ALFA ● FIAT ● LANCIA ● FERRARI ● LAMBORGHINI ● MASERATI
Issue 276 February 2019 £4.99
ZAGATO’S TUBULAR TRIUMPH
PUNTO POWER!
THREE GENERATIONS OF FEISTY FIATS
ALFA 156 V6
Sportwagon from Japan
FERRARI 330 GT
Vignale’s final estate
FROM DINO TO ABARTH
Racing set
SECRET SERENISSIMA: FROM COUNT’S CASTLE TO FREEDOM
www.auto-italia.net III
ALFA ROMEO TZ
Alfa Giulia V6 Biturbo Quadrifoglio
Red Calipers, carbon fibre steering
wheel inserts, 2950 miles.
Price: £63,975 £55,900
Alfa Romeo 159 V6 Jts Lusso
69,799 miles. Black with tan leather
upholstery Very good service history.
Price: £8,995
Alfa Romeo Giulia Tb 16V
Black and grey cloth. Alloy wheels,
air conditioning, 8,676 miles.
Price: £23,995 £22,495
Alfa Romeo Giulietta Tb Sport
145 miles. White with cloth. 18 inch
Alloy wheels,
Price: £23,069 £17,295
Alfa Romeo Mito TB TwinAir Sprint
Alfa Romeo 159 Jtdm Ti
124,500 miles Silver with black
leather upholstery. refurbished Alloys,
Price: £4,495
18,488 miles. Ametista black. Air
con, Alloys, E/W.
Price: £6,995
Alfa Romeo Giulietta Tb Sport
137 miles. Alfa red with cloth. Air
conditioning.
Price: £22,544 £16,995
Fiat Tipo Easy Plus
11,792 miles. Silver with black cloth
upholstery. Air con. Alloy wheels.
Price: £9,495
* No 1 out of 165 Fiat, Alfa Romeo and Chrysler Jeep dealers for customer satisfaction in the UK, Jan - Mar 2018
* No.1 out of 49 dealers for service in Alfa Romeo’s customer satisfaction survey, carried out by JD Power, July - Sept ’11
* No.1 out of 48 dealers for service in Alfa Romeo’s customer satisfaction survey, carried out by JD Power, May - June ‘11
*No.1 out of 63 dealers for service in Alfa Romeo’s customer satisfaction survey, carried out by JD Power, Jan - Mar’08
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I
taly in the 1960s was a glorious melting pot of precocious engineering and design talent.
A brief look at the ‘ones that got away’ in the 1960s confirms this – and this month we
have a feature on one of the most glorious lost causes of all.
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The re-emergence of three cars from the collection of an Italian aristocrat – Count Volpi –
after half a century hidden away in his castle is a truly joyous moment. The Count had
designs on challenging Enzo Ferrari, creating both the ATS and Serenissima marques, and
it’s three of his Serenissima sports cars that have resurfaced after 50 years of not turning a
wheel. They’re due to be auctioned in February 2019, and you can read the whole
fascinating tale on page 20.
Meanwhile, in hot-off-the-press news, we have the first indications of the fresh direction in
which new Fiat Chrysler boss, UK-born Michael Manley, is taking the company. His ‘Italian
Plan’ marks the first major changes to the five-year programme elucidated by his
predecessor, Sergio Marchionne, just before his tragic death.
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We now know that, when the all-new Fiat 500 is launched in early 2020, there will be a fully
electric model. There will also be hybrid versions of the Fiat 500X and Panda; the Alfa Giulia,
Stelvio, Giulietta, and Alfa’s new compact SUV (due in 2020); and the Maserati Levante,
Ghibli and Quattroporte.
What we don’t know, at the time of going to press, is what’s happening with all those
exciting new models that Marchionne announced – and which are notably absent from
Manley’s plan. What about the Alfa Romeo GTV (Giulia two-door coupe)? Or the Alfa 8C
supercar? And Alfa’s new large SUV? No news. Could that mean delays, or even
cancellation? No doubt we will hear more soon. I hope so, because we really need
reassurance that Alfa Romeo is to be treated with the respect it deserves.
Chris Rees
Editor
CONTRIBUTORS
[email protected]
Auto Italia is brought to you by a group of journalists
and photographers united by a passion for Italian
cars. Contributors to this issue include:
Chris Rees
Michael Ward
Phil Ward
Peter Collins
Tim Pitt
Mike Rysiecki
Elvio Deganello
Richard Heseltine
auto italia
3
CONTENTS
ISSUE 276
FEBRUARY 2019
FEATURES
14
20
28
14
36
44
54
60
68
72
74
20
76
LAMBORGHINI URUS
First UK drive – on and off road
SERENISSIMA
Three forgotten GTs resurface after 50 years
ALFA ROMEO TZ
Tubular chassis triumph from Zagato
THE BEST COLLECTION
Racer and designer Tony Best’s cars
FIAT PUNTO GROUP TEST
Hot Puntos: Mk1 GT, Mk2 HGT & Mk3 Abarth
SPORTY FIATS AROUND THE GLOBE
Little-known hot Fiats, from Brazil to India
FERRARI 330 GT 2+2 SHOOTING BRAKE
The very last Ferrari rebodied by Vignale
PADOVA AUTO E MOTO D’EPOCA
Highlights of Italy’s largest classic car show
AUTUMN MOTORSPORT FESTIVAL
All the action from Brooklands
ZANDVOORT HISTORIC GRAND PRIX
Classic F1 and GT racing in Holland
ALFA ROMEO 156 V6 SPORTWAGON
We import a rare Alfa from Japan
SUBSCRIPTIONS
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REGULARS
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86
92
36
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98
NEWS
Fiat reveals its electrification programme
BACK ISSUES
Discover every car we’ve ever featured
CLASSIFIEDS
Find your perfect Italian car here
OBSCURATI
Gio Ponti’s futuristic 1953 car is finally realised
60
44
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5
ITALIAN CAR NEWS
MANLEY’S ‘ITALIAN PLAN’:
YES TO ELECTRIC FIAT 500, ALFA GTV IN DOUBT
F
iat is accelerating its electrification
programme under new plans set out
by Michael Manley, FCA’s UK-born
CEO (pictured below). The plan
marks the first big changes to
Sergio Marchionne’s June 2018 five-year plan
since he died in July and Manley took over.
The next-generation Fiat 500, due for
launch in early 2020, will be based on FCA’s
first dedicated Battery Electric Vehicle (BEV)
platform. But no mention was made in the
new plan of the previously announced
Giardiniera estate version of the electric
500, leading to speculation that this may
have been shelved.
The latest announcements come in FCA’s
‘Italian Plan’ detailing the company’s
production future in Italy, with more than €5
billion to be invested at home.
Manley has committed to launching 13 all-
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new or restyled models between 2019 and
2021, many of them electric hybrids. As well
as the 500 BEV, both the Fiat 500X and Panda
will be offered as mild hybrids.
As for Alfa Romeo, the facelifted Giulietta
will also be made in mild hybrid form. When
they are facelifted, both the Giulia and
Stelvio will be offered in long-wheelbase and
Plug-in Hybrid Electric Vehicle (PHEV) forms.
Meanwhile at Maserati, the Levante, Ghibli
and Quattroporte will also be made as PHEVs.
Alfa’s new small compact SUV
will arrive in 2020, in both
conventional and PHEV guises,
but the big news is that it will
not be based on a shortened
Stelvio platform, as previously
thought, but on that of the
Jeep Compass. That means
that the new SUV could be
front-wheel drive or four-wheel drive – but
definitely not rear-drive.
Several other Alfa Romeos in Marchionne’s
plan are not mentioned in the latest
statement. There’s no news on the GTV (the
Giulia-based two-door coupe) or the 8C
supercar, leading to speculation that they
may have been delayed. Nor is there any
news on Alfa’s third SUV model, slotting in
above the Stelvio. Another change is
scrapping FCA’s plan to ditch diesel power
from 2022 – diesel will now continue
beyond that date.
FERRARI’S SP3JC ONE-OFF
Hot on the heels of its 812 Superfast-based Monza
SP1/SP2 limited production supercar, Ferrari has
revealed a new open-topped V12 supercar.
The SP3JC is a one-off designed around the F12tdf.
Designed in-house by the Ferrari Styling Centre, the
SP3JC was commissioned by Ferrari dealer/collector,
John Collins of Talacrest, who asked for a “pure,
uncompromising roadster”. The project took over two
years to complete.
The SP3JC features a more muscular stance,
dynamically sculpted flanks, a distinctive front air
intake, and a restyled rear end with horizontal slashes.
The graphics are inspired by Pop Art and the paint
scheme – blue (Azzurro Met), yellow (Giallo Modena)
and white (Bianco Italia) – recalls that of a famous
1962 Ferrari 250 GTO. The seats are trimmed in blue
leather with white inserts, the blue leather theme
extending to the lower dashboard.
The F12tdf has lost its roof in the transformation,
with two carbonfibre roll hoops and rear buttresses
taking its place. Glass inserts in the bonnet show off
the F12tdf’s 780hp V12 engine, and there’s a brushed
aluminium fuel filler cap.
FERRARI BREADVAN ‘HOMMAGE’ IN BUILD
A new car inspired by
the Ferrari 250 GT
‘Breadvan’ is under
construction in the UK.
The London-based
coachbuilder, Niels van
Roij Design, is behind the
Ferrari Breadvan
Hommage one-off.
Like the 1962 car –
which was based on a
Ferrari 250 GT SWB
Competition – the new
car will have a frontengined V12 with
manual transmission,
but is being built on a
Ferrari 550 Maranello.
The entire bodywork
and interior of the 550
will be replaced, leaving
only the tubular steel
space frame, V12 engine
and rear transaxle/sixspeed manual gearbox
from the original car.
“It is a complex task to
translate the essence of
the legendary original into
a contemporary design,”
says Van Roij. “We intend
to be inspired by the
original, but will ensure
we are not limited by it in
our creativity.” The
ongoing project is being
documented on the
company’s website
(nielsvanroij.com) and its
social media channels.
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7
NEWS
URUS TO RACE IN 2020
Lamborghini Squadra Corse has unveiled the
Urus ST-X Concept, previewing a new singlemake championship in 2020. The series will
combine circuit racing and off-roading on FIAapproved circuits in Europe and the Middle
East, with an ‘arrive and drive’ formula.
The Urus ST-X is mechanically uprated
compared to the road car and gets a steel roll
cage, fire extinguishers and racing fuel tank.
It’s 25 per cent lighter than the production
Urus, has a raised ride height and is
torsionally stiffer.
It also adds larger air intakes, a big rear
wing, hexagonal-shape racing exhausts and
21in alloy wheels. The concept car is painted
matt green Verde Mantis with a plain
carbonfibre bonnet.
ALFAHOLICS SHIPS 18TH GTA-R 290
ITALDESIGN GT-R50 GETS GREEN LIGHT
The Italdesign GT-R50 – a reshaped version of Nissan’s GT-R – has been
confirmed for production. Pricing of the Nismo-tuned 720hp ‘GT-R by
Italdesign’ starts at 990,000 euros excluding taxes. While the prototype –
unveiled at Goodwood in 2018 – was painted grey and gold, customers
can specify their own choices. Only 50 cars will be built, with deliveries
starting later in 2019. Visit GT-R50.nissan for more information.
ABARTH 124 WINS R-GT CUP
In only its second racing season, the Abarth 124 Rally has won the
2018 R-GT class, recording more than 40 class victories in 12 national
championships. Team Milano Racing’s 124, driven by Frenchmen Raphael
Astier and Frédéric Vauclare, secured the FIA R-GT Cup by winning four out
of five races. They topped a table dominated by Abarth 124s, with an
amazing six drivers in the top six places. Meanwhile, Simone Tempestini
won the European Championship with victories in Poland and Latvia.
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Somerset-based specialist Alfaholics has delivered its 18th
GTA-R 290 to a customer in the USA. The GTA-R 290 is a
‘restomod’ version of the classic Alfa Romeo Giulia GT (as
featured in Auto Italia March 2017).
The 18th example has a fully seam-welded body with
carbonfibre doors, bonnet and boot. The glasswork is
lightweight and there’s an aluminium fuel tank. A 2.3-litre Alfa
Twin Spark engine boasts 240hp thanks to MoTeC ECU, ITB
injection, sports exhaust and uprated cooling. A lightweight GTA
close-ratio gearbox is joined by a limited-slip differential and
lightweight propshaft.
The suspension has titanium wishbones, titanium billet
geometry, adjustable gas dampers, adjustable ride height,
aluminium T-bar and lightweight trailing arms. The wheels are
7x15 GTA Superleggera alloys with 195/55 R15 tyres. Brakes are
Superleggera billet aluminium with 300mm vented front discs
and 267mm rears, plus an adjustable aluminium pedal box.
Inside are leather Recaro seats with inflatable lumbar
support, Alcantara-and-leather dashboard, T45 rollcage with
Alcantara trim, aluminium pedals and Momo steering wheel,
while air conditioning is also fitted. For more info, contact
Alfaholics: tel 01275 349 449, www.alfaholics.com
NEWS
STRATOSFERICA: ALFA 4C MEETS LANCIA STRATOS
Italian car specialist Giampaolo Boldrin has revealed a
new Lancia Stratos rally car-inspired bodykit – the
Stratosferica – for the Alfa Romeo 4C.
Launched at the recent Milan AutoClassica show, it
comes eight years after Boldrin first presented his
Beta Montecarlo-based Lancia Rally 037 bodykit.
The Stratosferica is a 21st century take on the iconic
Bertone-styled Lancia Stratos of the mid-1970s. It
follows in the tyre tracks of the modern-era MAT New
Stratos and several self-build kit car replicas.
Unlike other Stratos interpretations, Boldrin Auto’s
new Stratosferica is an interchangeable glassfibreand-carbon bodykit that’s built around the Alfa Romeo
4C. The bodykit replaces the mid-engined two-seater’s
front and rear body panels with Stratos-insired bolt-on
replacement items. The nose cone includes
retractable headlights, as per Lancia’s original, with
integrated LEDs. Also offered are alloy wheels in the
style of the original Lancia’s distinctive Campagnolo
‘coffin-spoke’ wheels.
Boldrin Auto’s Alfa 4C transformation has been
unveiled in rally-inspired form, including auxiliary
front driving lamps and Alitalia-style livery, made
famous by the original rallying Stratos in the hands
of gifted Lancia Works drivers such as Sandro Munari
and Björn Waldegård.
A limited number of Boldrin Stratosferica
customisable bodykit conversions will be made, at
prices from around £20,000. More details are available
at www.boldrinauto.it – Gary Axon
MILLTEK’S GIULIA VELOCE EXHAUST
UK-based exhaust manufacturer Milltek Sport has added a new full exhaust
system for the Giulia Veloce, joining its existing Quadrifoglio offering.
A variety of cat-back configurations is available, including resonated and nonresonated, the latter boasting “thunderstorm” noises, says Milltek. The pipe is 3in
(76.2mm) in diameter, offering improved gas flow properties.
Electronic active valve options include an ‘Active Valve’ button, which allows the
exhaust to be run in fully-open position, or ‘Stealth’ mode. Milltek claims power
and torque gains and an improved engine note. Prices start from £965 plus VAT
for a cat-back, non-valved system. Contact www.millteksport.com
FORGE 500 PIPE
Forge Motorsport has launched a new silicone
intake hose for the Fiat 500 and Abarth
500/595/695. Designed for the 1.4T-Jet petrol
engine, the hose is based on the standard
Fiat/Abarth hard pipe, but with the size and flow
maximised for improved performance. The intake
pipe bore is increased from 70mm to 89mm, and
Forge claims power improvements of up to 10hp.
The price is £100.63 including VAT – more info from
www.forgemotorsport.co.uk
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NEWS
FERRARI 290 MM MAKES £17M
RM Sotheby’s has sold a 1956 Ferrari 290 MM – as
featured in Auto Italia January 2019 – for $22 million
(approx £17m). The ex-Fangio, Collins, Gendebien,
Castellotti and Moss racer was subject to a fierce
bidding war between three collectors.
Other highlights from the December 2018 sale
included a 1971 Lamborghini Miura P400 SV for
$2,205,000 (approx £1.7m) and a low-mileage 1989
Ferrari F40 for $1,545,000 (approx £1.2m).
ALFA SPIDER REACHES £47K
A 1969 Alfa Romeo 1750 Spider has reached a
remarkable £47,300 at auction. The price was
fetched at the recent sale by Classic Car Auctions
(CCA), where there was a bidding battle for the rare,
right-hand drive example. Reportedly in excellent
restored condition, it came with a hardtop, and the
final sale price of £47,300 was almost double the
lower estimate. CCA’s next sale will take place at the
Classic Car & Restoration Show at the NEC,
Birmingham on 23-24 March 2019.
FERRARI-THEMED AUCTION ANNOUNCED
Silverstone Auctions has announced a new dedicated Ferrari sale. The Dallas
Burston Polo Club will host a supercar weekend with Ferraris being auctioned in
association with the Ferrari Owners’ Club GB. The date is Saturday 21 September.
In the meantime, Silverstone Auctions is selling a rare 1970 Ferrari 365 GT 2+2 –
one of just 52 right-hand drive examples made, pictured above – that featured in
Auto Italia’s August 2018 issue. It’s for sale at Autosport International on 12
January at the NEC, Birmingham, with an estimate of £190,000 to £220,000.
More information at silverstoneauctions.com
TRANSAXLE TUNING PARTS
Alfetta owners have some new tuning
options now that Richard Melivin, Chris
Snowdon and EB Spares have come
together to offer track-tested upgrades
for the Alfetta and 75.
Listed among the goodies are:
Front upper ball joints with extended pin
Clutch housings for GTV6/75 racers
Race top arms with ball joint extensions
EB SPARES ALFA PARTS
GTV6 AND ALFA 75 V6 CLUTCH PLATES
EB Spares are now stocking centre plates for both the early twin-plate and later single-plate units.
12V CAM BELT TENSIONER REPAIR KITS
Bearing repair kit for the oil fed cam belt tensioner, as well as a gasket and seal kit.
ALFETTA RACE PARTS Reproduction of the Autodelta adjustable torsion bar bridge which allows easy
ride height adjustment. Suitable for early cars with removable bridge.
For more info Tel 01373 823856 or www.ebspares.co.uk
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URUS: ABSURD?
Named after a prehistoric ox, is the Urus a beast of burden
or a raging bull? We drive Lamborghini’s hyper-powered
SUV on and off road – and discover it’s a bit of both
Words: Chris Rees
Images: Michael Ward
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A
bsurd! A Scandinavian flick, a tail-out kick
and we’re sliding around our off-road
course in Bedfordshire like a pukka rally car.
Close your eyes and you could well believe
you’re on a 1980s Group B rally stage. Open
them, however, and what you see is the lap of luxury.
Driving the extraordinary Lamborghini Urus around
the Millbrook test facility – Alpine hill circuit, milelong straight, 130mph bowl and off-road course –
simply amplifies the absurdities with each
experience. Let’s get this straight: here is a car
weighing fully 2197kg that can do 0-62mph in 3.6
seconds – quicker than your average Caterham. And
with its throbbingly potent 650hp engine, it won’t let
go until you’ve reached 189mph; small wonder that
Lamborghini claims it’s the fastest SUV ever built.
And let’s not forget that it’s a full-fat, five-seat
family function machine.
Lamborghini must surely have been tempted to make
the Urus a giant among SUVs, rather like the LM002 of
the 1980s was. In fact, it’s the least 4x4-looking SUV I
can think of. Lamborghini has managed to bestow upon
it a low, squat, coupe-like stance, almost like
someone’s taken a square-shaped SUV and given it a
shove at the back to squash the roofline, at the same
time pushing the cab forward (the front end overhang
is quite substantial, by the way).
The styling manages to keep true to modern
Lambo aesthetics, a kaleidoscope of trapezoidal
volumes and sharp edges. I have to say you can’t
really see any of the LM002 in the Urus, which is a
blessed relief since the LM was a gawky Tonka
tractor by comparison. I really like the rear door
handles hidden on the bulging rear wheelarches –
what other car has those, huh? – and the frameless
doors which enhance the coupe look.
