Skip to main content

Praga presents first Bohema production supercar

The Bohema is Czech-based Praga's first street legal supercar

praga bohema supercar 21
Praga

After seven years of development, Czech-based auto manufacturer Praga delivered its first production car in 77 years to one lucky customer in the Netherlands, and the world is better for it. We have seen plenty of Bugattis and Ferraris roaming around lately, but Bohema looks, drives, and feels like nothing we’ve seen before.

Just two years ago, Praga debuted a pre-production prototype. Since then, engineers have been tweaking, testing, checking, rechecking, and whittling down the car’s weight to just 2,300 pounds of wet weight (meaning with all fluids topped off and ready to go).

Owner Tomas Kasparek said in a press release:

“We always promised no concepts, no teasers, no b-s… just a pure, lightweight, very fast and beautifully appointed road-legal race car for a limited number of supercar buyers who can really drive – and that’s what we have delivered.”

Praga

The Bohema is hand-built, using a full carbon body and monocoque tub that allows for incredible strength without added weight. The body was honed using computational fluid dynamics modeling, followed by plenty of time in an F1 wind tunnel. Everything on the Bohema has a specific purpose, including the big ducktail rear spoiler that can create as much as 1,984 pounds of downforce at 155 mph.

Praga

Power comes from a mid-mounted aluminum block and heads PL38DETT 3.8-liter twin-turbo DOHC V-6. This engine is a collaboration between Praga and Litchfield Engineering, which, among other things, converts the engines to a dry-sump lubrication system that not only keeps the engine safe during hard cornering, it also allows the Bohema to corner harder thanks to a 5.5-inch reduction in engine height and the resulting lower center of gravity. Power peaks at an impressive 700 horsepower at 6,800 rpm and 535 pound-feet of torque, which, even more impressively, is sustained from 3,000 to 6,000 rpm.

Praga

That power is then routed through a Hewland six-speed sequential gearbox featuring bespoke helical cut gears that can be shifted semi-automatically via F1-style paddle shifters. A tuned titanium exhaust disperses exhaust gasses and has all the snap, crackle, and pop and owner could want, while still remaining civilized enough to hold a conversation inside the narrow cockpit.

Praga

Praga did design the Bohema to be a true road-going car. It has a seventeen-gallon fuel tank, making road trips relatively easy and avoiding too many Kardashian-like rest area stops full of photos and questions. Deep storage areas are designed into the rear wheel arches, which the custom and optional carbon-fiber luggage fits perfectly into, much like we’ve seen on the BMW i8 in the past.

Praga

The steering wheel is removable to allow easier ingress and egress, while the sculpted interior has ergonomic recesses built into it so neither the driver nor passenger’s arms or elbows would jostle for position, like being in the middle seat on a coach flight. Storage pockets and even a smartphone mount accentuate the hand-stitched Alcantara and machined HVAC controls and air vents to underscore the idea that the Bohema is more than just a legal F1 car. That being said, the entire cockpit uses just 75 pounds of material.

Mark Harrison, Sales and Marketing Director for Praga Cars, said:

“The quality of the first Bohema that Praga has delivered cannot be understated. It is very easy to promise car enthusiasts an enticing new vehicle, but incredibly hard to design, develop and then produce a car that delivers on that promise. Praga has done exactly that with the Bohema: a supercar of superb quality in production and performance – with an earned right to be considered by all collectors.”

Bohema
Praga

Though the Praga Bohema is a road car, make no mistake that it has all the DNA to thrill and impress anyone who can afford to jump behind the wheel. Horizontally mounted pushrod-operated adjustable dampers allow for maximum travel at a minimum increase in height. Staggered central-locking wheels measure 18 inches in front and 19 inches in back. Six-piston calipers clamp down on carbon-ceramic discs to scrub off speed at a moment’s notice.

Praga

And there is plenty of speed. With just 3.29 pounds per horsepower to move, Praga says its rear-wheel drive Bohema can sprint from 0 to 100 km/h (62 mph) in a scant 2.3 seconds and top out at 197 mph.

Praga

Praga plans to limit production of the Bohema to less than 20 cars per year over the next four years. The company also plans to support all of its future owners well beyond the production line, so it is focusing on specific markets to sell the Bohema with a maximum amount slated for each area. The UK and Europe will get a max of 20 cars, the Middle East a max of 12 cars, South Asia a max of 16 cars, Japan a max of 12 cars, and the USA with a max of 24 cars.

