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      • The Bristol Fighter is a sports car produced by Bristol Cars in small numbers from 2004 until the company suspended manufacturing in 2011. It is generally classed as a supercar. The coupé body, which features gullwing doors, was designed by former Brabham Formula One engineer Max Boxstrom and gives the car a Cd of 0.28.
      en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bristol_Fighter_(automobile)
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  2. The Bristol Fighter is a sports car produced by Bristol Cars in small numbers from 2004 until the company suspended manufacturing in 2011. It is generally classed as a supercar. [2][3]

  3. The Bristol F.2 Fighter is a British First World War two-seat biplane fighter and reconnaissance aircraft developed by Frank Barnwell at the British and Colonial Aeroplane Company later known as the Bristol Aeroplane Company.

  4. Feb 19, 2020 · One of the most formidable fighter planes of the period was a single-engine two-seater, the Bristol F.2B, which was generally known as the Bristol Fighter, as well as the “Brisfit” or “Biff.” Often overlooked by modern historians assessing the merits of World War I aircraft, the F.2B was regarded as a great success in its day.

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  5. May 24, 2005 · Late in 1999, the company announced it would produce a new 200mph-plus supercar, the Fighter, based on Chrysler Viper components, and promised delivery at the back end of 2001.

    • What is the Bristol Fighter?1
    • What is the Bristol Fighter?2
    • What is the Bristol Fighter?3
    • What is the Bristol Fighter?4
  6. Sep 26, 2018 · A V10 heart in an aeroplane-inspired British body, this is the Bristol Fighter. The curvaceous blue supercar can travel at over 200 miles per hour yet its mo...

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  7. Bristol F.2b Fighter. The Bristol Fighter was designed in 1916 as a replacement for the B.E. two-seaters. No.48 Squadron received the first production aircraft and introduced them into service during the Battle of Arras in April 1917.

  8. The Bristol Fighter was the most successful two-seat combat aircraft of the First World War. It was initially designed as a reconnaissance machine to replace the Royal Aircraft Factory BE2c, which was quickly becoming obsolete.