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15
The choice of test cars in front of me is white, blue,
grey and the searingly bright Giallo Auge yellow (a
colour that I think really suits the car; I’m probably in
the minority here). I concede that the subtle Blu
Astraeus (dark blue) is probably the best colour for the
Urus. I haven’t seen one in dialled-down dark green or
brown, but these might be right for the country set,
perhaps. For the more stereotypically ostentatious
owner – that’s what Lambo is about, right? – the
company hints that a significantly brighter colour
palette may well be launched in the near future.
There’s no getting away from the sheer size of this
thing. It’s among the largest hunks of machinery on
the road. Despite not being terribly tall, you still need
to climb up to get into the driver’s seat; a useful but
ugly side step is optional. Once inside, things are about
as plush as they come: surfaces in piano black,
brushed aluminium and leather, all customisable with
Alcantara, carbonfibre and wood.
It doesn’t really feel like any other Lamborghini,
though, with its upright dashboard dominated by a big
touchscreen that comes straight from the Audi parts
bin. This is a bit clunky to operate, I must say, and
rather prone to ugly finger print marks.
You actually sit quite low down by SUV standards
but there’s loads of space inside, even for six-footers,
both front and rear. Speaking of rear passengers, you
can opt for two- or three-seat versions; the two-seat
option (just over £3000) includes splendidly supportive,
adjustable individual seats. However, you can’t fold
them down as you can with the bench seat version,
and there’s an obstructive bulkhead behind them. In
the five-seat version, the boot can be expanded from
a huge 616 litres to an antiques dealer-sized 1596
litres with the seats down.
Enough stats and foreplay. Let’s fire this baby – no,
this beast – up. This is a big moment: can the new
4.0-litre V8 twin-turbo engine do justice to Lambo’s
loud pedal reputation? It doesn’t begin well: it’s
disappointingly quiet with the mode settings in
‘Strada’. It gets fruitier in ‘Sport’ mode, but more is
still happening in the bass register than at upper
hertz levels. Switching to ‘Corsa’ elevates the exhaust
note to a much more appealing, cracklingly enticing
sound, even though some of the cabin noise is
artificially piped, and I really miss any popping noise
on gearshifts. Overall, it’s no Huracán V10; it’s rather
less antisocial than that…
Left in full auto mode, the eight-speed automatic
gearbox’s very short lower gear ratios help to boost
acceleration off the line. It feels every bit as quick as
its 0-62mph claim of 3.6 seconds, but perhaps the
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more impressive stat is 0-124mph in 12.8 seconds.
That is very, very fast. The gear changes are smooth,
making full use of the fact that 627lb ft (850Nm) of
torque is available from just 2250rpm. For the record,
peak power of 650hp arrives at 6000rpm. Using the
paddles behind the steering wheel is effective and fun
for manual-minded drivers, too.
Unlike Sant’Agata’s supercars, this is a very refined
cruising machine. At 90mph around Millbrook’s highspeed bowl, the cabin is all but silent. Wind noise only
becomes an issue (from the door mirrors, mainly) at
speeds well above 100mph. The ride is also excellent –
one of the main reasons for buying an SUV, really –
even though you can’t hide the weight of the huge
wheels, with the occasional rattle over bumps.
Selecting Corsa or Sport mode lowers the ride height
from 173mm to 158mm, reducing body roll, and shaving
some of the electronic driver assistance off. The
steering feel is always chunky, sharp and confidenceinspiring, if not entirely natural in feel. Another surprise:
for a car that measures a monster 5112mm long and
2016mm wide, the Urus is wieldy in traffic, thanks to
its four-wheel steering system.
All four wheels are driven all the time, with 60 per
cent rear drive in most situations. A Torsen centre diff
can transfer up to 70 per cent to the front, and up to
87 per cent to the rear. There's also a torquevectoring rear diff to apportion 75 per cent of torque
to either rear wheel. With adaptive air suspension and
active roll stabilisation also in the mix, it all helps the
sense that the Urus feels like a much smaller car. Yes,
the body does roll, but far less than you’d expect of
such a huge SUV, partly thanks to the low-set engine
keeping the car’s centre of gravity down. You certainly
do feel the car’s heft in corners, with handling
precision suffering at speed, but there’s a sense of
inherent balance front to rear. Benign understeer
awaits if you overcook a corner, although on slippery
surfaces we did manage to get the tail out to a lairy
angle. As I said, somewhat absurd!
The brakes are massively powerful, as I discover
during a halt test on Millbrook’s mile straight from
virtually maximum speed: it takes the Urus just 150
metres to stop from 170mph. Wow! I guess I should
have expected this from standard carbon ceramic
discs that are fully 440mm across up front and have
10-piston callipers. Discs of such a size require
wheels of a minimum 21 inches across to fit. You can
select 22in and 23in options, too, the latter being
the biggest of any SUV currently on sale. The best
choice overall for ride and dynamics is 22 inches, but
it’d be hard not to tick the 23in option box and
Urus makes a surprisingly
strong case for itself off-road.
Over rough stuff, it feels like a
Group B rally car
LAMBORGHINI URUS
surfaces, we managed to get the tail
“ Onoutslippery
to a lairy angle – somewhat absurdly
”
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17
impress your size-obsessed mates. If you want All
Season tyres, though, you’ll need to go smaller: only
PZeros fit the 23in wheels.
The reason for fitting two turbochargers (for the
first time ever in Lamborghini’s history, incidentally) is
that it offers the torque required for low-rev offroading. And that’s exactly what I’m about to do now.
Before you scoff, there is genuine interest in the Urus
from the ‘let’s off-road!’ community, with British
farmers among those already placing orders. Oh, and
you can tow 3.5 tons with it…
On all-weather tyres, there’s certainly no lack of grip
on the rough stuff. As standard, there’s a Neve (snow)
drive mode but you can order an optional Off-Road
Package that adds two extra modes – Terra (off-road)
and Sabbia (sand) – as well as reinforced bumpers and
extra underfloor protection. These modes raise the ride
height by 40mm to 213mm, or as high as 248mm at
crawling pace. Standard Hill Descent Control works just
like a serious off-roader, keeping the car utterly stable
down steep, slippery hills.
As I mentioned at the start, on our
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS
LAMBORGHINI URUS
ENGINE:
POWER:
TORQUE:
TRANSMISSION:
BRAKES:
TYRES:
DIMENSIONS:
WEIGHT:
FUEL CONSUMPTION:
CO2:
MAX SPEED:
0-62MPH:
PRICE:
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3996cc V8 twin-turbo
650hp at 6000rpm
627lb ft (850Nm) at 2250-4500rpm
8-speed automatic, four-wheel drive
Carbon ceramic discs, 440x40mm
front, 370x30mm rear
285/45 R21 to 285/35 R23 (front),
315/40 R21 to 325/30 R23 (rear)
5112mm (L), 2016mm (W), 1638mm (H)
2197kg
22.9mpg
279g/km
189mph
3.6sec
£165,000
gravelly/sandy/muddy test track, the Urus feels like a
Group B rally car: potent yet supremely agile. Few
owners may ever experience it, but it’s genuinely
great off road.
VERDICT
The Urus is absurd. Absurdly fast – faster than many
a Porsche 911, both in a straight line and around a
track. Absurdly luxurious. Absurdly large and heavy.
But also absurdly good fun, and in its own way, every
inch a raging bull.
Controversial it may be, but the Urus is definitely not
the most conspicuously outrageous SUV on sale (step
forward, Bentley Bentayga and Rolls-Royce Cullinan). But
it is certainly striking a chord with buyers. There’s already
a year-long waiting list, and it will likely double
Lamborghini’s annual production, with 3500 set to be
made in 2019. Which at the very least means Lamborghini
will have a budget for making ever more extreme
supercars. In the meantime, for a select clientele, it’s fast
and furious; lithe and luxurious; chic and capacious. The
car that has everything? Could be. III
Hexagonal design theme is
very Lamborghini ,but
there’s less of a fighter
cockpit feel to it all
Serene Triplets
Three beautiful and unique Serenissima sports cars, conjured up
by Count Volpi in the 1960s, have been unearthed from a 50-year
incarceration in his castle. Their story is curious but captivating
Story by Richard Heseltine
Images by Artcurial
20
auto italia
I
n a roundabout way, the wonderfully
esoteric Serenissima marque provided a
link between a palace coup that once
threatened to devastate Ferrari, and the
first faltering steps that helped establish
McLaren as a superpower in Formula 1.
Throw in a Venetian nobleman,
Stirling Moss’ racing mechanic
and an American-born
designer, and the
story becomes
even more
compelling.
To most
punters,
even
those
who love the strange stuff, mention of
Serenissima generally fails to register even
trace elements of recognition, but then it
isn’t as though the marque showered itself in
glory. There was barely even a trickle, but the
three cars gathered here – all set to go under
the hammer at Artcurial’s Rétromobile sale in
February 2019 – captivate because they are
so, well, enigmatic.
The story kicks off with an argument, or
rather several. By the end of the 1950s, Enzo
Ferrari had been royally upstaged by
garagistes from Surbiton with their mid/rearengined ‘beetles’. Il Commendatore bridled at
the concept of following Cooper’s lead and
“putting the horse behind the cart” but he
relented in time for Phil Hill to scoop the
1961 F1 drivers’ title aboard a 156
‘Sharknose’. Then it all began to unravel.
British upstarts fought back a year later and
the Scuderia – still using the same car –
quickly became an also-ran. Cue frank
exchanges of views, many relating to Enzo’s
wife Laura, who apparently wanted a say in
everything, followed by a mass walk-out that
included Hill and engineers Carlo Chiti and
Giotto Bizzarrini, among others.
Expecting a contrite Ferrari to come a
begging, they were disappointed. Chiti (and
briefly Bizzarrini) didn’t go far, however. With
backing from Tuscan industrialist, Giorgio Billi,
and wealthy French-born tin mining heir,
Jaime Ortiz-Patiño, a new company was
formed in Bologna under the alias Societa per
Azioni Automobili Turismo Sport Serenissima.
This was a bit of a mouthful, even for Italians
so it soon became ATS (Automobili Turismo e
Sport). Late to the table was Count Volpi di
Misurato of Veneto, who took a 20 per cent
stake in the firm. The nobleman, whose
father had been a close ally of Benito
Mussolini and who also founded the Venice
Film Festival, inherited a sizable fortune in his
mid-20s and spent much of it going motor
racing, most memorably with the Drogobodied Ferrari 250 ‘Breadvan’.
Chiti was charged with simultaneously
developing a Grand Prix chassis and an
engine, in addition to a road car. Unwanted
distractions from warring paymasters
threatened to derail his efforts from the
outset. And it would only get worse. When
the ATS Tipo 100 finally appeared at Spa for
the 1963 Belgian GP, it proved an unmitigated
disaster. Lead driver Hill failed to register a
single World Championship point that season,
appalling reliability hobbling the American’s
efforts (he only finished one race). The ATS
2500 GT car, meanwhile, broke cover at the
1963 Geneva Salon but, for all the positive
ink, only 11 or so of these gorgeous Franco
Scaglione-styled machines were made before
the firm turned turtle in 1964.
Then matters took a turn for the tortuous.
Alf Francis, Stirling Moss’ former spanner
man, had tried working his magic on the
ATS GP car with the help of his business
partner, gearbox king Valerio Colotti. With a
new, shorter spaceframe and fresh body,
the renamed Derrington-Francis appeared at
the 1964 Italian GP where Portuguese
charger Mário Cabral qualified last before
auto italia
21
Agena road car featured a
Serenissima mid-mounted
V8 engine and pretty
aluminium bodywork
retiring the car from the race with ignition
problems. The car then disappeared into the
ether but the connection led to Volpi
returning to car manufacture as Automobili
Serenissima, after what was left of the ATS
sports car construction arm moved to
Francis’ Modena facility.
From a new factory in Formigine, chief
engineer Alberto Massimino modified the
existing ATS chassis for the new strain, while
also developing the ‘Tipo 358V’ 3.0litre V8 - with
22
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twin overhead cams per bank - from scratch.
Period figures quoted 307hp at 8000rpm,
Massimino also designing the gearbox while
he was at it. Former Pininfarina artiste
Francesco Salomone (who has retrospectively
been credited with shaping the Ferrari 275
GTB) penned a sleek form to clothe the
frame, the aluminium bodywork being crafted
by Carrozzeria Gransport. The resultant
prototype made its bow at the Aerautodromo
SERENISSIMA
Ghia’s Tom Tjaarda
designed this 1968 GT for
Count Volpi but sadly no
production run ensued
di Modena on 20 December 1964. After being
evaluated by journalist and Le Mans winner
Paul Frère, chassis 001 then underwent a
redesign (finished in April 1965) with a revised
chassis and new Salamone-styled body. In
October of that year, the reminted 003 was
presented as the Serenissima Jet.
But not before it made an appearance at
the Le Mans trials. Two cars had been
provisionally entered for the 1965 24-hour
endurance classic, via Rob Walker, although
both entries were quickly scrubbed. Louis
Corberto lapped the Jet – now with the
engine enlarged to 3.5 litres - to a best
time of 4min 18.6sec, the fastest
runners being almost 50sec
quicker.
For the race proper, a new car – the
Fantuzzi-bodied Torpedo, as pictured here
(in non-running condition) – was driven by
Jean-Claude Sauer and 50-something
businessman Jean de Montemart at an
even slower pace, only to retire after 40
laps when the gearbox ran out of cogs.
Serenissima meandered along thereafter,
scrabbling to find a foothold. Then matters
took a turn for the interesting. In May 1966,
Bruce McLaren approached Volpi with a view
to adopting Serenissima’s engine for his
fledgling F1 team in place of the troublesome
Ford IndyCar-based unit. The engine was then
taken out of the Jet and installed in the rear
of a McLaren M2B-2. Reverted back to 3.0
litres, and running on Weber 42IDM carbs, it
produced a relatively humble 280hp.
The relationship got off to a bad start at
Spa-Francorchamps after the V8 let
go in qualifying; it then did
the same at the following
meeting at Zandvoort.
Fortunately, the engine
held together long
enough to propel the Kiwi
to sixth place in the
British Grand Prix at
Brands Hatch, scoring his
team’s first-ever World
Championship point – and
a small piece of motor
sport history – in the
process. Not that
Serenissima would feature in F1
to the end of the 1966 season.
Volpi changed tack and initiated a
mid-engined road car project. The Agena
featured Tipo 358V power and an aluminium
body, although there remains a degree of
confusion as which carrozzeria actually
bodied it. According to Volpi: “Originally, we
fitted louvred lights. Then the mechanics
modified the front to include four lights but,
auto italia
23
as this was less elegant, we redesigned it to
improve its appearance. The end result, with
covered lights and a more discreet lower air
intake, was more harmonious. At some stage,
a rear spoiler was fitted, but this was later
removed.” It would be fair to say that the
Agena pictured here was very much a
prototype,
with all that
entails, the
interior
being awash
with
exposed
screwheads
and signs of modifications. The eight-track
Philips audio set-up is oh so groovy, though.
Then there’s mysteriously-named Ghia GT
Coupé – confusingly also referred to as
Agena in period – just to heap confusion onto
future historians. The car was originally fitted
with a ‘Massimino’ V8 engine, but this was
quickly replaced in 1969 with an Alf Francisdesigned, 3470cc ‘M-167’ engine, which it
retains today. Boasting twin overhead
camshafts and three valves per cylinder (two
intake and one exhaust), and equipped with
four gurgling Weber 40 DCN14 carburettors, it
was purportedly good for 320hp at 7500 rpm.
Power was transmitted to the rear wheels via
a five-speed Serenissima/Francis gearbox,
complete with limited-slip differential.
The late, great Tom Tjaarda styled this car.
He told the author in 2012: “I was first
Show in 1968 where it received a rather
bland coverage by the media. After that,
de Tomaso tried to convince Count Volpi to
invest in production. Volpi was a rather
strange individual; very courteous and
elegant but also quite introverted. He didn’t
discuss much about the car while I was
designing it, or
when the
prototype was
being made. I
think I saw him
only a couple
of times. The
design and
execution of the car was done very quickly
as de Tomaso wanted to get paid quickly.
I was never satisfied with the design
myself. It seemed a bit too Mangusta-like
and the proportions were not to my liking.
It was rushed through and there wasn’t the
time to make changes or perfect certain
areas of the car.
“I do remember de Tomaso attempting to
convince Volpi that he should fish up the
money to pay for tooling-up a production
programme. It seems that the projected
Count Volpi was a rather strange individual; very
“
courteous and elegant but also quite introverted
”
24
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involved with Serenissima just after I entered
Carrozzeria Ghia in December 1967. Actually,
the Count was, I gather, a friend of [Ghia
boss] Alessandro de Tomaso [having entered
an OSCA-powered de Tomaso for the 1961
French GP where it was shared by Nino
Vaccarella and Giorgio Scarlatti]. After a few
short months at Ghia, de Tomaso handed me
this project, asking me to design a sports car
using the same basic chassis of the de
Tomaso Mangusta.
“The car was displayed at the Turin Auto
SERENISSIMA
Agena was an early
example of a mid-engined
supercar, produced just one
year after the Miura
auto italia
25
cost scared the Count away and no one
ever saw him again around Ghia. The
prototype and he just vanished and the
project was never talked about again. I think
Volpi made the right decision to walk away,
as it was an easy way to make a large
fortune a very small one.”
Serenissima limped on to the end of the
1960s, taking delivery of a McLaren Can-Am
sports-racer chassis in 1968, with one of its
3.0-litre V8s substituting the usual Chevrolet
item. Former works Ferrari driver Jonathan
Williams picked up a few minor placings along
the way (including a second place at EnnaPergusa), while a single-seater Formula Libre
car amounted to little. Then in 1970 Volpi
called it quits. Rights to the name were sold
Fabulous Fantuzzi-bodied
‘Torpedo’ made an
appearance at the Le
Mans 24 Hours race
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to Moreno Baldi but nothing was heard of the
marque subsequently.
The three cars pictured here were
retained by the Count and stored at his
castle and have not turned a wheel since
the 1960s. Accordingly, because they – and
Volpi – were never seen at motoring events
thereafter, Serenissima was – and remains –
a marque draped in mystery and clouded in
half-truths. In many ways, that only adds to
the sense of wonder.
Once sold at auction, expect to see these
cars appearing at a high-end concours in,
say, two or three years’ time. While
Serenissima failed to set the world alight, it
did establish a connection between some of
the greatest names in motor sport history,
becoming an attention-grabbing footnote
that arguably deserved more. No doubt that
isn’t what Count Volpi was after, but at
least it’s something. III
How to Buy These Cars...
All three cars will be auctioned at Artcurial’s
Paris Rétromobile sale on Friday 8 February
2019 – full details at artcurial.com
1966 Serenissima Fantuzzi-bodied Torpedo –
estimate: €1.3 to €1.8 million
1967 Serenissima Agena –
estimate: €400,000 to €600,000
1968 Serenissima GT Ghia –
estimate: €400,000 to €600,000
Taking The Tube
Alfa’s glorious tubular-chassis TZ
won many races. The victories might
have been even more numerous, had
the TZ started competing earlier
Story Elvio Deganello
Photography by Michael Ward
28
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A
n Alfa Romeo with a tubular chassis,
perfect for racing – an utterly enticing
prospect when it was first suggested
back in 1958. But Alfa Romeo’s
management was divided. Some did not
want the factory to be directly involved in racing,
partly because of the risk of failure, but also because
it would divert energy away from mass production.
Other managers, meanwhile, believed that racing was
in Alfa’s DNA and they wanted to make a comeback
with a proper competition car.
