This Car Company Got Banned For Being “Too Good” – This Concept Could Revive Its Legacy

They didn’t get banned for cheating. Chaparral got banned for being too clever. In the 1960s and ’70s, while others played by the rules, Chaparral rewrote them by building cars with active aerodynamics, vacuum fans, and semi-automatic transmissions long before Formula 1 caught up. They were banned, blacklisted, and eventually faded out. But judging by this new Centurion concept, they’re not done rewriting the book yet.

The Centurion isn’t interested in retro tribute. It’s a resurrection that looks forward, not back – an audacious machine built around the bones of what Chaparral always represented: functional chaos dressed up as design. Its silhouette is impossibly low, a fusion of LMP1 aggression and stealth-fighter angularity, layered with exposed aero elements and carbon panels that feel well within Chaparral’s wheelhouse of ‘pushing the limits’.

Designer: Jobin Sunil

The body looks like it was sculpted by wind and then reassembled by a pit crew armed with carbon fiber and caffeine. That gaping front end looks like it’s inhaling the asphalt. You can spot hints of the classic Chaparral 2J, the infamous “sucker car,” in the exaggerated skirts and low-slung frame, but now it’s paired with a single-seater layout and an unapologetically futuristic silhouette. Everything’s wide, chopped, and aggressive – more hypercar than prototype racer.

Aerodynamics are the soul of this thing. The exposed suspension, turbine-style wheels, and ductwork that seems to slice through the body all scream function-first, but the design doesn’t compromise on theatrics. There are layered lighting elements, fighter-jet-like fenders, and that gorgeous blade-thin rear lightbar stretched across an oversized diffuser that looks ready to vacuum-seal itself to the road. The tail section reads like a tribute to LMP1 design, but it’s been rewritten in brutalist calligraphy.

And yet, there’s restraint in the madness. Every detail is justified. The exaggerated wheel arches and open suspension arms? Downforce. The rear diffuser that stretches like a canyon under the tail? Ground effect. The seat carved directly into the monocoque, flanked by that “STEP HERE” footwell? Minimal mass, maximum intent. There’s not a single inch of wasted volume.

Designer Jobin Sunil’s Centurion strips away all the pleasantries. No windshield, no doors, no distractions. It’s a scalpel of a machine, pointed squarely at the future of performance. The entire rear is a sculpture of tension and utility – complete with a continuous taillight blade and dual venturi tunnels that look like they could suck small animals clean off the road.

There aren’t any performance specs- and rightly so. This is a design exercise, not a production prototype. It’s not promising lap times or horsepower figures. It’s exploring what a Chaparral could be today if it didn’t have to answer to race regulations or showroom practicality. The concept stays true to the brand’s history of challenging convention, not for shock value but to reframe what a performance car can prioritize.

The post This Car Company Got Banned For Being “Too Good” – This Concept Could Revive Its Legacy first appeared on Yanko Design.

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