Bugatti Chiron Super Sport Tuning Guide — Best Setup for FH6

Class Range: S2 - X | Base HP: 1,578 | Drivetrain: AWD | Weight: 1,995 kg | Best Class: S2

The Bugatti Chiron Super Sport in FH6 is what happens when engineers decide that "enough" is a dirty word. 1,578 horsepower from an 8.0-liter quad-turbo W16 that sounds less like an engine and more like the world's angriest vacuum cleaner — in the best possible way. This thing will hit 440 km/h on the Playa Azul straight without breaking a sweat, and it does it with the kind of stability that makes you think you're going 150 instead of 300.

But — and this is a big but — the Chiron weighs nearly two tons. You feel every single kilogram in the braking zones and through quick direction changes. The Chiron is a speed machine, not a handling machine, and tuning it is all about leaning into that identity. You're not going to out-corner a Senna or a Valkyrie. What you can do is hit such absurd speeds on the straights that it doesn't matter how slow you are through the corners — you'll still win.

I've spent probably 20 hours tuning the Chiron across different builds, and here's what I've learned: the stock tune is actually brilliant for top speed runs, but the suspension is way too soft for anything resembling a circuit. The gearing is too long for most tracks, and the tire pressures are set for comfort rather than performance. Fix those three things and the Chiron transforms from a straight-line one-trick pony into something that can actually hang on technical circuits.

Best Tuning Setups by Class

S2 (998) — Top Speed King

Tires: 32/32 PSI
Gearing: Speed-focused final, 3.20
Camber: -1.0°/-0.5°
ARB: 30/25
Springs: Front 650 / Rear 550
Ride Height: Lowest
Aero: Min front, min rear
Diff Accel: 70%/20%

For highway runs and speed traps. You'll hit 440+ km/h. Minimum downforce = maximum speed. Just don't try to turn.

S2 (998) — Balanced Circuit

Tires: 30/30 PSI
Gearing: Balanced final, 3.50
Camber: -1.2°/-0.8°
ARB: 32/28
Springs: Front 700 / Rear 600
Ride Height: Lowest
Aero: 25% front, 30% rear
Diff Accel: 65%/25%

The everyday build. Enough downforce to survive corners, still fast enough to gap most cars on straights. My go-to for online racing.

S2 (998) — Grip Build

Tires: 28/29 PSI
Gearing: Acceleration final, 3.80
Camber: -1.5°/-1.0°
ARB: 35/30
Springs: Front 750 / Rear 650
Ride Height: Lowest
Aero: 50% front, 55% rear
Diff Accel: 60%/25%

Maximum cornering grip. You'll lose 20-30 km/h on top end but you can actually take corners at speed. Use for technical tracks like Guanajuato.

X (999) — Unlimited

Tires: 32/32 PSI
Gearing: Max speed final, 2.80
Camber: -1.0°/-0.5°
ARB: 28/22
Springs: Front 600 / Rear 500
Ride Height: Lowest
Aero: Min both
Diff Accel: 75%/15%

The no-compromises build. Engine fully upgraded, twin turbo conversion. 480+ km/h. Glorious on the highway.

Key Tuning Parameters

Engine & Power

The W16 is already heavily boosted from the factory — four turbos feeding 8.0 liters. Upgrading to race turbos pushes output past 1,800 hp but the power curve gets peaky. I prefer keeping the stock turbos and spending PI on handling upgrades instead. Camshafts and intercooler are the only upgrades worth the PI cost. Skip the displacement increase unless you're building a dedicated drag car.

One Chiron-specific thing: the quad-turbo setup means boost builds at different RPMs for different turbo pairs. The small turbos spool first, then the big turbos kick in around 4,000 RPM. Keep the engine in the 4,500-6,500 RPM sweet spot — drop below 4,000 and you lose the big turbos, rev past 6,500 and power falls off.

Suspension & Handling

The Chiron's biggest weakness is its weight. At 1,995 kg, it has the momentum of a freight train. Stiff springs are mandatory — 650-700 lb/in front and 550-600 rear for circuit builds. Anti-roll bars need to be aggressive: 30-35 front and 25-30 rear. Fast rebound in the rear helps the car recover from the massive weight transfer during braking. A controlled nose-down attitude under braking actually helps turn-in by loading the front tires.

Gearing Strategy

Stock gearing is absurdly long — 7th gear tops out around 490 km/h, which you'll never reach outside the highway. Shorten the final drive to bring top speed down to 420-430 km/h for circuit builds. For pure speed trap builds, keep the stock final drive and stretch 6th and 7th even further.

Common Tuning Mistakes

ProblemFix
Car won't turn at high speedAdd 10-15% front downforce, soften front ARB by 2-3 clicks
Rear end slides out under brakingShift brake balance forward (60% front), reduce rear ride height 2 clicks
Tires overheat after 2-3 lapsLower tire pressure to 28 PSI, reduce negative camber to -1.0°
Slow out of cornersShorten final drive 0.20, increase accel diff lock to 75%
Unstable above 380 km/hAdd 20% rear downforce, stiffen rear springs 50 lb/in