A compromise was reached and, in 1958, Alfa Romeo
made an agreement with Carlo Abarth. The proposed
agreement was that Abarth would build the car and
make it competitive. Alfa Romeo sent Mario Colucci to
Abarth’s facilities in Turin, where he designed a strong
and light (50kg) tubular frame and installed an engine
derived from the Alfa Romeo Giulietta. Bertone built
the bodywork and the Alfa-Abarth 1000 Coupe debuted
at the Turin Motor Show in November 1958 (pic below).
auto italia
29
ABOVE: Alfa Romeo 105.10
and 105.11 Spider
prototypes on test in 1961
LEFT & BELOW: Early GTZ
sketches by Ercole Spada
However, this model never reached production.
According to Giuseppe Busso, technical director of
Alfa Romeo at the time, the reason was that it would
have cost too much to build. In 2005, Busso told me:
“With the cancellation of the Alfa-Abarth 1000
programme, everyone lost something – Alfa Romeo,
Abarth and Bertone. The only person who gained
was Mario Colucci who was hired by Abarth, where he
had a brilliant career.”
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I think this is only partly true. As it happened, Alfa
Romeo did eventually benefit because in 1960 Busso
adapted Colucci’s Alfa-Abarth chassis to instigate the
105.10 project for a Sport 1300. The chassis was fitted
with a modified Giulietta engine with a dry sump, roller
bearing crankshaft and twin ignition. It was also
uprated with disc brakes, independent rear suspension
and an improvised open body. For the final bodywork,
Zagato's Ercole Spada was asked to do a new design.
ALFA ROMEO GIULIA TZ
ABOVE: The GTZ prototype
had gained a hardtop by
the winter of 1961
RIGHT: Spada’s early
thoughts on the TZ coupe
BELOW: The Giulia TZ, as
presented in late 1962,
suggested production was
imminent. Sadly it wasn’t!
In October 1961, the Sport 105.10 was ready. Fitted
with a 1600cc engine adapted to fit in a strengthened
chassis, the new model acquired the code 105.11.
However, track tests revealed that the lap times
remained the same as the old Alfa Romeo Giulietta SZ
and the lack of performance was attributed to poor
aerodynamics. An improvised hardtop made the car
immediately faster. A lesson was learned and Ercole
Spada sketched a coupe very similar to the TZ that we
know, but with different headlights and tail.
Spada recalls that the prototype had round
headlights and teardrop-shaped indicators, while Busso
preferred rectangular headlights (which were fitted to
the prototype exhibited at the 1962 Turin Motor Show).
Before the TZ entered production, however, the
rectangular headlights were discarded with great
pleasure by Ercole Spada. He also changed the tail ‘lip’
that was turned inside because tester Guido Moroni
had verified that turning the ‘lip’ to the outside
improved maximum speed and stability.
The 105.11 coupé exhibited at the Turin Motor Show
in November 1962 under the title Giulia TZ suggested
that production was near. In reality, it had not even
been decided who would build the car. The situation
was resolved during a dinner between current and
former Alfa Romeo employees, plus Carlo Chiti who was
now at ATS in Bologna. Also present was Ludovico
Chizzola (now an Innocenti dealer in Feletto Umberto,
Udine) and his brother Gianni (now at Alfa Romeo). The
latter expressed his disappointment at the continuing
uncertainty over project 105.11, inspiring Chiti to stand
up and announce triumphantly: “Let's do the TZ!”
Alfa Romeo management agreed. Chiti suggested
the ATS factory as a suitable production location, while
Ludovico Chizzola offered a workshop at his Innocenti
dealership. On 4 March 1963, Chiti and Chizzola
established the company Auto-Delta, where the
triangular shape of the Greek letter ‘delta’ symbolised
the triangle between Bologna (Chiti's main workplace),
Feletto Umberto (home of the newly formed company)
and Milan (home of Alfa Romeo).
The Dipre Espe (Design Department and Experiences)
workshops at Alfa Romeo built the first Giulia TZ. AutoDelta would build almost all the TZs, sourcing the
chassis from SAI Ambrosini of Passignano sul
Trasimeno. The engines, gearboxes and other
mechanical parts came from Alfa Romeo, the bodies
from Zagato and details in electron (aluminium and
magnesium light alloy) from Moto Gilera. The brakes
and dampers were obtained from foreign suppliers.
auto italia
31
Everything was then assembled by craftsmen at
Feletto Umberto. Production took place at a rate of five
cars per week in order to complete the 100 examples
required for homologation in the GT category by 1963.
In anticipation of the homologation, two Giulia TZs
were registered in the Prototype category and debuted
in the Tour de Corse on 10 November 1963, but they
both withdrew due to an accident. Two weeks later at
the Monza circuit, Giulia TZs driven by Lorenzo Bandini
(chassis 750025), Roberto Bussinello (750022),
Giancarlo Baghetti (750001) and Consalvo Sanesi
(750007) were classified in the first four places in the
Monza, the Giulia TZ won again with Sivio Moser
(chassis 750010), and also in the Tour de France came a
class win for Jean Rolland and Gabriel Augias (750015).
Finally, on 11 October 1964, Silvio Moser and Karl Foitek
won their class in the 1000km of Paris with chassis
750010. In effect, the Giulia TZ won all the races in the
World Championship in which it participated.
Furthermore, in the hands of private customers, it won
numerous other rallies, track races and hillclimbs.
After such initial success, Alfa Romeo’s management
decided to boost racing activity. General Manager,
Orazio Satta Puliga, hired Giorgio Valentini as head of
Homologation rule changes meant 1965 was the TZ’s
“final
racing season. It was crowned with successes
”
Sport Prototype category of the FISA Cup. However, it
must be said that the TZs’ only competitor was an
Innocenti-Morris IM3 – hardly a great threat!
On 13 January 1964, the FIA homologated the Giulia
TZ in the GT category and a week later it made its
debut in the World Championship at Sebring. The class
winner was a TZ (chassis 750052) driven by Jim Kaser
and Chuck Stoddard. Giulia TZs then appeared in other
championship races. In April 1964, a TZ (chassis
750031) came third overall and first in class in the
Targa Florio with Roberto Bussinello and Nino Todaro.
There was a victory for TZ 750028 crewed by
Giampiero Biscaldi and Ernst Furtmayr in May’s
Nürburgring 1000km, and a second victory for Roberto
Bussinello and Bruno Deserti in June’s 24 Hours of
Le Mans (chassis 750011).
In September 1964, at the Inter Europe Cup at
32
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sports activities for Dipre Espe. Unfortunately,
however, there was immediate conflict with Giuseppe
Busso. “If the newcomer is allowed to express his
opinion,” said Busso during a meeting, “I resign!”
Immediately after this, Valentini was displaced at
Auto-Delta where, all by himself and almost secretly,
he developed the changes that gave rise to the Giulia
TZ2 in just three days. According to Valentini, the TZ
was too high so he worked to lower it. First he moved
the steering column from beneath the upper chassis
cross-member to above it. He then moved the exhaust
pipes to the side to lower the driver's seat, fitted 13inch rims in place the 15-inch originals and adapted
the suspension to suit.
The new lowered chassis was fitted to six Giulia TZs
(chassis 750102, 750103, 750105, 750107, 750108 and
750109), three of which were bodied in glassfibre by
ABOVE: The 1964 Le Mans
Giulia TZ #750006 piloted
by Giampiero Biscaldi and
Giancarlo Sala
ALFA ROMEO GIULIA TZ
ABOVE: The Bianchi-Rolland
TZ #750108 in full flow at
the 1965 Targa Florio
BELOW: Beguiling TZ2
Balzaretti & Modigliani. Bertone created the Canguro
show car on chassis 750101, while Pininfarina built the
Giulia Sport show car on chassis 750114. Finally, nine
chassis were used for the TZ2 (chassis 750104,
750106, 750110, 750111, 750112, 750113, 750115,
750116 and 750117). All nine benefited from other
important improvements such as a dry-sump engine,
Campagnolo wheels and bodywork that was lower,
lighter and more dynamic. The aluminium-bodied TZ2
chassis 750104 served as the ‘master’ for the other
bodies realised in glassfibre.
In 1964, Auto-Delta was transformed into Autodelta
SpA (a joint stock company). It was also decided to
relocate the workshop from Feletto Umberto to
Settimo Milanese, while competition management was
appointed in 1965. Unfortunately, the FIA announced
that new sporting regulations for 1966 required the
production of at least 500 examples to obtain
homologation in the GT category. This would mean that
the Giulia TZ would have to run in the Sport category in
1966, up against cars designed specifically for this
class, in which it would simply not be competitive.
1965 would therefore be the TZ’s final official
season. It was crowned by successes, such as victory
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33
in March 27 in the 12 Hours of Sebring by Jean Rolland
and Bernard Consten. There was also victory on April
25 for the debutant TZ2 (chassis 750106) of Roberto
Bussinello and Andrea De Adamich in the 1000km of
Monza. May 1965 saw a lowered-chassis TZ (750108)
take a win with Lucien Bianchi and Jean Rolland in the
Targa Florio. Other victories included Boley Pittard in
the 500km of Spa and the TZ2 of Giacomo ‘Geki’ Russo
and Andrea de Adamich in the Nürburgring 1000km.
By 1966, Autodelta’s attention was focused on the
Alfa Romeo Giulia GTA, conceived to dominate in the
Turismo category. The glorious TZ continued to be
raced successfully in the hands of privateers for many
years with significant results in national racing
championships and hillclimbs.
SIMILAR BUT DIFFERENT
The TZs were all hand-built, and were never exactly
the same. Theoretically they can be divided into
‘street’ and ‘race’ types. The former have bumpers,
sloping windows, bright profiles under the doors and
the bonnet locks controlled from the inside. The
‘race’ types have no bumpers or profiles, and had
sliding windows and external bonnet handles, plus
some mechanical details in electron. In reality,
there was a mix and match of components, in
particular the windows.
Some race examples had wheels with Rudge
Whitworth central fastenings to speed up pit
operations in long-distance races, as well as a quickopening filler cap. The 13-inch rims of the TZ2 have
round holes like the Alfa Romeo Tipo 33, either 7J or
7½J width. The unique Bertone Canguro (pic above)
and Pininfarina Giulia Sport (pic below), both built on
‘Tubolare’ chassis, are completely different. Among
the TZ cars built by Zagato, chassis 750061 is unique
because it has a ‘double bubble’ roof requested by its
customer, Dimitri Nabokow.
Today the differences between TZs have tended to
merge because it is almost impossible to find bumpers
and other spare parts for the street version. As a
result, most TZs are restored as race models. III
ABOVE: TZs regularly
appear at both the Silver
Flag hillclimb and
Goodwood Revival events
34
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Personal
Best
Racing driver and
designer Tony Best chose
his collection of Italian
competition cars based
not so much on sporting
prowess – though they all
undoubtedly have that –
as on aesthetic appeal
Story by Mike Rysiecki
Photography by Michael Ward
I
f you were drawing up a list of the people you’d
want to keep you company on a road trip to Italy,
Tony Best would be right up at the top. His
contagious enthusiasm for Italian sports cars
would keep your spirits high, and his proven
record behind the wheel of some tricky-handling
vehicles would let you rest peacefully when it was
your turn in the passenger seat.
Tony’s journey to building one of the most
appealing multi-discipline collections of Italian cars,
all with sound pedigrees, began not in Maranello,
Milan or Turin, but with a much ‘safer’ starter set of
air-cooled VWs. Offering little clue to his future car
collecting intentions, early examples of a Type 2, in
this case a split-screen campervan and an early ovalwindow Beetle, form the core of his Wolfsburg
heritage group. But it is a Karmann Ghia which
provides the link across his two favourite genres.
More of that air-cooled-Italian-designed 2+2 thread
will come later as we work our way through the
delights of Tony’s ‘garage of Italian grace’.
Since Tony is a successful industrial designer,
aesthetics feature strongly in his life, and the rationale
for his Italian collection is easy to grasp. It has been
populated with, as he says, “things I like, that are just
good to look at”. However, there is an additional twist
to that seemingly simple foundation; all of the
examples are specialist competition cars from
different motorsport disciplines.
For someone who has, since boyhood, always
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THE BEST COLLECTION
LEFT: 246 Dino is the only
example currently racing.
THIS PAGE: This superb
Ferrari 212 Inter won the
1953 Coppa InterEuropa
wanted to race, Tony took an almighty leap straight
into historic single-seater racing when he acquired
his first Italian car, and one of the last of the frontengined Grand Prix cars. His Ferrari 246 Dino was
built in the early 1970s and is one of three
recreations built from the remains of the 1950s
originals which were, as was often the case back in
the day, broken up and destroyed.
The 246 Dino was the very last front-engined car to
win a Grand Prix, though the format persisted in
Formula 2 in Italy. Late-1950s Grand Prix racing was
dominated by rear-engined cars from Cooper, Brabham
and Lotus but when British teams boycotted the Italian
Grand Prix at Monza in 1960, a Ferrari 246 Dino scored
the final win for a front-engined car. Tony’s is the only
246 Dino currently racing, and he campaigns it in the
HGPCA for cars manufactured between 1930 and 1966.
Getting the car to where it would run reliably and be
competitive in historic racing was a long, laborious
process. Tony first saw the car race on track at the
2011 Goodwood Revival where Rick Hall, of renowned
Lincolnshire classic racing specialist Hall & Hall, raced
the car for its previous owner and qualified the car on
the front row of the grid. The Dino engine was
renowned for two things in its day: the smooth
delivery of power, and its fragile reliability. At the
Revival, the car displayed both characteristics, but
Tony was not put off.
Over the next four years, Tony admits to having
moments of doubt while the engine was being rebuilt
and all he had was an empty but beautiful rolling
chassis in his garage. You don’t just go out and buy
new parts for these engines, so having new heads
cast took time and patience.
When the day finally came, in 2016, Tony
accompanied Rob Hall to Donington Park for a test
session. The long wait was immediately forgotten as
Tony got his first experience of the Dino’s power. He
describes the car as having a “deep and completely
different sound to other period Grand Prix cars. The
power delivery is especially even which, with such easy
gear-changes, makes for smooth acceleration, while
the exhaust sound just gets louder and louder. The car
is easy to drive with nice spacing between the pedals.
Unlike some earlier cars, you sit lower down in the Dino
and feel quite surrounded and safe. I was immediately
able to go fairly quickly.”
Tony is proud of the look of the Dino and praises the
complete and thorough attention to detail that Hall &
Hall give to his car. “Very fast cars like this can be
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dangerous, so everything has to be fully sorted. They
seem to love it as much as I do and make sure that all
the details, right down to the proper grey-painted
spokes on the chrome rimmed Borrani wire wheels and
the hand painted numbers, are done properly.”
Tony recently scored double podium finishes at the
2018 Silverstone Classic. In the Goodwood Revival 2018
Richmond and Gordon Trophies race for 1952-1960 2.5litre Grand Prix cars, he finished third in the front-
era of ‘race on Sunday, sell on Monday’ for major
manufacturers and a 212 Inter was allegedly bought by
Ford in Michigan to examine in preparation for building
its original Thunderbird. Tony’s is a Vignale-bodied
example, but others had coachwork by Touring,
Pininfarina, Ghia and Farina. The 212 Inter sold
particularly well in North America after Piero Taruffi
and Luigi Chinetti won the 1951 Carrera Panamerica in a
Vignale 212 coupe.
the Alfa RL home, I quickly had to get used to the
“ Driving
centre-pedal throttle and external lever brake
”
engined class after making up five places in one of the
most hotly contested races of the festival weekend.
With the Dino now fully sorted, Tony is enjoying the car
and making the most of it. His first outing for 2019 will
likely be the VSCC Spring Start at Silverstone.
Two years after buying the Dino racer, Tony added
another very special Ferrari, also with a significant
competition history, to his stable. The Ferrari 212 Inter
is a 1952 car with early racing history in the hands of
Franco Cornacchia, a Milanese Ferrari dealer, who won
the 1953 Coppa InterEuropa in this car. This was the
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Given its competition history with Scuderia Guastalla,
which was Cornacchia’s racing team, it is no surprise
that, when Tony acquired the car, the hand-formed
nose section was no longer as originally created. It has
since been reformed and is now faithful to the original
design. Those with the sharpest eyes will also notice
another quirk of hand-built cars: at the rear end, the
left and right-hand wings are ever so slightly different
in profile. During its early life, this car returned to the
Ferrari factory to have the later 2.7-litre Colombo V12
engine upgrade fitted, which technically could make
THE BEST COLLECTION
Tony’s 1923 Alfa Romeo RL
has been rebodied as a
Targa Florio car. He’s raced
it but it’s more at home as
a summer tourer
this car a 212/225. A subsequent return to Maranello
designated the car as one of the very first ‘Classiche’
Ferraris to receive the prized ‘Certificato di
Authenticita’. The car’s competition history is far from
over, as it has completed nine classic Mille Miglias and
has also raced at Goodwood.
Next to join Tony’s collection was a 1923 Alfa
Romeo RL, a car dating from the time when Enzo
Ferrari was driving for Alfa’s racing team. First
developed by Giuseppe Merosi in 1920, the Tipo RL
proved itself at the Targo Florio in 1923 when RLs
finished first and second. Like many sports cars of
this era, Tony’s has been rebodied, in this case by Neil
Twyman, as a Targa Florio car.
It’s another Hall & Hall-influenced car, which is in the
collection simply because Tony “has always liked preWW2 cars and the RL Targa Florio looks great. Pre-war
cars aren’t always great to drive or reliable, but with
the help of Rick Hall and Carol Corliss [pre-war registrar
of the Alfa Romeo Owners’ Club], I was introduced to
this car’s owner. Prior to purchase, Rick drove the car
and was reassuring in his evaluation. I got to drive the
car back to its home and quickly had to get used to the
centre-pedal throttle and external lever brake.”
The RL was Alfa’s first sports model of the interwar period and has been added to the collection for
participation in historic rallies. It has a 3.0-litre six-
cylinder early crossflow engine which develops
plenty of torque. Allegedly, its crankshaft weighs in
at over 44kg! Race gearing makes it a 110mph car,
although the all-round drum brakes demand a bit of
planning and anticipation when open roads turn to
urban streets. Tony says the brakes are “just enough
for this heavy car”.
The Alfa has appeared at the Goodwood Festival of
Speed and Salon Privé with its previous owner, and
Tony raced the car in the 2016 Goodwood Members’
Meeting SF Edge Trophy. “Although I had never
contemplated racing this car, it felt very solid and
secure enough to enjoy the torque and speed on the
race track. I’d do it again, but this really is a car for
tootling around the Cotswolds and going to a
country pub in the summer.”
He is planning on taking the RL to the Leggenda di
Bassano rally in Italy in June 2019. “I’m really just
starting to enjoy this car and plan to try and use it
more. It’s coming up to 100 years old but doesn’t feel it.
It’s a very civilised car to drive which, back in its day,
must have been way ahead of its time. It always starts
and with its very smooth engine, it always goes well.”
Now can we turn our attention back to the aircooled section of Tony’s Italian vehicles. For
completeness, it’s probably best to mention the
immaculate Lambretta Li 125 at this point – a late
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1959 Series 2 which once served as an inspirational
design piece in Tony’s studio. But to make a link back
to the Karmann Ghia and the VW collection, we need
to consider his 1967 Abarth 595.
The story of Carlo Abarth and his pioneering tuning
house is well documented. As Phil Ward recounts in his
2007 book Great Small Fiats, “A standard 500 wheezes
out around 18hp, giving the standard version a top
speed of 58mph. This does not sound like the basis for
anything remotely satisfying.” Carlo Abarth bored the
engine out to 594cc, added a larger carburettor, sports
exhaust, camshaft and alloy oil sump. The enlarged
engine now boasted 27hp at 5000 rpm. As Phil Ward
comments: “This is hardly gut-wrenching, horsepower,
but when you start with just 18hp, a 50 per cent power
increase is significant. The top speed went up to
75mph (a 39 per cent increase) and the acceleration
was hugely improved. The 595 engines were further
developed [and later cars, like Tony’s, produced 34hp at
5000rpm] still utilising the standard Fiat crankshaft.
This resulted in a Fiat 500 capable of over 80 mph!”