Praga

Finally, the Praga Bohema costs a cool 1.43 million Euro, which equates to just over $1.5 million. But as with all low-production hypercars, the exclusivity and rarity of a vehicle like the Praga Bohema make it more than worthwhile to some wealthy car enthusiasts.

Praga

Standard Vehicle Specification: Praga Bohema – road-legal supercar

Weight (wet): 2,300 lbs

Weight to Power: 3.29 lb per hp

Interior: bespoke steering wheel, switchgear and systems

Pedals, seat, and steering wheel adjustable

Leather / Alcantara trimmed seats and surfaces

Exterior: 2 x 1.76 cubic-foot side pods with bespoke leather luggage

Aerodynamics honed at an F1 wind tunnel

Chassis key features:

Left / Right-hand drive 2-seat configuration

Mid-rear mounted engine

Rear wheel drive

Structural design of carbon composite monocoque and rear-mounted chrome-moly frame

Carbon fibre body panels

18” front; 19” rear aluminum wheels / Surface Transform carbon disc brakes / 6-piston calipers

Powertrain key features:

Praga – Litchfield PL38DETT engine 3.8l V6 twin-turbo

6-speed sequential gearbox with paddle shift operation

Bespoke turbo, dry sump and titanium exhaust system

Performance:

700 bhp @ 6,800 rpm

535 lb-ft between 3,000 and 6,000 rpm

0 – 100 km/h (62 mph): 2.3s

Downforce: 1,984 lbs @ 155 mph

Top speed: 197 mph

Topics
Lou Ruggieri
A lifelong lover of cars, Lou contributes to Motor Trend, Hot Cars, Auto & Truck Connection, and the PowerAutoMedia Group.
F1: Isack Hadjar fills the last vacant seat for the 2025 season
Hadjar is the most recent F1 promotion from the Red Bull Junior program
Izack Hadjar is the new Racing Bull driver for the F1 2025 season.

The Formula 1 driver shuffle is over, at least for now. In the last of three moves associated with the Red Bull Racing organization, Isack Hadjar was named Yuki Tsunoda's teammate on Red Bull's second F1 team, which is now called Racing Bulls.
Meet Isack Hadjar
Hadjar is the most recent promotion from the Red Bull Junior program to a seat in an F1 race car. The Junior platform, which Red Bull began in 2001, has now promoted nineteen young drivers. Among the earlier promotes are Daniel Ricciardo, Sebastian Vettel, and Max Verstappen.

Hadjar is 20 years old. He has driven for the Campos Racing team for two years and finished second in total points this year. The 2024 F2 Champion, Gabriel Bortoleto, was promoted earlier to drive for the Kick Sauber F1 team in 2025.

Read more
Ducati Panigale V4 Tricolore celebrates superbike dominance
The Ducati Panigale V4 Tricolore is finished in the Italian flag colors.
2024 Ducati Panigale V4 Tricolore limited edition parked in a plaza, left profile view.

Ducati, one of the best motorcycle brands, has introduced a special edition superbike that celebrates the Italian brand with a unique, three-color livery. The 2025 Ducati Panigale V4 Tricolore is limited to 1,000 units. It will be in U.S. dealerships beginning April 2025 with a starting price of $58,000.
The significance of the Ducati Panigale V4 Tricolore

Previous

Read more
F1: Liam Lawson to take the seat on Red Bull, partnering with Max Verstappen
Red Bull has a deep racing organization with many promising drivers
Liam Lawson replaced Daniel Ricciardo on RB Honda mid-season in 2024.

Red Bull Racing names RB Honda driver Liam Lawson to fill the vacant seat for the F1 2025 season. Lawson's selection comes just one day after Red Bull announced driver Sergio Perez will be leaving the team at the end of 2024.

The cascade of driver changes follows a bittersweet 2024 Grand Prix season in which Red Bull driver Max Verstappen won his fourth Drivers' Championship. Perez's lackluster performance since June resulted in Red Bull falling to third place in the Constructors' Championship. Combined drivers' Championship points determine the Constructors' title, which includes financial awards based primarily on the teams finishing order in points.
Liam Lawson as the second Red Bull driver
Lawson will be Max Verstappen's teammate. Red Bull hopes that Lawson can be a consistent point scorer, placing high enough that, combined with Verstappen's assumed continued dominance, the two drivers will snare the Constructors' title for the team.

Read more