Car quick pick



Your car fleet

No cars selected
Ariel logo

Ariel - Atom series

Sort by: Year  Model  Displacement  Power  Weight 

About Ariel

Ariel was a bicycle, motorcycle and automobile marque manufactured in Birmingham, England. Car production moved to Coventry in 1911. The company name was reused in 1999 for the formation of Ariel Ltd, a sports car producer.

History

The company dates back to 1847 when Ariel made an early pneumatic-tyred wheel for horse drawn carriages. The name was revived by James Starley and William Hillman in 1870 when they invented the wire-spoke wheel which allowed them to build a lighter weight bicycle naming it Ariel (the spirit of the air). They put the name on the factory where they made penny-farthing bicycles and sewing machines. In 1885 Starley invented the Rover Safety Bicycle - a rear-wheel-drive, chain-driven bicycle with two similar-sized wheels, which is essentially the design still used on bicycles today. Use of the name lapsed but in 1896 it appeared again, this time on motorised transport.

The first Ariel vehicle was a Tricycle that used a 2.25 hp De Dion engine mounted at the rear. More tricycles were produced and quadricycles were added in 1901 as Ariel then moved into car production.

Read more...

Ariel Atom (2000)

roadster door / 2 seats, petrol (gasoline) 4 cylinder straight (inline), 16 valves DOHC (double overhead camshafts, twin cam), 1588 cm3, 82.8 kW, manual 5 speed, rear wheel drive

Ariel Atom 2 (2003)

roadster door / 2 seats, petrol (gasoline) 4 cylinder straight (inline), 16 valves DOHC (double overhead camshafts, twin cam), 1998 cm3, 164.1 kW, manual 6 speed, rear wheel drive

Ariel Atom 2 Supercharged (2004)

roadster door / 2 seats, 4 cylinder straight (inline), 16 valves DOHC (double overhead camshafts, twin cam), 1998 cm3, 223.7 kW, manual 6 speed, rear wheel drive

 
TOPlist