This 1967 595 is a fully-documented, matching-
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numbers, Abarth-factory assembled car. Correctly
designated as an ‘Abarth 105’, it was originally built in
the Fiat Mirafiori plant and first sold to a customer in
Treviso. This is Tony’s favourite “souped-up hot pocketrocket” which he much prefers over a classic MiniCooper. He comments: “The Abarth is always ‘on the
edge’ and the engine never sounds quite ‘settled’ – so
you just have to rev it!”
There are a few sympathetic custom additions to this
car, made by a previous owner who did some racing in
the 1980s. Cars like this one rarely escape additional
aftermarket improvements, so it’s no surprise to find
the wide arches filled with period-correct magnesium
alloy wheels, a pair of stylish door mirrors and an
authentic fixed hard top panel, which replaced the
original folding canvas sunroof.
With the story now having neatly closed the loop back
to an iconic Italian design with an air-cooled engine, we
look forward to trying out some of Tony Best’s Italian
collection. Look out for a future issue of Auto Italia when
we will feature a performance demonstration and track
test of Tony’s fabulous cars. III
Tony’s 1967 Fiat-Abarth
595 is a genuine Abarth
example with some
evocative period extras
HOT POINTS
We salute the now-departed Fiat Punto with a last blast
in the three hottest versions from each generation:
Mk1 GT Turbo, Mk2 HGT and Mk3 Abarth Scorpione
Story by Tim Pitt
Photos by Michael Ward
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T
he passing of the Fiat Punto in Europe in
2018 was not marked with fanfare or
flowers. After 25 years in production and
over nine million sales, Fiat’s erstwhile Bsegment hatchback slipped away quietly
across European markets last summer. No direct
replacement is planned.
At Auto Italia, we think that’s a shame. After all, the
Punto was part of a hatchback heritage that
stretches back (via the Uno and 127) to 1971. It lived
through three generations, the merger with Chrysler
and a joint venture with General Motors. It also won
the European Car of the Year award in 1995 and even
surpassed the Volkswagen Golf to become Europe’s
best seller in 1997.
The factors that killed off the Punto (‘Point’ in Italian)
included lack of investment, the rise of the SUV and
tougher safety legislation. But we’re here to celebrate
the car, not apportion blame. And what better way
than by gathering the three generations of Punto in
their hottest, most exciting forms?
Representing the Mk1 Punto is the turbocharged –
and tweaked – GT owned by Jason Earl. Our nearstandard Mk2 HGT, meanwhile, is Leigh Rose’s daily
driver, while the Mk3 Abarth Evo Scorpione is the
pride and joy of Lance Litherland. Amazingly, all three
men own at least one other Punto, with Leigh
boasting no fewer than four. Clearly, there’s
something about this small car…
If you’re keen to take the plunge with a Punto, they
are remarkably cheap to buy and – according to our
owners – very reliable. However, the number of GT and
HGT survivors is dwindling fast, so don’t delay. Jason
recommends the Punto GT Owners’ Club for parts and
advice, while Lance runs the Abarth Punto
Collective group on Facebook,
with help from friend
Steve Miller.
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MK1:FIATPUNTOGT
Giorgetto Giugiaro certainly penned some handsome
hatchbacks; his CV includes the Alfasud, Lancia Delta
and original Fiat Panda. The Mk1 Punto is one of his
less celebrated efforts, yet its 25 year-old design has
The range-topping Punto GT – often referred to as
the ‘GT Turbo’ – upped the visual drama with front fog
lamps, shapely side skirts and 14-inch alloy wheels. Its
boosted 1.4-litre engine was a development of the Mk2
Uno Turbo motor, developing 136hp and 150lb ft of
The Mk1’s 25-year old design has scarcely aged a day:
“
pert, pretty and refreshingly free of contrived cuteness
”
scarcely aged a day. Pert, pretty and refreshingly free
of contrived cuteness, it was a fitting follow-up to the
hugely popular Uno (another Giugiaro effort). Its large
tail lamps, incorporated into the C-pillars, were
emulated by the first Ford Focus, among others.
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torque. Zero to 62mph took under eight seconds, with
its top speed quoted as 124mph.
The 1997 Punto ‘GT3’ seen here is the third and final
evolution of the Mk1, with slightly less power as
standard (131hp), but a smaller turbo for quicker
Turbocharged GT offers
plenty of driving fun. Owner
Jason Earl spent 16 years
fettling it to his ideal spec
FIAT PUNTO GROUP TEST
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS
FIAT PUNTO GT
ENGINE:
POWER:
TORQUE:
TRANSMISSION:
TYRES:
DIMENSIONS:
WEIGHT:
TOP SPEED:
0-62MPH:
response. We say ‘as standard’ because Jason Earl’s car
is anything but. A 16-year labour of love, it shares his
garage with two other Punto GTs: a yellow GT2 and a
stripped-out GT3 racer with a roll cage. “It will be
putting out 300hp by the time I’m finished,” grins Jason.
This Punto is his ‘show’ car, finished in beautiful
Rialto Blue – a colour only offered on the GT for a
single model year. Eibach lowering springs (-30mm) and
16-inch OZ Ultraleggera alloys provide a sportier
stance, while an Ultra Racing strut brace stiffens the
chassis. Cosmetic upgrades include a louvred bonnet
and Heko wind deflectors. Inside, Jason’s fitted an
upgraded stereo and a custom pod on the A-pillar to
house turbo boost and oil pressure gauges.
There are more mods beneath the skin, with EBC
1372cc 4-cyl turbo
131hp at 5600rpm
148lb ft (200Nm) at 3000rpm
5-speed manual
185/55x14
3770mm (L), 1625mm (W), 1440mm (H)
1000kg
124mph
7.9sec
brake discs and pads, a Viper carbon induction kit,
Samco hoses and a Blue Flame stainless steel
exhaust. Power is up to 151hp: plenty in a car that
weighs less than a metric tonne. “You can drive it
sensibly, but it’s also really responsive and fast enough
to be fun,” Jason explains.
The GT’s power curve is a little flat until the turbo
wakes up, then rockets eagerly from 3000rpm to the
redline, dump valve whooshing with every upshift. The
five-speed manual ’box needs deliberation – doubly so
when selecting reverse – but its steering is swift and
full of feedback. Bigger rims and shorter springs mean
Jason’s Punto feels jittery at low speeds, yet
commendably planted in the corners. It’s an analogue
hot hatch of the old school, and all the better for that.
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MK2:FIATPUNTOHGT
By the late 1990s, hot hatchbacks had fallen from
fashion. Spoilers and go-faster stripes were out, subtle
street sleepers were in, and the 1999 ‘Nuova’ Punto
HGT chimed perfectly with the times. Indeed, the fullfat 130hp HGT was now supplemented by a semiskimmed 80hp Sporting, and available with five doors.
Unless you chose the optional Abarth bodykit, it was
almost indistinguishable from the standard car.
For diehard Fiat fan Leigh Rose, you sense the HGT’s
anonymity is part of its appeal. “They’re so affordable
to buy,” he says, “but there are less than 200 on UK
roads now”. Leigh’s daily driver is standard apart from a
stainless steel exhaust and aftermarket radio. He also
owns another HGT for spares, a Punto Sporting, a
Bravo HGT and a Stilo Schumacher – oh, and another
Mk2 Punto for his wife to drive.
With a 16-valve 1.8-litre non-turbo four beneath its
stubby snout, the HGT packs a big cubic capacity for a
small car. Performance is brisk, too: 0-62mph in 8.6
seconds and nudging 130mph flat-out. Maximum power
arrives at 6300rpm, with peak torque of 121lb ft at
4300rpm. Incidentally, the same engine also saw
service in the Fiat Barchetta and, in Twin Spark guise,
the Alfa Romeo 156.
The Mk2 Punto’s crisp contours still look
contemporary. Its jewel-like headlights were ahead of
their time, while the return of Fiat’s round ‘laurel
wreath’ badge was a pleasing nod to the past. Inside,
the plasticky cabin has dated, but – tiny door mirrors
aside – the ergonomics are hard to fault and Leigh’s car
wears its 84,000 miles well.
There are no squeaks or rattles on the move either,
despite the HGT’s rather firm ride. As I soon learned on
the banked bends of our test track, it also has a
propensity for body roll, an issue exacerbated by flat,
unsupportive seats. Nonetheless, the Punto is fun to
hustle along, aided by all-wheel disc brakes, a lively
throttle and responsive power steering – the latter
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with a switchable super-light City mode for parking.
That motor is the main attraction, though: peppy
and brimming with mid-range punch that negates the
need for the Sporting’s six-speed gearbox (the HGT
has a five-speeder). Leigh encourages me to push it to
the 7200rpm redline and I oblige, enjoying the busy
bluster of the motor and zingy rasp from the tailpipe.
As we arrive back at the car park, Leigh is smiling. “I
fall in love with cars and sometimes regret buying
them,” he says, “Not this one.”
1.8 HGT is now a rare sight.
Drives very differently to
the turbo cars. Owner Leigh
Rose is delighted with his
FIAT PUNTO GROUP TEST
TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS
FIAT PUNTO HGT
ENGINE:
POWER:
TORQUE:
TRANSMISSION:
TYRES:
DIMENSIONS:
WEIGHT:
TOP SPEED:
0-62MPH:
1747cc 4-cyl
130hp at 6300rpm
121lb ft (164Nm) at 4300rpm
5-speed manual
185/55x15 (195/45x15 optional)
3800mm (L), 1660mm (W), 1480mm (H)
1040kg
127mph
8.6sec
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TECHNICAL SPECIFICATIONS
ABARTH PUNTO EVO SCORPIONE
ENGINE:
POWER:
TORQUE:
TRANSMISSION:
TYRES:
DIMENSIONS:
WEIGHT:
TOP SPEED:
0-62MPH:
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1368cc 4-cyl turbo
180hp at 5750rpm
199b ft at 2500rpm
6-speed manual
215/45x17
4065mm (L), 1967mm (W), 1478mm (H)
1185kg
137mph
7.5sec
FIAT PUNTO GROUP TEST
MK3:ABARTHPUNTOEVOSCORPIONE
The Abarth Scorpione is the last word in Punto
performance – quite literally, given the model’s recent
demise. Just 199 examples of this edition were made,
sold via special order from the factory, just 10 of them
right-hand drive. It’s the only Punto eligible for the
Abarth register, for ‘cars of historical significance or
Punto Assetto Corsa as my daily driver. It’s surprising
how different the cars feel; the Scorpione is much
stiffer and sportier, with a torquier engine and better
brakes. I’ve owned it for two-and-a-half years now and I
don’t plan to sell it.”
I’m itching to get behind the wheel, but let’s start
with the spec. The Scorpione was only available in
black, with a full Essesse bodykit and painted matt
The Scorpione is much stiffer and sportier,
“with
a torquier engine and better brakes
”
Ultra-rare Scorpione is one
of only 10 made in RHD.
Lance Litherland uses his
for special occasions only
interest to collectors’. Several 695s, including the
Biposto and Tributo Ferrari, also make the grade.
So the Scorpione is a bit special, and owner Lance
Litherland treats it as such. “This is my special
occasion car,” he explains, “I have an Abarth Grande
black stripes (versus the stick-on stripes of lesser
Abarths). Gloss-black 18-inch alloys fill out the
wheelarches, while lowered Essesse springs and Koni
FSD shocks sort the stance. Its engine is treated to
remap, sports air filter and freer-flowing exhaust, with
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braking handled by 302mm floating front discs and
Brembo four-pot callipers.
Inside, there are bespoke Sabelt Corsa seats, with
stitched Abarth logos on the front and red release
levers that resemble racing cut-out switches on the
back. Subtle red and yellow stitching abounds, and I
also spot the unique Scorpione floor mats – “a
nightmare to get hold of,” sighs Lance. Beneath the
handbrake, a metal plaque proclaims: “1 of only 10”.
This car sounds much meatier than standard, thanks
to a custom titanium exhaust that Lance ordered from
Italy. Incredibly, it weighs just 6kg (“I weighed it”),
compared with 18kg for the Abarth system, but its
boisterous bark is the most palpable benefit. The 1.4litre engine, fortified by a Garrett turbocharger,
develops 180hp at 5750rpm and 199lb ft at just
2500rpm. In terms of straight-line speed, expect 062mph in 7.5 seconds and over 135mph.
Heading for the track, the Scorpione immediately
passes the ‘50-metre test’: its controls nicely weighted,
its damping measured and supple. The lack of reach
adjustment for the steering wheel means I’m forced to
adopt a ‘short arms, long legs’ driving position (the
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opposite of the Italian car stereotype), but the car
turns in keenly, hunkering down into corners then using
its ample torque to blast along the straights. Modernity
is on its side, of course, but as a driving machine, the
Scorpione leaves our other Puntos in the shade. III
180hp engine is to full
Essesse spec. This one has
a custom titanium exhaust
fitted and sounds fabulous
Feisty Foreign Fiats
From all around the world, there have been a surprising
number of feisty Fiats that you’ve probably never heard of.
Here’s our round-up of little-known global sporting Fiats
Story by Chris Rees
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W
e all know our sporting Fiats. From the
humblest Cinquecento Sporting to the
fieriest Fiat-Abarths, from Rally-badged
1970s specials to 21st century HGTs,
Fiat has produced a whole string of
high performance models.
But as we also all know, Fiat is a global car maker,
with factories in all corners of the world. While most of
these foreign plants are used to churn out basic A-to-B
transport, they’ve also been responsible for some
pretty tempting sporting machinery, too. Stuff that has
seldom, if ever, been seen in Europe, and has a touch
of the exotic for that reason.
From Brazil to Argentina, from Turkey to India, here
are some of Fiat’s hidden sporty treasures – covert
coupes, secret spiders, tucked-away turbos and
hidden hot hatchbacks.
FIAT 770/800 COUPE & SPIDER (ARGENTINA)
This smart coupe and convertible could have remained
– as with so many such cars – just another minor
product of the Italian coachbuilder craft. Having built a
few hundred of its special bodied Fiat 600s from 1959
onwards, Carrozzeria Vignale was all ready to ditch its
designs. But Fiat’s Argentinian factory had other ideas,
and acquired the rights to mass produce Vignale’s
600s locally in 1965.
In fact, this model had already – from 1961 – been
licence-built in Germany as the Fiat Neckar Riviera 770.
Fiat Concord basically made it in Argentina under the
name Fiat 770 Coupé, powered by a 767cc Fiat 600D
engine with 23.6hp. It was renamed 800 in 1966, when
Vignale’s a convertible version was also launched.
Manufacture of coupe went on until 1969, while the
Spider soldiered on until 1970.
FIAT 1500 COUPE, 1600 SPORT
& 125 SPORT (ARGENTINA)
Following its Fiat 600-based special bodies, Vignale sold
its Michelotti-designed Fiat 1500-based coupe to Fiat
Argentina, having concluded making some 150
examples in Italy from 1963 to 1966. The Argentinian
version was basically the same as the Italian one
except for minor details like its locally-made Sandrini
steering wheel and different centre console. Initially it
was powered by Fiat’s 1481cc 81hp engine, raised in
1969 to 1625cc and 92hp, in both cases with fourspeed manual transmission.
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After some 5228 examples had been manufactured,
it was redesigned in 1970 with a fastback roof – very
successfully, in fact, echoing the look of the Fiat Dino –
and was renamed 1600 Sport. When its engine was
swapped again in 1972 for a Fiat 125 twin cam (with
100hp, then 110hp and finally 125hp), it was renamed
125 Sport. It continued in production until 1978, latterly
with an outlandish rear spoiler, and even enjoyed some
racing success locally.
FIAT 128 IAVA (ARGENTINA)
IAVA (Industria Argentina de Vehículos de Avanzada)
was created by a group of Fiat dealers in Argentina in
1971, a bit like a South American version of Abarth. It
took the Fiat 128 and made a string of tuned models
from 1971 to 1982. Initially the 1.1-litre engine was
tuned to 71hp, then IAVA produced 1.3-litre models
with between 88hp and 103hp. Interior accessories
and aerodynamic add-ons were also offered – as well
as a tuned Fiat 133!
FIAT 147 RALLYE, RACING
& SPAZIO TR (BRAZIL)
Fiat’s Brazilian wing launched its own development of
the 127 – the 147 – in 1976. It took only until 1977 for
its sporty 147 Rallye model to be launched,
distinguishable by its front spoiler and bonnet vent. It
was fitted with a 1.3-litre twin-choke carb engine with
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72hp, usefully more powerful than the Italian-made 127
Sport with its 1050cc powerplant. In 1982, the Rallye
was renamed Racing and later still the Spazio TR.
Emerson Fittipaldi even offered his own special version
with a black grille, alloy wheels and spoilers, plus
reworked manifolds and twin carbs for 75hp.
FIAT 147 SORPASSO (ARGENTINA)
The South American development of Fiat’s 127, the
147, was made in Argentina from 1981. The following
year, a sporty version called the 147 Sorpasso was
launched by IAVA with a larger 1.3-litre engine
developing 90hp (some 30hp more than the standard
1049cc model). It also got alloy wheels, fog lights and a
spoiler. With a 0-62mph time of 8.2 seconds and a
101mph top speed, this was the fastest car made in
Argentina at the time, and the world’s fastest 127
derivative. It’s rare though: just 405 Sorpassos were
built from 1981 to 1984.
FIAT OGGI CSS (BRAZIL)
The Fiat Oggi was a unique-toBrazil two-door salon version of
the Fiat 147 sold between 1983
and 1985. Mostly it was a
sensible runaround but in 1984
Fiat launched a racy model
called the CSS with a beefy
1415cc engine. The CSS was
also used in Brazilian racing but
only around 300 units were sold.
CLOCKWISE FROM TOP LEFT:
1500 Coupe, 147 Sorpasso,
Oggi CSS, 147 Racing, 128
IAVA, 1600 Sport
SPORTY FIATS FROM AROUND THE WORLD
FIAT 131 2000 RACING (SOUTH AFRICA)
In the 1970s, Fiat in South Africa sold a 131 Rally model
with a 1.6-litre 98hp pushrod engine. Then in 1978, it
produced a much more interesting version: the 131
2000 Racing. Built to homologate the 131 for Group N
racing locally, it had a 2.0-litre 130hp engine with twin
downdraught carbs, and was tested by Car magazine
from 0-62mph in 8.5 seconds. Some 200 needed to be
built for homologation but only 16 in fact were.
FIAT TEMPRA COUPE & TURBO (BRAZIL)
Never heard of the Tempra Coupe? No surprise: it was
only ever offered in Brazil. Launched in September
1992, not long after the Tempra saloon, the two-door
coupe looked appealing, if undramatic. Two engines
were offered. The 2.0 16V was historic because it was
the first engine sold in Brazil with four valves per
cylinder. With 127hp on tap, it was capable of 0-62mph
in 9.8 seconds. The other engine was the 2.0 Turbo
which, although it only had eight valves, kicked out
165hp thanks to its Garrett turbocharger. With a
0-62mph time of 8.2 seconds, it was the fastest car on
sale in Brazil at the time. The Coupe lasted until 1995,
by which time Fiat in Italy had launched its own
Bangle-designed Coupe.
FIAT UNO 1.5R/1.6R (BRAZIL)
The Fiat Uno was a real Brazilian institution: made
right up until December 2013, some 3.6 million were
sold there. In 1987, Brazil got its first ‘hot’ Uno in the
1.5R, whose 1.5-litre engine developed 86hp. Sporty
parts included red seatbelts, decals, black tailgate,
fat tyres and special hubcaps. It did 0-62mph in 12.4
seconds – better than the contemporary Ford Escort
XR3. In 1990, the engine was upped to 1.6 litres and
88hp (and from 1993, 92hp).
FIAT UNO TURBO I.E. (BRAZIL)
In Europe, we got an Uno Turbo from 1985, but it took
until 1994 for Brazil to make its own version – just after
the Uno was replaced by the Punto in Europe. The
Brazilian Uno Turbo i.e. used the Italian-made 118hp 1.4litre turbo engine – Brazil’s first ever turbo car. It looked
quite different to the European Uno Turbo, with its own
bodykit and a unique clamshell bonnet, designed to
accommodate a spare tyre in the engine bay. It also
got the Tempra’s brakes. Sold between 1994 and 1996,
only 1801 Uno Turbos were produced in Brazil.
FIAT PALIO/SIENA SPORTING & 1.8R (BRAZIL)
Fiat’s ‘world car’, the budget-priced Palio, was anything
but exciting for the most part. But from 2001 it was
offered, from Turkey to South America, in ‘Sporting’
guise with a 1.6-litre 16-valve engine with 120hp –
heady stuff! There was even a three-box Siena
Sporting version in Brazil. Things got more knucklewhitening in 2004 when Fiat Brazil created the Palio
1.8R with a General Motors-sourced 1.8-litre engine
rated at 115hp, including lowered suspension, alloy
wheels and lots of sporty touches.
FIAT UNO SPORTING (BRAZIL)
The old Uno name was revived in 2010 for the
Brazilian-built ‘Novo Uno’. While there was no
resurrection of the Uno Turbo, Fiat did offer a model
badged Sporting with a 1368cc engine developing
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57
85hp, which in a car weighing 1004kg, gave it a
0-62mph time of 11.8 seconds. It featured sports
seats and steering wheel, spoilers, side skirts, double
centre-exit exhausts and black exterior details.
No hot shot, then, but sporty to look at.
FIAT PALIO SPORTING (BRAZIL)
From 2012, Brazil’s second-generation ‘Novo Palio’ range
was bolstered with a Sporting model. This didn’t get a
special engine (it merely kept the existing 1.6-litre 16V
E.torQ Flex engine with 115hp) but the steering was
sharpened up, the car sat 10mm lower than standard,
and it had bigger anti-roll bars and 195/55 tyres. It
looked funky with its front spoiler, graphics and alloy
wheels – made all the more so with the Interlagos
special edition which added a rear spoiler, special logos
and bright yellow paint. As for performance, top speed
was 120mph and 0-62mph took 9.8 seconds.
FIAT ARGO/CRONOS 1.8 HGT
(SOUTH AMERICA)
In 2017, the Fiat Argo replaced the Palio in both Brazil
and Argentina. In its sportiest form, it revives the longlost HGT badge (pic above). With its 1747cc single
overhead cam engine, it has 130hp, good enough for
116mph and 0-62mph in 9.7 seconds. A saloon version,
the Cronos 1.8 HGT, is also available.
ABARTH PUNTO (INDIA)
FIAT BRAVO SPORTING (BRAZIL)
The Fiat Bravo was quite an advanced model by
Brazilian standards when it was launched. That was
even more the case with the Sporting version (pictured
above), offered between 2010 and 2014. Its 130hp
1747cc engine was good for 120mph and 0-62mph in
just under 10 seconds.
FIAT IDEA SPORTING (BRAZIL)
Yes, the Brazilians even made a Sporting version of the
Idea MPV. Offered from 2010, it used Fiat’s familiar 1.8
E.TorQ 16V engine with 130hp and could get to 62mph
from rest in 10.2 seconds – with spoilers and natty
alloys to help it on its way.
FIAT STRADA SPORTING (BRAZIL)
Is it possible to be ‘Sporting’ in a pick-up? In Brazil,
absolutely yes. The Strada’s design was inspired by the
Fiat Grande Punto but it shared many elements with
the Fiat Palio. The Strada Sporting model was genuinely
sporty, too, with a 1.8-litre 130hp engine, firmed-up
suspension and fat rubber on alloy wheels. It even got
an aero bodykit and red seatbelts! But it wasn’t very
popular: the Sporting was only offered for three years
before being dropped with the 2013 facelift.
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Did you know that there’s a five-door Abarth Punto?
Well there is – in India (pic left). Launched in 2015 and
still available today, it’s based on the Punto that’s now
defunct in Europe. It uses a 1368cc 16-valve T-Jet
engine with 145hp – enough for Abarth to claim it’s the
first hatchback ever made in India with a sub-10 second
0-62mph time (8.8 seconds in fact). Its spec includes
disc brakes, “track-tuned” suspension, alloy wheels,
body graphics and side skirts. III
Limited Edition Martini Magic ring bound wall
calendar. Only a few left (21 x 28 cm)
For details:
[email protected]
Price: £9.95 + P&P.
‘Braking’ The Mould
Ferrari never built an estate car but that didn’t stop Vignale making
this 330 GT-based ‘shooting brake’ for the US Ferrari importer.
We investigate the last Ferrari ever rebodied by Vignale
Story by Richard Heseltine
Images by Erik Fuller/RM Sotheby’s
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I
t looks as though it wandered off the set
of a 1960s sci-fi flick; the sort of film that
came free with a mop-top hero, a
beautiful playmate with big hair and little
clothing, and a soundtrack to die for. The
4.0-litre, V12-engined 330 GT 2+2 shooting
brake featured here hasn’t lost the power to
shock, that’s for sure. Conceived by the
American Ferrari importer, Luigi Chinetti Jr,
styled in part by the renowned illustrator Bob
Peak, and bodied by Alfredo Vignale’s
eponymous carrozzeria, it was – and remains
– one of the most controversial Ferraris ever
to turn a wheel.
By the time you read this, chassis number
07963 will have
gone under the
hammer at RM
Sotheby’s endof-year sale at
the Petersen
Automotive
Museum, 50
years after it first broke cover at the 1968
Turin Motor Show. The new custodian will
own the last Ferrari ever clothed by Vignale,
and one which has enjoyed something of a
critical re-evaluation of late (witness several
appearances in blue-chip concours events).
It wasn’t always thus. There was a time
when this car routinely topped website
listicles; ‘Top 10 Ugliest Ferraris’ and so on.
While the car’s outline continues to divide
opinion, the passing of time has seemingly
brought more people around to the ‘like’
camp. For some of us, it isn’t even the least
attractive Vignale Ferrari; it isn’t even the
fifth least attractive Vignale Ferrari.
For most of the 1950s, Ferrari’s road car
production consisted of small-series runs,
production of which often didn’t reach
double figures. The Maranello firm was a
boutique enterprise, one patronised by
royalty, playboys, movie stars and your
common-or-garden beautiful people. If you
wanted a one-off, no problem. Ferrari
typically sold cars as rolling chassis to be
clothed by an outside coachbuilder.
During the firm’s embryonic years, this
tended to be Alfredo Vignale’s tiny body
shop. The son of a car painter, and the fifth
of seven brothers, Alfredo took his first
tentative steps into coachbuilding in 1924 on
commencing his apprenticeship with Ferrero
& Morandi of Turin. He was just 11 years old.
Six years later, he caught the eye of Battista
‘Pinin’ Farina under whom he would complete
his training. Aged 24, he was then poached
Vignale’s burgeoning reputation, it rapidly
became Ferrari’s couturier of choice.
A bewildering array of coachbuilt offerings
would follow. If there was one common
characteristic, it’s that Vignale offerings were
bold and often startlingly modern-looking.
This symbiotic relationship would, however,
last only a few years. While notoriously
impassionate about his road-going wares,
Enzo Ferrari was astute enough to realise
that having them completed with an endless
array of body styles resulted in a degree of
uncertainty as to how they would turn out.
He wanted greater uniformity. He needed a
partner, a carrozzeria of choice, and it wasn’t
Vignale. It is
widely held
that around
150 Ferraris
were bodied
by the Turin
concern
from 1950 to
1955, before Pinin Farina assumed the
mantle. There wouldn’t be another Vignale
Ferrari until 1968 – this one.
A fair amount of bovine do-do has been
excreted about this car in print and on the
internet. The truth is this: the donor car was
imported into the USA in 1965 by Luigi
Chinetti Motors of Greenwich, Connecticut
and sold to a Mr Desy. It was originally red
with a beige interior. Two years later, the 330
GT 2+2 returned to the dealership and
Chinetti Jr – or ‘Coco’ as he was then
universally known – was tasked with selling
it. “Man, that was tough!” he recalls. “Nobody
wanted them new, and I couldn’t give it away
as a used car. I was interested in design, and
sketched out my ideas, and that car seemed
like the perfect basis for what I had in mind.
Bob Peak was a good friend and an excellent
artist who lived just up the street from me.
Man, it was tough selling 330 GT 2+2s. Nobody wanted
“
them new. It seemed like the perfect basis for my design
”
by Giovanni Farina - brother of Battista and
owner of Stablimenti Farina - to be his
workshop foreman. Nonetheless, Vignale
dreamed of being his own boss, only for
World War 2 to interrupt his plans. He would
have to wait until 1947 before establishing
his own body shop.
Operating out of a former sawmill, his small
business became a moderately sized one
after Vignale landed a contract to make
refrigerated storage containers. The first car
to be wear his own badge was a rebodied
second-hand Fiat Topolino. What’s more, he
had by now embarked on what would prove a
long and fruitful relationship with fellow
Stablimenti Farina alumnus, Giovanni
Michelotti. The two friends became regular
collaborators, Michelotti producing
renderings which Vignale turned into threedimensional reality. Such was Carrozzeria
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61
He did a lot of famous movie posters,
including those for West Side Story, My Fair
Lady, Apocalypse Now and some of the
James Bond movies. He also illustrated the
cover of Time magazine a whole bunch of
times, and did a ton of car advertisement and
brochure illustrations. Bob also loved cars
and we just hit it off.”
Their first collaboration was a gullwingdoored device based on a 275 P sportsprototype that was damaged in a race at St
Jovite with Chinetti Jr at the wheel. They
followed this Michelotti-constructed
confection with something a bit more
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practical. “I always liked the concept of the
‘shooting brake’,” Chinetti muses. “There was
something uniquely British about something
sporting but also elegant and practical. I
wanted to do something similar. In America,
they’re called ‘station wagons’, but I always
referred to this car, and the Daytona rebody
we did later, as ‘Extended Coupes’. Anyway, I
sketched out a few ideas and then Bob took
them and worked in his own.”
There was then the small matter of finding
someone to fashion their starry-eyed vision.
“I went to see Alfredo Vignale and he
couldn’t have been nicer. You know, back
then guys like Vignale and Michelotti were
true artists. They wouldn’t stick their noses
in the air around guys like me. There wasn’t
one panel on that car that was shared with
the original 330 GT 2+2, other than part of
the doors, and I really liked the way it turned
out. You have to remember, we didn’t do a
scale model beforehand or anything like that.
If I had to do it over again knowing what I
know now, I would have had a windshield
made, rather than using the one from the
330. Something less curved would have
looked better. Overall, though, I thought it
looked pretty nifty. I still do.”
FERRARI 330GT 2+2 VIGNALE
THE OTHER FERRARI ESTATE CARS
Ferrari 212/340 ‘Sicilian Cart’
The Carretto SicIliano was dreamed up by
the famous (if only in Ferrari lore) Marzotto
brothers, and constructed by Carrozzeria
Fontana of Padova on a 212 Export chassis.
The shooting brake-style body was
subsequently removed to make way for an
open Vignale outline. The Fontana shell was
then placed on a 340 America frame; that,
too, was later reconfigured back to a Spider.
Felber Croisette
Willy Felber had form when it came to
modifying (some might say ruining) Ferraris.
The Swiss car dealer collaborated with
Michelotti on the construction of a 365
GTC/4-based beach car that broke cover in
1974. It subsequently gained doors and an
estate car-like roof, before being converted
back into a beach car. Felber followed
through by commissioning the construction of the 365 GT4-based Croisette. Michelotti has
retrospectively been accredited with building this one-off ‘combi-coupé which was first seen
at the 1977 Geneva Motor Show.
Unveiled at the 1968 Turin Motor Show, the
Ferrari ‘wagon’ was met with both muted
praise and derision. Some arbiters of beauty
admitted to liking the concealed headlights
and other details, if not necessarily the
overall outline. Then there was Cyril
Posthumus. In his six-page review of new cars
and concepts at the Turin Motor Show for
Road & Track magazine, the Briton well and
truly got his knickers in a twist. Having
erroneously described the car as being based
on a 365 GTC chassis, he labelled it
‘deplorable’ before adding: “In effect, they’ve
taken a 2+2 fastback and added a glazed
NART/Panther ‘Extended Coupe’
The only NART Ferrari not fashioned in Italy, this one-off 365 GTB/4-based machine was
styled, for the most part, by Gene Garfinkle. It was commissioned by enthusiast Bob
Gittleman in 1974 and built by Panther Westwinds of Surrey. The arrangement made sense,
given that Luigi Chinetti Jr of NART was also Panther’s US concessionaire. The conversion,
which included gullwing-style rear Perspex panels, was carried out in the winter of 1975-76.
However, contrary to popular belief, it wasn’t equipped with twin turbos.
Pininfarina Ferrari 456 GT Venice
Pininfarina produced seven specially modified 456s for Prince Jefri Bokiah which included
four-door saloons and five-door estate cars. The build of these cars was shrouded in
mystery, and it later transpired that the notorious playboy paid around $1.5m per car, but
didn’t take delivery of one example, which was sold to a British collector.
auto italia
63
rear extension, leaving a triangular filled area,
the lot finished in dismal two-tone brown and
suggestive of a semi-detached hearse.”
Writing for Sports Car World, Jerry Sloniger
commented:
“Vignale should
do well with
their ’68
offerings...
[The] most
intriguing (not to be confused with most
tasteful) offering was a yellow and off-brown
station wagon with imitation yellow fur rug in
the luggage compartment, parcel rail on the
roof and air conditioning. Coco Chinetti and
Bob Peak expect to sell several dozen a year.”
Forgoing the fact that both men couldn’t
even agree on what colour the car was, it
should be pointed out that the NART-Vignale
offering was always going to be a one-off,
despite several mentions of a mooted limited
run in period articles. “There was no intention
of making more than one,” Chinetti insists. “I
Panther Daytona ‘wagon’ and Touring
Lamborghini Flying Star II). By the time he
bought it, it was finished in gold over metallic
green. More recently, it passed though the
hands of
purveyor of
wine bar funk,
Jay Kay. It has
since
undergone yet
another change of hue to the current (and
rather fetching) metallic bronze.
The last word has to go to Chinetti. “You
know, I caught some crap for some of the
NART Ferrari rebodies, but they made
sense financially. Vignale charged us
$4000 to do the body for the 330 GT 2+2.
I sold it for $12,000, so who’s the dummy?”
He has a point. III
The NART-Vignale Ferrari was always going to be a
“one-off,
despite several mentions of a limited run
”
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sold the car before it was even built.”
The 330 ‘wagon’ was initially finished in
metallic gold on metallic brown, and enjoyed
a somewhat cosmopolitan existence. In 1977,
the car was advertised Stateside for $29,500.
Some time later, it was acquired by
Frenchman Jean-Claude Paturau (aka ‘Patch’),
an authority on watches and a collector of
shooting brakes (he also owned the NART-
STYLISH DELIVERY...
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EVENTS AND ITALIAN CAR CLUBS
Padova Passion
Italy’s biggest classic car show lived up to its billing with
some stunning displays and delightful rarities
Story & images by Chris Rees
T
here’s always a moment when I arrive at
Padova’s Auto e Moto d’Epoca. Will it live up
to its past glories as Italy’s biggest and
best classic car show? Will there be those
never-seen-before rarities that make
Padova such a delight?
I needn’t have worried. My moment of relief in
October 2018 was seeing a six-door minibus that
Bertone built for Fiat to ferry its VIPs around factories.
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auto italia
The 1975 vintage Bertone 850 VIP was one of only
eight ever made. Six passengers could see everything
thanks to a see-through roof and huge windows. It was
originally green and yellow, but has been repainted
blue. Apparently, it sold at the show for 150,000 euros
– quite some sum for a Fiat 850 T-based machine with
Idroconvert transmission that needed restoration! But
actually less than the Fiat factory runabout we saw
last year, which reputedly went for 170,000 euros…
ABOVE: Siata Daina Bertone
OPPOSITE PAGE, TOP LEFT
CLOCKWISE: Lombardi GP,
Bertone minibus, Volugrafo
& Volpe microcars, Abarth
207A, ‘volanti’, Bertone
Runabout, Alfa 2 diesel
Parked next to the Bertone bus were my two other
stars, and easily the cutest cars of the show – if you
can call them cars: the gloriously named Volugrafo
Bimbo and Volpe. The Bimbo was designed by a
racing driver called Belmondo and looks like a dodgem
car – and it was certainly dodgem-sized at only
238cm long and weighing 125kg. The Volpe,
meanwhile, is one of just two examples made in 1947.
It’s an aesthetically appealing attempt to recreate big
car styling on a miniature level – and it certainly was
miniature at only 250cm long. Despite having no
engine, it sold for 35,000 euros.
Padova is a bewilderingly huge show. The stats bear
this out: 11 halls and acres of outdoor areas. Over 4000
cars on sale. More than 600 autojumble stands (the
largest of any European show). 120,000 visitors. Over
700 journalists. The organisers reported a big increase
in the number of cars priced at over £200,000, but
most sales activity was in the £20,000 to £100,000
zone, including many modern classics. Overall, though, I
have to say there didn’t seem to be quite so many
‘venduta’ signs on cars this year.
Jaw-dropping rarities continued inside the halls.
Another Bertone star was the 1969 Runabout concept,
nestling on the Fiat X1/9 Club stand because this
wacky sci-fi car inspired the development of the X1/9.
It’s badged as an Autobianchi, despite having a Fiat 128
engine mounted amidships.
There were so many cars I’d never seen before, just
fabulous. How about a 1955 Abarth 207A Boano Spider,
Abarth's very first production race car and one of 10
made? Or a very pretty 1952 Siata Daina 140S by
Bertone (one of three made), plus a less-pretty 1950
Fiat 1100 Derby by Bertone. Other ‘etceterini’ that
caught my attention included a unique 1957 Ermini
Swaab, a very rare 1949 Gilco 205MM Zagato, a 1938
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69
Siata 636 Gran Sport, a 1950 Giannini Sport 750 Siluro,
a Stanguellini 1100S and two 1961 Coriasco Fiat
Multiplas (pick-up and van).
Yet another surprise: a three-wheel drive Moto
Guzzi trike. Built for military use in the mountains
between 1959 and 1963, just 129 examples were
made. It looked fabulous!
Equally fabulous was the sight of Zagato’s new
‘Sanction Lost’ Porsche 356 Carrera Coupe – a
recreation of a car that never existed in period but
was designed at the time. The ‘lost’ 356 archive
dates from 1959 – and goodness, does the 2018
evocation look superb.
Alfa Romeo vans have very much been ‘discovered’ of
late, and there were several at Padova, my favourite
being a fantastic 1959 example. Discovered abandoned
in the Egyptian desert, having been used as a camera
vehicle for movies, it’s been beautifully restored using
ultra-rare parts. It’s very rare survivor with a – wait for
this – two-cylinder, two-stroke supercharged diesel
engine! I also loved a very rare surviving Lancia Aprilia
ambulance, as well as a slew of classic Lamborghini
tractors and Maserati’s famous Eldorado racer.
Beauties abounded, like a 1956 Fantuzzi-bodied
Maserati 300 S, one of only 26 made, which had been
raced by both Fangio and Moss. A 1968 Ferrari 330 GTC
presented in ‘Viola’ purple paint – the only survivor of
two made, it seems – looked stunning, as did an exMille Miglia 1953 Ferrari 250 by Pininfarina.
What was apparently a unique De Tomaso Pantera
Group 5 prototype featured a bizarre set of
appendages front and rear, presumably for downforce
– yours for 185,000 euros. Other surprising prices
included a Fiat 131 Supermirafiori Abarth Volumetrico
for 23,000 euros, a stunningly well restored Lombardi
850 Grand Prix for 60k and an unregistered Fiat Ritmo
Abarth (price not divulged but evidently very high).
A parade of 16 rally cars in a special Rally Italy
Experience exhibition featured the likes of an Alfetta
GTV 2000 Gr2 and a Fiat 131 Abarth Gr4. Evidence that
electric classics are becoming more popular was
provided by a battery-powered Fiat 600 on show.
FCA was present officially, with the debut of Alfa
Romeo’s latest restoration – a 1955 Giulietta Sprint
owned by Italian rock singer Piero Pelù, who did the
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PADOVA AUTO E MOTO D’EPOCA
OPPOSITE PAGE: Zagato
Porsche 356, Lambo
tractors, Gilco 205MM
Zagato, Maserati A6G
THIS PAGE CLOCKWISE
FROM TOP: Bertone 1100
Derby, Miki Biasion with
Delta, Alfa GTV6 Group A,
Piaggio Apes, De Tomaso
Pantera Group 5 prototype
2018 Mille Miglia in this car. As for resorted Fiats, a
1967 Fiat 124 Sport Spider and 1982 Pininfarina
Spidereuropa were both on sale in FCA’s ‘Reloaded by
Creators’ programme. Also on show were a 1988 IMSA
Alfa 75 Turbo Evoluzione, 1908 Fiat S 61 Corsa and
1988 Lancia Delta HF integrale Safari. Padova also saw
the launch of Alfa’s new ‘Instant Classic’ service that
certifies ‘modern collectable’ models such as the
Quadrifoglio NRING special editions.
So Padova 2018 didn’t disappoint; indeed, we felt it
was truly a vintage year. If you’ve never been to the
show, make a date in your diary for next year: Auto e
Moto d’Epoca returns on 24 to 27 October 2019. III
BONHAMS AUCTION RESULTS
The UK auction house Bonhams returned to Padova
for the second time, selling over £2 million worth of
cars, easily the most valuable being a 1960 Ferrari
250 GT. "We are very happy,” said Gregor Wenner of
Bonhams. “It was a great pleasure to see the room
so crowded. The best lots went for some serious
money, confirming the consolidation of the
market.”
ALFA ROMEO-ENGINED 'MAREA' POWERBOAT
(1948) £46,681
ALFA ROMEO GIULIETTA SPIDER WITH HARDTOP
(1957) £66,977
ALFA ROMEO 2000 SPIDER TOURING (1960) £91,333
ALFA ROMEO SPIDER 1300 JUNIOR (1973) £14,207
DE TOMASO PANTERA L (1972) £81,185
FERRARI 250 GT SERIES II (1960) £448,458
FERRARI 348 SPIDER (1995) £52,770
FERRARI 308 GTS TARGA (1978) £45,666
FIAT 1500 CABRIOLET VIOTTI (1937) £63,933
FIAT ABARTH ALLEMANO SPIDER (1958) £50,740
FIAT 500L (1969) £5581
FIAT 500 JOLLY REPLICA (1970) £19,281
FIAT 124 ABARTH RALLY STRADALE (1976) £51,755
LANCIA FULVIA ZAGATO (1971) £34,503
auto italia
71
Autumn Motorsport Day
Rain certainly didn’t stop play at Auto Italia’s annual motorsport
event at Brooklands, with a full entry of fine cars taking to the
track over at Mercedes-Benz World
Story by Phil Ward
Photography by Michael Ward
2019 BROOKLANDS EVENT DATES
ITALIAN CAR DAY – SATURDAY 4 MAY
SUPERCAR SUNDAY – SUNDAY 14 JULY
AUTUMN MOTORSPORT FESTIVAL – SUNDAY 13 OCTOBER
72
auto italia
G
iven the weather conditions,
there was an impressive grid of
open racing cars – notably the
museum’s own Napier Railton,
driven enthusiastically by Allan
Wynn. The sheer power of the 24-litre W12
aero engine made sure that the Brooklands
lap record holder (143.44mph in 1935) was
right behind the Ferrari 812 Superfast pace
car that I was piloting. The view of the beast
filling the rear-view mirror was just awesome
– if a little disconcerting.
Of course, the rain was of little
consequence to the rally car drivers who
revel in such conditions. Mick Wood put in a
fine performance is his much-campaigned
Fiat 124 Abarth, taking time off from the
ground-up restoration of his fabulous exworks example. Other Abarths taking to the
track included a Scorpione and 1000 OT,
both owned by enthusiast Tim Milnes,
accompanied by Claudio Doto’s immaculate
130 TC. Equally at home in the wet were the
big-engined off-roaders. Big bangers
included Bob Searles in his Aston Martin V8
and one brave NASCAR driver who ventured
out on slicks, and still managed to put in
some quick, if slippery, laps.
Cream of the Italian entry, and both
recently subjects of Auto Italia features,
were Ian Sterling in his superb Ferrari 348
Challenge and Tim Luscombe in his Ferrari
250 GT ‘Bow Tie’. Entrusted to driver Bo
Williams, the ‘Bow Tie’ was something of a
surprise for spectators: if they were
expecting the traditional sound of a Ferrari
V12, the car’s rumbling 5.4-litre American V8
came as a shock.
While the weather was tolerable for the
track demonstration, the rain poured down
during the afternoon, which left the
organisers no choice but to cancel the test
hill ascents on safety grounds. In our long
history of events at Brooklands, this was the
first time we’ve endured such poor weather.
Fortunately, one of the benefits of holding
events at this historic venue is the many
indoor attractions. The motoring collections
and recently opened Aircraft Factory
exhibition were an excellent diversion for the
hundreds of spectators.
Our thanks to all our readers who
supported Auto Italia’s events this year, and
we look forward to seeing you again in
2019. The Italian Car Day on 4 May already
has some very special entries, so make a
note in your diary now!
auto italia
73
Zandvoort Historic Grand Prix
The Dutch track hosted historic F1 racers and some
spectacular sports cars
Story & images by Peter Baker
74
auto italia
Z
andvoort, nestling as it does
among the sand dunes of the
Dutch coast, not only ranks
alongside Spa-Francorchamps and
the Nürburgring in terms of
character and reputation, but because it’s
within easy reach of the UK and just a short
distance from Amsterdam, it’s an ideal
opportunity to combine serious historic
motorsport enjoyment with plenty of
interesting extra-curricular activity.
The 4.2km track is well known to fans of
Formula 1 as home to the Dutch Grand Prix
between 1952-1985. Some exciting news:
circuit upgrades in a bid to bring F1 back to
Holland within four years have been finalised.
In the meantime, the oldtimers meeting in
2018 attracted the very best in historic
motorsport, including two rounds of the FIA
Masters Historic Formula 1 Championship,
supported by the FIA Masters Historic Sports
Cars Championship, and a round of the FIA
Formula 3 European Cup. In all, the event
featured a 17-race programme, with
everything from Pre-1966 Touring Cars to
classic Formula 3 (500). Some 65,000
spectators enjoyed three days of racing in
unbroken sunshine.
Perhaps the most exciting 90 minutes of
the weekend was the 42-car Masters
Gentlemen Drivers race, where the Ferrari 250
GTO of Nicky Pastorelli (pic above) set fastest
time and led from the start, beating off
challenge after challenge, until, within sight of
the chequered flag, its gearbox cried enough,
allowing Andy Wolfe’s AC Cobra to squeeze
past and take a well-deserved victory.
Nicky Pastorelli also appeared in the NK
GTTC race where he again set fastest time
driving a Ferrari 365 GTB4 Daytona (pic left),
but he was eventually beaten by Daniel
Schrey’s Porsche 935 K3.
The Masters Historic Formula 1, with its
close racing and sheer noise (remember
when F1 spectators needed earplugs), was a
real crowd pleaser; two times 20 minutes of
pure nostalgia. A nice touch was the use of
an Alfa Romeo 4C as the Official Course Car.
The track display of two Ferrari ‘sharknose’
156 replicas (pic below), circulating at
different times throughout the weekend as a
tribute to the late Phil Hill, was another
treat. Philip Toll Hill Junior drove for Enzo
Ferrari between 1959 and 1962 and won here
at Zandvoort before becoming the 1961
World Champion, at the same time giving
Ferrari its first Constructors’ Championship.
Hill also raced at Le Mans seven times for
the Scuderia, being part of the winning team
three times. It is hoped that the two 156
cars built by Jan Biekens and Jason Wright
will continue to appear at all tracks where
the originals enjoyed success.
auto italia
75
Banzai Q-Car
We’ve imported an Alfa Romeo 156 V6 Sportwagon
Q-System from Japan. We think you should too – why?
Story by Phil Ward
Photography by Michael Ward
H
ave you ever owned a favourite car that,
when the time came to replace it,
production had ended and you couldn’t
find a really good, low-mileage, wellmaintained example? Well, there is a
solution to this problem.
I have owned a string of Alfa Romeo 156s, mainly
Sportwagons, from a 1.9JTD to a 2.4JTD ti to several
2.5 V6s. In my opinion, the combination of the 2.5 V6
and six-speed manual gearbox is a near-perfect
specification. For my tastes, the shape and size of the
Sportwagon is ideal and still attractive, especially the
desirable post-2003 facelifted version. The UK market
never received the V6 facelift so I became resigned to
the fact that my ideal car was unobtainable.
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auto italia
Smitten by the fabulous Busso V6, I looked around
for alternative models that shared this power unit. The
obvious one is the 156 GTA Sportwagon, which has
become highly collectable and priced accordingly. Many
examples are now high-mileage, many have been driven
hard, and under-body corrosion is an issue. Quite why
Alfa Romeo opted not to facelift the GTA is also
anathema to me, however I have seen and driven
examples that have been retro-fitted with the facelift
and they do look superb.
My other options were the 147 GTA and the GT 3.2. I
discounted the 147 for similar reasons to the 156 GTA,
plus I have never got on with the ‘frisky’ handling and
hard ride. So I opted for a GT on the basis that there
were still good low-mileage cars around at reasonable
prices. Being based on a 156 chassis, I was expecting a
similar driving experience but with more power. In
reality, I found the GT’s handling ponderous by
comparison, and gearchange less than sprightly. The
3.2 engine was certainly more powerful, but not as
exciting as the 156’s revvy 2.5. Another minor irritation
was wind noise from the frameless side windows. All in
all, my GT 3.2 was not a car that I bonded with.
What to do next? I took to trawling auction sites for
low-mileage facelift V6 156s, a fruitless search
considering that the specification I wanted had never
been available in the UK, although I have heard
rumours of one in Ireland. I even considered building
my own car by fitting a late facelift 1.6 or 1.8 with a
V6, a project quickly dismissed on cost grounds, and
the fact that these undertakings never turn out the
way you expect them to be.
Research revealed that there were righthand drive facelifted V6s elsewhere
in the world,
notably South Africa and Japan. The South African
websites turned up a few cars but they were highmileage and not particularly attractive. Japan,
however, was a revelation. Japanese owners are
fastidious about their cars and enthusiastic about
Alfa Romeos, Abarths and Lancias. Numerous
websites offer cars for export and it became evident
that some Japanese-market models were never
available in Europe, in particular the high-spec 156 ti
fitted with a V6 engine and manual gearbox.
I found that the apparently automated responses in
contrived English from Japanese websites did not
inspire me with confidence. The prospect of buying a
car sight unseen in Japan left me feeling very
nervous. I needed advice.
Regular readers will know that the Ward family has
owned a number of Fiat Coupes, most of them
attended to by John Cartlidge at Midlands Car
Services. John has imported numerous superb Coupes
from Japan, some versions never available in the UK
market. Given John’s no-nonsense approach and
undoubted engineering expertise, I knew I would
receive reliable information.
Taking advice from someone who has
in-depth knowledge of the import
system is essential. There are many
pitfalls and unexpected costs for the
unwary. Japanese websites are
stocked with cars that have
already been through auctions, or
at least appear so. In reality, the
tasty 2005 156 V6 Sportwagon in
Misano Blue is only on the
website to entice you. An enquiry
about purchasing that car will
likely reveal that, “It has already
been sold but we have a similar
one in stock.” A deposit is taken and
the company goes off to auction to buy your
dream car. Given that it can take six to eight
weeks for a car to reach the UK, it has been known
for deposits and/or cars to evaporate. There are
auto italia
77
rogues in Japan, too. The sale price on Japanese
websites includes a quote for the car to be delivered to
a UK port but they don’t indicate the costs of UK
import duty, VAT, port expenses or delivery – costs that
can easily double the sale price.
John Cartlidge has successfully imported around 40
cars from Japan, not all of them Italian. He employs an
agent in Japan who arranges to purchase cars at
auction and arrange the shipping. A website-based
company would be more expensive to deal with, as it
has to put its mark-up on the purchase, while an agent
works on commission and is more reliable.
Based on previous auction sale values, John offers an
all-in cost for the cars he locates. This includes all the
duties and delivery – and he guarantees the condition
of the car. No deposit is required and you pay on
collection. You can’t get much fairer than that. I
decided to go ahead and set my criteria for a lowmileage 2005 2.5 V6 156 Sportwagon in red or blue.
John set a price, which I agreed, and then I waited for a
suitable car to come up. As it happened, I didn’t have to
wait long. In a matter of days, I was emailed pictures of
an immaculate red one-owner example showing just
56,000km (35k miles), with Q-System automatic
transmission fitted. The time difference meant that
John had to set an alarm for 3am to bid on the car. He
was successful. The agent sent detailed pictures of
the car post-auction and it did indeed look superb. Now
I had an eight-week wait.
I received a call from John to say that the car had
arrived at Midland Car Services, along with two yellow
Fiat 20v Turbo Coupes in the same shipment. He
reported that the lip on the front bumper had been
cracked in transit and agreed to repaint it and also put
the car through an MOT inspection. In the meantime,
78
auto italia
the DVLA provided an age-related 05 plate and a low
rate of VED was calculated because the car had
already been registered in another country.
The day came to pick up the 156 and I was
astonished at the quality. The paintwork was nearperfect, apart from the rear bumper that had been
repainted at some point by the previous owner in the
wrong shade of red. The seats looked like they had
never been sat on. Given that the paintwork was not
‘pink’ and that the car had covered less that 2000
miles a year since 2005, it had obviously been little
used and carefully stored.
In common with any Italian car that has been
stored for an extended period, the re-awakening
process comes with a compilation of issues. The
engine thermostat had seized, the air conditioning
didn’t work, the fuel gauge was erratic and there
were creaks coming from the suspension. The
Japanese sat nav was unfathomable and, annoyingly,
so was the service history.
The car was immediately booked in to AlfaWorkshop
for a full service and it was revealed that spanners had
rarely been anywhere near the engine, although the oil
was clean. Jamie Porter’s troops went through the list
and changed the belts, front discs, suspension
wishbones (dry joints), engine top mount, radiator and
thermostat. Although immaculate, the chassis was
devoid of underseal (I’ve seen the lack of protection on
other facelift 156s, sometimes only one side is
covered!), so an overdue coat was applied.
One issue did take some time to rectify: the air con.
The fault was hard to trace and quite bizarre.
Apparently the air con fuse is shared with the cigarette
lighter and it transpired that a small metal piece from
an accessory plug was found in the bottom of the
After a period of storage,
many items needed to be
fettled, including belts, rad,
thermostat, air con, brakes
and suspension
ALFA ROMEO 156 V6 SPORTWAGON Q-SYSTEM
auto italia
79
OUR PREVIOUSLY OWNED 156 ALFAS
Alfa Romeo 156 Sportwagon 2.5 24V 2000
Alfa Romeo 156 ti Sportwagon 2.4 JTDm 2005
Alfa Romeo 156 Sportwagon 1.9 JTDm 2004
Alfa Romeo 156 Saloon 2.5 24V 2002
Alfa Romeo 156 Sportwagon 2.5 24V 2003
80
auto italia
lighter socket, causing a short. The lack of air con in
Japanese heat and the mounting list of servicing
issues is probably a clue as to why the 156 came up for
auction in the first place.
All attempts to make sense out of the Japanese
sat nav failed miserably. The voice that appeared to
be directing me to an obscure location 6000 miles
away in Japan became irritating. A standard UK
stereo was installed and the fitter explained why the
156’s windows were festooned with aerials, the sat
nav unit also had satellite TV!
I had not experienced a Q-System 156 since we roadtested one back in 1999 (issue 34). I was not into
automatics back then, but given my advancing years
and modern stop-start driving conditions, I now see the
point. Having lived with my Japanese 156 for a while, I
have grown to like the Q-System.
The bulletproof Japanese-made Aisin transmission
offers three automatic driving modes ('ice, 'city' and
'sport'), plus a manual mode, selectable by shifting the
gear lever to the left-hand sector, which has four ratios
in an 'H' arrangement. In ‘ice’ mode, the car starts off in
second gear to avoid wheelspin. 'City' changes up gear
at around 3500rpm, while 'Sport' allows the revs to go
to 5500rpm. The clutchless ‘manual’ gear lever function
allows high revs in each ratio and provides engine
braking during deceleration.
I use ‘city’ mode most of the time and find the gear
changes to be really smooth, in fact almost
imperceptible. On the road, the spacing of the four
ratios can be limiting, especially when exiting a fast
roundabout. Having said that, in this situation my
previous six-speed manual Sportwagon didn’t like to
pull third gear on exits, and was a bit hectic using
second. There is a kickdown function on the Q-System
for some extra oomph but I find that hitting the ‘Sport’
switch provides a more immediate response and that
satisfying V6 soundtrack at high revs. So while you are
searching for that low-mileage 156 V6, in Japan or
elsewhere, don’t dismiss the Q-System. III
CONTACT:
Midlands Car Servicing/
John Cartlidge, Shepshed,
Leicestershire.
Tel: 07905 143 578.
midlandscarservicing.co.uk
BOOK SHELF
Alfa Romeo Tipo 33/1967
By Patrick Dasse &
Martin Übelher
Dingwort Verlag
ISBN: 978-3871-661-167
79 euros
Alfa Romeo Tipo 33/1967
is a new book from
Dingwort Verlag, a
German publisher that
has been making big
waves recently, not least
for its launch of five
bumper volumes on 105
Series Alfas.
Now it’s the turn of the
Tipo 33. Widely regarded
as one of the most
beautiful cars ever made,
the 33 enjoyed a highly
successful racing career.
The focus of this book is
pretty tight: the
development of the Alfa
33 and its racing record in
the year of launch (1967).
The publishers decided
that the wealth of
material they had
accumulated on the 33
merited a separate
volume for each racing
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year; a second volume
covering the 1968 season
is planned for 2019.
It had long been
thought that much of the
documentation
concerning Autodelta, the
company behind the Tipo
33, had been lost. But
with the help of Alfa
Romeo’s Arese-based
archivist, Marco Fazio, a
huge tranche of records
has been unearthed,
containing detailed
reports of Autodelta’s
racing activities. These
helped build a reliable
record of the works cars
that raced during 1967 –
even if the full story is
frustratingly still not quite
complete.
This beautifully
produced hardback has
fully 312 pages. While
there is detailed text – in
both English and German
– on both the car’s
development and races,
words definitely take
second place to the
photographs (all 338 of
them), which are
exclusively period shots.
The evocativeness of
these images is very
striking: early tests at
Alfa’s Balocco track;
drivers preparing for Le
Mans; cars at full tilt in
events like the Sebring 12
Hours, Targa Florio and
Nürburgring 1000km.
In addition to racing,
the road-going 33
Stradale and OSI
Scarabeo are also
included. For the die-hard
Tipo 33 fan, this book is
an absolutely essential
work. Luckily for all of us,
it’s meticulously put
together – not just a
superb reference work,
but also a joyous addition
to the bookshelf.
Martin's Cars: Pensieri in
Tre Dimensioni
By Paolo Martin
ASI
ISBN: 978-8898-344-499
£25
Paolo Martin is not
perhaps a very well
known name outside
Italy, but he truly
deserves to be. His work
as a car designer put him
at the forefront of one of
Pininfarina’s golden eras
– the late 1960s and
early 1970s.
He was the design
genius behind such greats
as the Ferrari 512 Modulo
concept car and the 1967
Ferrari Dino Berlinetta
Competizione. Perhaps his
most celebrated designs
are the Fiat 130 Coupe,
Rolls-Royce Camargue,
Peugeot 104 and Lancia
Beta Montecarlo. He also
designed the BMC 1800
and 1100 Aerodinamica
concepts, which inspired
Citroen’s GS and CX.
This book is written by
the designer himself, and
his memories, stories and
anecdotes of a long
career are utterly
fascinating. He started his
apprenticeship at
Michelotti, then spent a
short time at Bertone,
before settling at
Pininfarina. As an
independent from 1976,
he had input on designs
for companies like
Stutz, Piaggio, Savio
and Maggiora.
There are some
fascinating chapters on
rarely seen projects. One
example is a four-door
Lotus he designed for
Colin Chapman. Another is
the curious Bugatti PM1
supercar proposal from
1985, the wooden buck
for which we recently saw
at the Turin National
Motor Museum.
Martin’s book is
subtitled Pensieri in Tre
Dimensioni (‘Thoughts in
Three Dimensions’), which
seems fitting for such a
gorgeous publication. It’s
definitely worth searching
out. The text is in both
Italian and English, and
within its 304 pages are
hundreds of superbly
reproduced photographs
and original sketches.
This is a soft-bound book
but don’t let that put you
off: the quality is
excellent throughout. One
last recommendation: it’s
very keenly priced.
MIDDLE BARTON GARAGE
F I AT A N D A B A R T H S P E C I A L I S T S
ESTABLISHED 1987
Spares and Workshop - Servicing
Repairs - Restoration
E-COMMERCE WEBSITE FOR ALL FIATS
1955 - 1985 ESPECIALLY MODELS IN THIS ISSUE
Middle Barton Garage, Troy, Ardley Road,
Somerton, OX256NG
Tel ++44 (0)1869 345766 ● Fax ++ 44(0)869 346581
www.middlebartongarage.com
eMAILBOX
WRITE TO THE EDITOR AT: AUTO ITALIA, GINGER BEER PROMOTIONS LTD,
ENTERPRISE HOUSE, BUILDING 52, WREST PARK, SILSOE, BEDFORDSHIRE, MK45 4HS
OR EMAIL
[email protected]
DISAPPEARING
CLASSICS
The magazine is
tremendous and it
amazes me how you find
all these rare cars. What a
brilliant car the Alfa
Romeo 155 GTA is (Auto
Italia September 2018).
Such a shame it never
went into production.
I am in the middle of
doing a ‘to new’ build of
an Alfa Romeo 155 V6
Sportpack. The spares
situation is dire. Very
soon the 1990s and early
2000s models will
disappear, due to there
being no parts left. It
took a full day to source
a new engine mount for
the 155, I eventually
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located one in
Switzerland – you
couldn’t write it!
Here are some photos
of my three Lancia Beta
VXs – I don’t think there is
anywhere you would
easily find this number
together. The three Beta
VX coupes are likely to be
the only ones I can do to
new, again because of the
parts nightmare. It turns
out that across Europe I
bought the few remaining
parts available, as when I
went back to the
suppliers for more they
said I’d got the last they
had! If this were a German
car, parts would be easy.
In October 2018, Alfa
Romeo registrations in
Europe were over 3800. In
the first 10 months of the
year, Alfa Romeo
registered almost 74,900
cars in in Europe, 3.2%
more than in 2017.
Meanwhile, Lancia
registered almost 4500
cars in October, up 33.2
percent compared to
September. In the first 10
months of 2018, Lancia
has registered about
40,000 cars.
Isn’t that news
incredible! No small Alfa
any more and no Lancia
replacement due? Seems
crazy, as the small Alfas
were a great way to get
the younger generations
into the brand. My son
William has a MiTo
TwinAir, which is a super
car. I love driving it!
Keep up the great work
with the magazine.
Patrick Hurst
FUTURE LANCIAS
Many thanks for the
Lancia Futurista feature
(Auto Italia January 2019).
It’s an amazing car, not
really my cup of tea but a
real work of art. One
questions I have, though,
is how can a car that’s 30
years old by called
‘Futurista’? I understand
the whole ‘future vintage’
thing but the Delta is very
much yesterday’s car.
I also found it very
exciting to read in your
piece on the Zagato
Lancia Hyena that Lancia
itself was, at one stage,
going to make it as a
regular production car.
How amazing would that
have been? That’s the
true ‘Futurista’ model in
my book. If Lancia had
given the green light to
that project, the brand
might be in a very
different position than it
is today. Indeed, it might
actually have had a
bright future – seems
like Lancia’s prospects
are looking pretty bleak,
I must say.
James Crane
NEXT MONTH
COMING SOON
ISSUE 277 ON SALE 6 FEBRUARY 2019
FERRARI TESTAROSSA & 512 TR
FULL COLLECTORS’ GUIDE
Some features may appear in a later issue
If you are having trouble finding your favourite magazine, call us on 01462 811115.
Auto Italia is available at
If you cannot find the magazine remember that
you can reserve your copy under the Just Ask! scheme so, well, just ask!
auto italia
85
BACK ISSUES
Check our new updated back issues index for the
magazine featuring your car of choice.
To order just email us or phone 01462 811115.
£5.00 (UK) – £6.00 Europe – £7.50 Rest of World
Special package prices for any 3 issues
£12 UK – £15 Europe – £18 Rest of World
ABARTH
Allemano 2400 and 2200
19
Abarths at Monza 1998
19
Abarths at Silver Flag
85
Radbourne Abarth 1300
21
595SS
118
600s
29
600s
82
750 Zagato Dubble Bubble.
60
750 Zagato Record Monza.
196
750 Zagato Record Monza + 750
Zagato Dubble Bubble.
258
850 Allemano Spider
50
Abarth 1000 SP
37
Abarth 2000 SP
165/250
Abarth Osella PA1
30
Abarth Osella PA2
89
Abarth Osella PA2 Nordschleife 144
Abarth 1300 OT
43
Abarth OT 1300
93
Abarth Simca 1050 Corsa.
222
Abarth Simca 1300
119
Abarth Simca 1300 OT
143
204A Cisitalia Abarth
199
205A
220
207A Boano
48
1000 Bialbero
50
1000 TCR
106
1000 TC
145/264
1000 TC v 600 Modified
238
Abarth Tipo 139
197
Abarth Tipo 140
201
1500S
217
2200 Allemano Spider
147
850, 1000 OTR
55
1000 Berlina Corsa /Abarth Simca
2000 / 500 Esse Esse
167
750 GT Zagato / 500 Trofeo / 124
Stadale / 1000TC (VBH)
168
850TC Nürburgring
103
850 Allemano
58
OT 1600 (rep)
235
Scorpione Corsa Prototipo
141
Lombardi Grand Prix
265
Abarths at Monza
58
Autobianchi A112
75/270/217
Ritmo (Alitalia)
90
Ritmo Group 2
229
Formula Italia
90
Formula Abarth 033
138
124 Abarth Rally
67
124 Abarth Grp 4 Rally x2
73
124 Abarths x3
145
124 Abarth Rally
196
124 Abarth Rally Group 4
214
124 Abarth Rally Targa Florio
257
124 Abarth/Fulvia/Alpine
32
Polish/124 Group 4 Abarth
38
San Remo Rally 124 Abarth
47
131 Abarths x3
178
131 Abarth Stradale
43
131 Abarth
53
131 Abarth/Integrale/Coupe
58
131 Abarth Alitalia
68
131 Abarth (San Remo)
81
131 Prototypes
215
131 Abarth Diesel
231
131 Stradale v Group 2
251
131 Alitalia v Stratos v Fulvia. 273
X1/9 Prototipo
130
Abarth Rally Range 2004
Panda/Stilo/S1600
96
Panda Rally EVO 2007
136
Stilo WRGB 2005
101
Stilo WRGB 2006
129
Stilo Trofeo Abarth
193
Grande Punto S1600
183
Grande Punto S2000
134/253
Grande Punto Italy launch
138
Grande Punto Abarth Sanremo. 141
Grande Punto Abarth Belgium. 143
Grande Punto Abarth SS UK.
149
86
auto italia
Grande Punto Abarth SS.
162
Grande Punto Abarth v 130TC. 158
Grande Punto Abarth v Mito.
171
Grande Punto Abarth v Mito CL. 177
Grande Punto Abarth EVO.
173
Grande Punto Abarth Guide.
267
500C Abarth
173
500C Abarth/Punto Abarth EVO. 175
Abarth Grande Punto EVO.
197
Abarth Punto EVO Scorpione.
224
500 Abarth 2008 Italy launch. 148
500 Abarth 2008 UK launch.
156
500 Abarth Trofeo Brands (VBH). 166
500 Abarth Trofeo Cadwell.
170
500 Abarth Trofeo GB Race 1.
171
500 Abarth Trofeo GB (CBH).
175
500 Abarth Trofeo GB Roundup. 181
500 Abarth (Forge)
179
500 Abarth SS Hillclimb UK
182
500 Abarth ‘Polizia’
204
500 Buyers’ Guide
218
500 595 695 Buyers’ Guide
271
Abarth 595 by Oakley Design.
213
Abarth 595 by Oakley/TMC.
218
Abarth 595 New V Old.
216
Abarth 695 Biposto.
229
Abarth 695 New V Old.
251
Abarth 695 Rivale.
273
Abarth Classics at Franciacorte. 181
Abarth Classics at Franciacorte. 191
Abarths 124 MY2017
248
Abarths 124 R-GT v
Ex-works 124 Group 4
259
Abarth Classiche
255
Abarth MY2017 range test
257
Abarth 124 Spider
265
Abarth 124 GT
268
ALFA ROMEO
100 Years of Alfa Romeo. Pt1
167
100 Years of Alfa Romeo. Pt2. 168
100 Years of Alfa Romeo. Pt3. 169
100 Years of Alfa Romeo. Pt4. 170
Autodelta
209
Autodelta at 50 GTA/TZ1 test 214
Alfa Romeo prototypes (TZ3)
171
Alfa Romeo Commercials
192
Alfa Romeo at Balocco P3/1300GTA
/155DTM/Disco Volante
173
SE048 (Group C racer)
106
G1
264
RLSS
49
RL
213
6C 1750
38
6C 1750SS
117
6C 1750SS (1929 Mille Miglia). 226
6C 1750
189
6C 1750
225
6C 2300 Replica
75
6C 2300 Aerospider
201
6C 2300 Mussolini
127
6C 2500 Freccia d’Oro
50
6C 2500 by Castanga
134
6C 2500B Mille Miglia
155
6C 2500S
156/229
6C 2500SS
187
6C 2500 Competizione
243
Nardi-Danese 6C2500
31
8C 2300 Tim Birkin
27
8C 2300 (Spitzley)
56
8C 2300
244
2900A
83
8C 2900B
25
8C 2900B Le Mans
267
8C 2900B Spider
248
8C 2600 at Spa
114
8C 2600 Simon Moore
142
8C Tipo B/Montreal/8C Comp
149
8C 2300 v 8C Competizione.
163
8C Engine Feature
151
8C Tipo B ‘P3’
253
Alfetta 159 meets Maserati 8CL 14
Alfetta 159
24
Alfetta 159 Track Test
87
Alfetta 12C
101
Bimotore
95
Clemar Bucci 2500SS
19
1900CSS
15
Tipo 33 Stradale
40
Tipo 33 Stradale
164
Tipo 33/3
56
Tipo 33/3
111
Tipo 33/3
188
Tipo 33/2
194
Tipo 33 Daytona
109
Tipo 33 TT12
113
Tipo 33 TT12
258
Tipo 33 Concepts
124
Tipo 33 Elvio Deganello
204
1900SS Ghia Coupe
22
1900 SSZ
80
1900 SSZ ‘Lopresto’
217
1900 Golden Oldie
115
1900 C SS
15
1900 C SS BOANO 1955
266
1900 SS
176
1900 Ti (Pininfarina)
202
1900 Disco Volante
64
1900 Disco Volante
230
1900 Pinin Farina x 2
236
1900 Berlina
272
2000 Sportiva
125
2000 Sprint
212
Alfa Twincam engine feature.
137
Alfa Twinspark engine feature. 145
1750 GT Prototipo
132
Giulia Sprint Veloce Zagato
36
Giulia Sprint Veloce Zagato
195
Giulietta Sprint Veloce ‘Goccia” 94
Giulietta Sprint Veloce v GT Q2 147
Giulietta Sprint Barn Finds.
223
Giulietta Sprint Bertone.
228
Giulietta Sprint Zagato
50
Giulietta Spider
28
Giulietta 50th Birthday
97
Giulietta Ti
233
SZ Coda Tronca
268
LDS Formula One
69
Giulietta Sprint Speciale
205
Giulietta Sprint Speciale
274
Giulia SS
18/140
Giulia Spider (B&W)
167
Giulia Spider (Concours)
253
Giulia Spider Veloce Racer.
259
Giulia or Giulietta?
24
2600 Sprint
16
2600 Spiders
51
2600 Spider v Lancia Flaminia. 255
2600 SZ
56
TI Supers
38
Disco Volante 2012
198
Canguro
205
TZ2 1966
43
TZ1&1/2
62
TZ1
179
TZ2
135
TZ3
185
Montreal v Dino v Citroen SM
14
Montreals
47
Montreal (Modified)
81
Montreal v Dino V Biturbo.
159
Montreal Buyers’ Guide.
174
Montreal V8 Engine Feature.
187
Montreal Group 4 Autodelta.
263
1900 Matta Jeep
47
1900 Matta Jeep
126
1900 Matta Jeep ‘AR51’
246
2300 RIO
106
Alfa 90 and Alfa 6
62
Alfa 90 and Alfa 6
162
Alfa 6
97
Alfa 90
102
Junior Zagato
128/271
B.A.T 11 Bertone
146
Gransport Quattroruote
241
Berlinas
48
Alfa Saloons: Giulietta, Giulia Super,
90, Alfetta, 2000 Berlina
16
Giulia Super Dutch Trofeo
35
Giulia Super “Carabinieri”
129
Giulia Ti Super Racer
98
Giulia Super
34
Giulia Super,TI & Nuova Super
76
Giulia TI Super (Factory car)
196
Giulia Coupes
82
Giulia Dossier (105)
235
Bertone GTV
36
Giulia Sprint GT Tripletest
65
Giulia 105 Series 3 car test
208
Giulia (105) GTC
53
GTAm/BMW 2002 Replicas
25
GTAm 1750
39
GTAm Turbo (Giordanelli)
44
GTAm 1300 Peter Crutch
55
GTA (Track Test)
70
GTA vs Lotus Cortina
77
GTA (Tipler)
159
GTA 105 through to 155
197
GTA 105 Giulia Sprint GT
203
GTA-R 290 (Alfaholics)
252
GT Junior/Fulvia/124 Coupe
147
GT Junior with 75 Engine
247
Spider Duetto/ S3 vs Fiat 124. 116
Junior Zagato
45
Spider Duetto
272
Giulia Spider (105 Prototype)
121
Alfa Spider 105 (Time Machine) 193
Alfa Spider 105 series
11
Alfa Spider Group test
79
Alfa Spider Group test
S4/916/Brera Spider
186
Alfa Spider (Unleaded conv)
25
Alfa F1 179 vs Tornado etc
28
Alfa INDY car
207
Alfasuds
42/72
Alfasud (Golden Oldie)
110
Alfasud V6 Alitalia (Colvil)
150
Alfasud 7 car test
151
Alfasud Engine Feature
177
Alfasud Trofeo
219
Alfasud 1.2 Ti
226
Alfasud Buyers’ Guide
259
Alfasud - Giugiaro
265
Sudsprint (Time Machine)
185
Sudsprint Buyers’ Guide
37
Sudsprint Racer (Lewis)
86
Sudsprint 3 car test
138
33 Buyers’ Guide
28
33 AKK Motorsport
38
33 Turbo Alfa Aid
41
33 Buyers’ Guide
111
33 P4 (Time Machine)
173
Classic Saloons: Giulia Super 1.6 /
2000 Berlina / Alfetta 1.8 /
Giulietta 2.0
188
Giulietta Turbo
123
Giulietta (Time Machine)
171
Alfetta 2.0 Saloon
231
Alfetta GTV 2.0 Racer
115
Alfetta GT/GTVs
14
Alfetta GT/GTVs
41
Alfetta GT 3 car test
95
Alfetta GT Racers 3 car test
266
Alfetta GTV6 + integrale ‘Ring 101
Alfetta Turbodelta
107
Alfetta GTV6 (Ron Simons)
135
Alfetta Review
232
Giulietta, Giulia Super,
2000 Berlina, Alfetta, Alfa 90
16
Alfetta / Autodelta
198
Alfetta Turbodelta v 75 Turbo
EVO v 155 Q4
237
Alfetta GTS
270
Alfetta Buyers’ Guide ‘72-’84
266
GTV6 Readers View
31
GTV6 “Rare” 550bhp
52
GTV6 (Lindsay)
66
GTV6 South Africa
126
GTV6 /33/156 Club Racers
133
GTV6 2.5 V6 (Time Machine)
176
GTV6 Buyers’ Guide
178
GTV6 3 car test (Jupe)
210
GTV6 v SZ v GTV (916)
238
GTV6 3.0 V6
249
75 Driver’s Choice
2
75 Owners View x 2
19
75 ‘Progetto Cinque’
22
75 1.8, Tipo, Dedra
25
75 Turbo Evo Presley’s Car
36
75 AROC Enzo’s car “Rare”
48
75 Turbo Humphrey’s car
58
75 Turbo Road car
58
75 Classic Choice
84
75 At the ‘Ring (Ron Simons)
93
75 3.0 V6 twin test (EMC)
139
75 3.0 V6 vs 3.5 GTV6
157
75 Buyers’ Guide
167
75 Turbo IMSA (Arese)
175
75 V6 Twin Test (Jupe)
219
75 3 car Test
239
75 3.0 v Giulietta V6(Jupe)
262
75 VS GTV 3.0 VS Giulietta
266
75 3.2 24V Track Day (Porter)
266
75 LE
273
Alfa SZ + Zagato Story
13
Alfa RZ vs 3.0 Spider
26
Alfa SZ/RZ Guide
41
Alfa SZ 3 car test
100
Alfa SZ 24v Supercharged
136
Alfa SZ Buyers’ Guide
167
Alfa SZ (Time Machine)
191
Alfa SZ vs Stelvio (Zagato).
198
Alfa SZ VS RZ
266
Alfa SZ v K Coupe v Shamal
274
145 1.7 16v
2
145 CL vs BMW 318Ti
12
145 1.8TS
19
146 145 Team Cars
116
146 + 145 Buyers’ Guide
103
145 Cloverleaf/Bravo HGT
42
145 Cloverleaf/Bravo HGT
180
145 CL Fleet report
54
145 vs 33 vs Mito
160
145 Buyers’ Guide
198
145 Turbo by Autodelta
249
146 1.6 Junior
32
146 Ti vs Audi A3
30
146 2.0 Racer
76
147 Pre-launch test
51
147 Italy launch
55
147 5-door + 2.0 Manual
59
147 Selespeed vs BMW 316
63
147 5-door 1.6 + 2.0
68
147 GTA
76
147 GTA Road Test
79
147 GTA Road Test (Steve Berry) 87
147 GTA x 2 Autodelta
102
147 GTA Cup Track Test
92
147 GTA Modified
253
147 GTA/Integrale/Coupe 20vT 164
147 / 156 Monza Sport
70
147 1.6 Turbo (Autodelta)
78
147 Rally Car SS1600
86
147 1.9 jtd 16v
90
147 Range test 2005
101
147 Facelift 2005
105
147 Buyers’ Guide (Soper)
114
147 + GT Q2
127
147 JTD 24hr racer
131
147 Collezione
132
147 Collezione + GT Blackline
145
147 Sport + GT Q2
137
147 JTD-M by Janspeed
149
147 Buyers’ Guide
150
147 5 car group test
184
155 ITC
11
155 ITC (Arese)
143
155 2.5 V6 ti (Martini)
213
155 Buyers’ Guide
24/68/201
155 Q4/Dedra Integrale
32
155 4 car group test
150
155 / 156 / 159 Saloons
183
155 BTCC
231
155 DTM Drive at Goodwood
260
155 GTA
271
164 3.0 V6 v Thema 16v Turbo
17
164 Twin Spark
22
164 Guide
49
164 Racer (Soper)
78
164 Buyers’ Guide (Soper)
105
164 bimotore
107
164 Procar
142
164 v Croma v Thema v Saab.
153
164 (Time Machine)
188
GTVs Modified (Autodelta 1997) 17
GTV 2.0 16v J10 (Autodelta)
22
GTV 3.0
20
3.0 GTV Spider vs RZ
26
24v V6 GTV
14/29
24v GTV vs Lotus Elise
43
Spiders New & Old
35
Spider Duetto vs 939
152
Spider 2.0 TS Fleet Report.
209
Spider 105 S4/916 2.0/939 JTS. 221
Spider group test 916
256
V6 Coupes Alfetta/916/Brera. 153
V6 Engine Feature.
153
GTV Cup
39
GTV Cup (Road Car)
65
GTV Cup v Fiat 20v Turbo
224
GTV (Autodelta)
50
GTV LMA/AROC Racers
85
GTV6 LMA Racer (Soper)
112
GTV6 3.2 V6 in Italy
90
GTV6 (916 V6 + 2.0TS facelift)
92
GTV (916 Buying Advice).
96
GTV (916 Buying Advice).
143
GTV (916 3.0 Team Cars)
119
GTV (3.0 Supercharged)
122
GTV6 3.2 Buyers’ Guide
152
GTV6 v integrale v Coupe 20vT 155
GTV6 916 Series Group Test
244
155 2.0 + V6 SZ & 33
20
156 Supercharged (Engstler)
23
156 Launch
18
156 in Spain
20
BACK ISSUES INDEX - DOWNLOAD AT WWW.AUTO-ITALIA.CO.UK
156 Hormann
25
156 Superturismo
25
156 ETCC track tect
91
The Range 164 / 75 & GTV
26
156 2.5
27
156 JTD vs 156 1.8TS
28
156 Group N
29
156 Group N (Powermods)
69
156 Selespeed
33
156 2.0 Selespeed (SW)
70
156 vs Audi A4 Quattro
33
156 Q system/Selespeed
34
156 1.9 JTD
41
156 2.4 JTD
67
156 Buyers’ Guide
44
156 Buyers’ Guide (Soper)
138
156 Sportwagon
45
156 Corsa
46
156 Sportwagon JTD
47
156 Sportwagon JTD 16v
175
156 Sportwagon
48
156 Group N Racer
49
156 Superturismo Track Test
81
156 + GTV (Autodelta)
50
156 Sportwagon 1.6
53
156 Tarox & Zender
52
156 Red Dot brake test
53
156 / 147 Monza Sport
70
156 GTA Launch
69
156 GTA Sportwagon
71
156 GTA Saloon
79
156 GTA Bridgestone tyres
82
156 GTA Monzasport
112
156 GTA Buyers’ Guide
160
156 JTS Sportwagon (Selespeed) 73
156 JTS S/Charged Autodelta 124
156 V6 vs 2.4 JTD (OBD tuning) 82
156 2.0 JTS (2002)
83
156 Giugiaro Facelifted (1.9jtd) 84
156 Drivedata remaps
89
156 20v M-Jet (2003)
93
156 2.4 M-Jet (Tunit)
97
156 GTA AM (Autodelta)
100
156 Buyers’ Guide
102
156 2.0 TS HBE Suspension
103
156 3.7 South Africa
128
156 GTA/TSpark/V6 24v/JTD
172
156 GTA 4 car test
199
156 GTA 3.7 by Autodelta
215
156/166/147/GT Range 2005 103
156 Ti Buyers’ Guide
182
156 Buyers’ Guide Twinsparks 203
156 Auto / GT /156 GTA
240
166 News pages
24
166 International Launch
27
166 UK Launch
32
166 3.0 V6 24v
37
166 2.0 Twin Spark
49/71
166 Let’s go to Italy
52
166 3.0 24v V6 Super
54
166 Germany Launch
88
166 TI (2.0 TS Lusso)
94
166 Supercharged by Autodelta 134
166 Buyers’ Guide
148
166 Dossier
251
V6 Saloons 164/166/159.
158
V6 Saloons Group Test
155/156/164/166/159.
218
1997 Scighera
33
Science Museum Exhibition
67
Gippo Salvetti (Blue Team)
72
New Alfa Imports
81
GT (2004)
89
GT (2004) JTS
94
GT (2004) 1.9 jtd 16v
95
GT 3.2 V6 Novitec
110
GT Novitecrosso 1.9 16v M-jet
99
GT 3.2 V6 (Autodelta)
106
GT 1.9 jtd 16v Novitec
141
GT Q2 v Giulietta Sprint Veloce. 147
GT Cloverleaf + 147 Ducati.
150
GT 3 car test.
168
GT Buyers’ Guide.
176
GT 3.7 v 3.2.
233
GT 3.2 v GTV v Coupe v 3200
265
Brera (Ital Design Concept)
91
Brera Italian launch 2005
113
Brera / GT / 159 JTD-M
120
Brera UK Launch 2006
119
Brera Spider Launch Italy.
123
Brera Spider Launch Morocco.
132
Brera Spider J6 by Autodelta.
144
Brera V6 Q4.
124
Brera 2.2 at MBW.
130
Brera Q Tronic.
133
Brera S Prodrive.
146
Brera S Buyers’ Guide.
165
Brera 3.2 V6 Vs GTV6 3.2.
181
Brera 3 car group test.
227
159 (John Simister)
105
159 V6 (John Simister)
108
159 V6 Range Test
109
159 2.4 JTD-M 2.2 JTS
117
159 Sportwagon Italy Launch
118
159 Sportwagon 2.2 V6 Q4
122
159 Ti
139
159 V6 Q4 (Nordschleife)
141
159 2.2 J4 Supercharged
153
159 2.0 JTD-M
166
159 1750 TBi
167
159 1750 TBi SW
182
159 5 car group test
190
Brera S Supercharged /GT 3.7/159
3.2. Autodelta (UK)
166
8c Competizione
139
8c Competizione Spider
161
8c Disco Volante Spyder
248
Alfa Range Test 2008
140
4x4 33,155,159,164,Brera.
256
Alfa Cloverleaf 5 car test
178
MiTo Italian launch
147
MiTo UK launch
155
MiTo M430 by Marangoni
155
MiTo Multiair
164
MiTo Multiair Cloverleaf
171
MiTo 1.4 TB vs Abarth Punto
171
Mito CL vs Grande Punto Abarth. 177
Mito Buyers’ Guide.
189
Mito Carbonio (Monzasport).
191
Mito 5 car group test.
193/257
Mito TwinAir.
200
Alfa Giulietta Italian Launch.
170
Alfa Giulietta UK Launch.
175
Alfa Giulietta + Mito MY2014. 215
Giulietta Marangoni G430
183
Giulietta TCT Launch
194
Giulietta TCT
196
Giulietta 3 car group test
197
Giulietta Buyers’ Guide
216
Giulietta + Mito QV
223/229
Giulietta Sprint New and Old
227
Giulietta 4 car test (mod)
263
4C
184/211/214/220
4C (Jamie Porter)
230
4C Modified (Jamie Porter)
246
4C v 8C
223
4C SBK
236
4C Spider (News)
229
4C Spider
234
4C Spider RHD
241
4C Spider Buyers’ Guide
265
Club Racers 2012
200
Club Racers 2015
234
Alfa Museum Revival 2014.
229
Alfa Museum Visit 2017.
262
Alfa Buyers’ Guide Special Issue.
Giulietta, Mito, Brera, 159Ti,
147, GT, 156 GTA, 156 Ti,
GTV 3.2, 166, SZ.
229
Alfa Buyers’ Guide
Classics Special Issue. 1750 GTV,
Montreal, GTV6, 75, 155, GTV 916,
147 GTA, 156 GTA,
242
Giulia Special. 101/750 Series, 105
Berlina, SS, 105 Bertone, GTA, TZ1,
TZ2, MY2017 Giulia QV
254
Giulia 2015 Museum Launch
235
Giulia 2015 Balocco Test
245
Giulia Super
248
Giulia 2016 UK Drive
255
Giulia 2017 Veloce
259
Giulia 2017 QV by Celtic Tuning 260
Alfa Romeo Giulia Veloce RHD 261
Stelvio Italian Pre-Launch.
254
Stelvio Italian Launch.
256
Stelvio UK Launch.
262
Stelvio on the Stelvio.
272
Stelvio Quadrifolgio.
264
Stelvio Quadrifoglio.
268
Police Cars last 60 years.
258
Alfa Romeo F12 van
261
Alfa Romeo F1 group test
270
FERRARI
Auto Avio 815
125 S
Ferrari V12 Engine Feature
Supersqualo
Ferrari 246 vs 250F
196S (rep)
195 + 196
195S Coupe by Ghia
156 F1 Sharknose
166 Fangio’s first
166 F2/FL
166 Mille Miglia
208
266
150
24
172
91
21
143
93
51
240
153
166 Mille Miglia Ch.0066
180
166 Mille Miglia Ch.0314M.
183
166 MM Fontana Ch.024.
255
212 Export Mille Miglia 2010.
169
212 Inter Coupe. Ch.0257
219
212 Inter Coupe. Ch.0137E
229
212 F1.
216
340 America
10
340 America
45
340 America
158
340 / 375 MM Ch.0320
207
335 S Ch.0674
241
500 Mondial
12
500 Mondial
239
250 California/Mistral
30
250 California Guide
47
250 California Spyder
128
250 California Spyder x 2
148
250 California Concours Winner 215
250 GT Boano
34
250 GT Boano x 3
243
250 GT prototypes
2
250 GT/GTO
92
250 Europa Ch.0313
238
Dino 246 Tasman
174
Dino 246S
60
Dino 246S Ch.0784
144
250 GT Pininfarina Coupe
38
250 GT Pininfarina (Bowtie)
270
250 GT Pininfarina
Collectors’ Guide
255
250 GT Cabriolet
220
250 GT Drogo
69
250 GT Nembo Spider.
137
250 GTE
101
250 GTE Collectors’ Guide
263
250 MM Mille Miglia 2010
174
250 SWB replica
52
250 SWB Stirling Moss
56
250 SWB at Spa
104
250 SWB Ch.2335
238
250 GT Sperimentale Ch.2653
20
250 GT TDF Ch.1309
14
250 GT TDF
151
250 GT TDF Ch.0585 (Disney).
227
250 GT Lusso (Fyshe)
42
250 GT Lusso
94
250 GT Lusso
97
250 GT Lusso (4.0)
121
250 GT Lusso Concours Winner 193
250 GT Lusso Ch.4713
264
250 Testarossa/206 SP (Fiorano) 90
250 Testarossa Ch.0714
161
250 Testarossa Ch.0738
173
250 Testarossa
237
206 SP Track test
133
206 SP Maranello
197
206 P Berlinetta Ch.0834
251
206 Spider
220
290 MM Ch.0626
170
290 MM Ch.0626 (News)
239
410 S
32
410 Superamerica Ch.0671S
193
410 Carrera Messicana Ch.0594 199
268 SP Ch.0798
17
330 P
124
330 P Ch.0818
230
330 LMB track test
24
330 LMB
232
330 GTO at Monza
67
250 GTO/Daytona Replicas
12
250 GTO (#3505GT)
16
250 GTO vs Jag E-Type
37
250 GTO vs 250 LM (Nord)
102
250 GTO Goodwood Revival ‘09 165
250 GTO Ch.4675
169
250 GTO x 2
200
250 GTO (#3505GT)
231
250 GTO (#3387GT)
252
250 LM
27
250 LM
84
250 LM
110
250 LM Ch.6045
195
250 MM Ch.0344MM
22
250 MM Ch.0352MM
184
250 MM Ch.0276
268
250 Monza Ch.0432M
23
500 MD/TR
101
500 TRC
137
500 F2
139
500 Mondial / Mille Miglia ‘08
160
625 TRC Ch.0680
196
750 Monza Ch.0552
20
750 Monza (ice racer)
89
750 Monza Ch.0492M
187
750 Monza
234
212E Montagna (Hillclimber)
73
Dino Formula 2 Ralt
79
275 GTS vs Nanchang
43
275 GTS/Aston Martin DB6
49
275 GTB/C Ch.09079
227
275 GTB/C
44
275 GTB (Celebration)
98
275 Tour
100
275 GTB/4
130
275 GTB/4
134
275 GTB/4 (Ex McQueen)
223
275 GTB/4C
235
275 GTB/4C Ch.06885
260
275 ‘NART Spyder’
145
275 GTS/4 ‘NART Spyder’
211
275 GTB Collectors’ Guide
258
275 GTS Collectors’ Guide
272
365P
64
375 Plus Ch.0384
105
375 Plus
218
375 Ch.0388
181
375 MM Ch.0490
182
375 S Ch.0030
232
375 S Ch.0030
232
330 P
273
330 & 365GTC
31
330 GTS & 330 GTC
140
330 GTC
231
330 GTC Collectors’ Guide
253
365 GTS
85
365 GT 2+2 Bora vs Jensen
35
365 GT 2+2 Collectors’ Guide
270
365 GTC4 vs Espada
36
365 GTC/4
274
Pinin (Four door)
144
Daytona Spider
36
Daytona Spider by Straman
250
Daytona Group 5
107
Daytona by Michelotti
146
Daytona vs Ferrari 599
150
Daytona ‘Pozzi’ V Road Car.
236
Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona
261
NART Panther.
256
246 Racer (Goodwood T Dron)
88
246 GT/GTS
11
246 GT
48
246 GT vs Stratos
81
246 GT Buyers’ Guide
163
246 GT Buyers’ Guide
238
246 GT Classiche Feature
205
246 GT/GTS Collectors’ Guide. 252
246 GT/GTS
237
Dino V6 Engine Feature
180
246 Dino vs Urraco vs Merak.
190
246 Dino vs Lancia Stratos.
265
246 Dino vs 308 GTB 50th.
273
312 P
63
312 F1
30
312 T5
66
312 T3
80
312 B3 “Spazzaneve”
129
312 B2 F1
149
330 P4 Can Am
161
330 P4 Ch.0858
218
P3/4
54
P3 at Spa
118
712 Can-AM
76
712 Can-AM
254
512 M ‘Sunoco’
13
512 M ‘Tergal’ Ch.1002
246
512 S
55
512 S/M 712
228
512 S vs Porsche 917
163
512 BBLM
40
512 BBLM
155
365 Boxer vs Bora 4.7
78
512 Boxer
23/114/254
512 BBi Buyers’ Guide
62
512 BB Buyers’ Guide
236
512 BBi v Pantera v Bora.
154
500 Superfast
228
365 GT4 BB Buyers’ Guide
179
365 GT4 BB 512 BB Testarossa 180
365 GT4 GT4 Targa (Eastwood) 267
512 Testarossa Reader’s Car
209
Ferrari V8 Engine Feature
157
308 GT4
18/26
308 GT4 vs Merak SS
50
308 GT4 vs Urraco vs Merak
149
308 GT4 LM (NART)
194
308 Buyers’ Guide
43
308 GT4 Buyers’ Guide.
219/234
308 GTB/GTS Buyers’ Guide.
241
308 GTB
126
308 GTB Michelotto
181
308 GTB Michelotto (Olio Fiat). 187
308 IMSA Track Test
87
308 Carma FF
201
308 GTS vs Urraco
65
308 GTS vs Jalpa.
162
308 4 car test.
171
308 Collectors’ Guide
266
328 GTS v Porsche 911
19
328 and 348 Buyers’ Guide
46
328 Buyers’ Guide
147/231
328, 348, 355, 360
82
348 GTC/GTS
32
348 Spider/Mondial
58
348 tb+ts Buyers’ Guide
243
348 + 348 Challenge
274
400 Buyers’ Guide
39
400 Buyers’ Guide (Hackett).
112
400 Cabrio by Straman.
138
412 Buyers’ Guide.
190
400/412 Buyers’ Guide.
233
412 Reader’s Car
206
Mondial 3.2/3.4
29
Mondial Buyers’ Guide
197/235
Testarossa/Pantera (Racers)
26
Testarossa vs Countach
33
Testarossa Buyers’ Guide
244
288 GTO Evoluzione
2
288 GTO Evoluzione (Nord)
89
288 GTO Evoluzione Track Test 105
288 GTO Evoluzione
233
288 GTO v Porsche 959
18
288 GTO (Simon Park)
95
288 GTO V 488 GTB
257
F40LM vs Bugatti EB110SS vs Diablo
SV Roadster
176
F40 vs Bugatti EB110SS
15
F40 vs Porsche 959
34
F40 vs Ducati 996SP
41
F40 Michelotto
76/214
F40 LM
189
F40 Buyers’ Guide
247
F40 at 30
262
355 vs Cobra vs 200NSX
26
355/Diablo/ AR F1/Tornado
28
355 Spider F1
29
355 Challenge car
54
355 Challenge (Rockingham)
70
355 + 360 by Imola Racing
90
355 / 360 / 430 V8s
115
355 Buyers’ Guide
154/232
F355 Collectors’ Guide
268
365 Iding (355)
20
456 GTA
14
456 M GT
25
456 Estate/Spider/FX
58
456 M GT vs Daytona
66
456 M GTA Buyers’ Guide
183
456 M GTA Buyers’ Guide
230
456 M Racer
195
F50
10
F50 Track Test (Donington)
28
F50 Track Test (Rockingham)
68
550 Maranello
11
550 Maranello vs Vantage
22
550 Maranello vs Aircraft
40
550 Maranello (Prodrive)
75
550 Maranello Buyers’ Guide.
209
550 Maranello Buyers’ Guide.
237
550 Barchetta (News)
54
550 Barchetta Track Test
65
575M (John Simister)
70
575M Manual (Steve Berry)
86
575M Novitec
112
575GTC
98
575GTZ
133
612 Scaglietti
88/97
612 Scaglietti (John Simister)
93
612 Scaglietti/456/400
111
612 Scaglietti Road Trip
123
612 Scaglietti HGTC
129
612 Scaglietti Buyers’ Guide.
246
Ferrari V12 Buyers’ Guide.
260
Ferrari by Alcan
30
Ferrari at Le Mans
18/26
Ferrari at Le Mans (Historic)
80
Ferrari at Imola
32
Ferrari at Monza
69
Ferrari at Shelsley Walsh
78
Ferrari at Fiorano
113
Ferrari Supercars at Mugello
115
Ferrari F1
13
Ferrari F1
18
Ferrari F1
47
Ferrari F1 2000
78
Ferrari F1 126C4 Track test.
168
F1 Ferrari/Minardi Test
27
F1 Today and Tomorrow
32
F1 Season Round-up
53
Maranello Concessionaires
49
50 years of Ferrari Poster
38
Coys Historic Festival
41
333 SP (Derek Bell)
15
333 SP
45
auto italia
87
360 Modena
37
360 Spider
45/52
360 Spider (Digitec)
75
360 Club Fiorano Test
59
360 Spider (Hamann)
63
360 Challenge Stradale
85
360 Manual vs Ducati 999
88
360 Bi-Kompressor (Novitec) 96/100
360 Racers x 2
104
360 Modena (Manual v Gallardo) 182
360 Modena Buyers’ Guide
240
F430
99
F430 Spider
106/119
F430 by Novitec
116
F430 Vs Gallardo SE
122
F430 Challenge Corse Clienti
125
F430 Whisky Trail
128
F430 Bi-Kompressor (Novitec). 132
F430 Scuderia
138/153
F430 Scuderia 16M.
164
F430 GTC Team Modena.
156
F430 Vicki Butler Henderson.
165
F430/360/355/348/328.
205
F430 Buyers’ Guide.
242
Enzo
83/101
Enzo vs Maserati MC12
158
Ferrari/FIA GT Championship 03 87
Ferrari Club Racers 208/355/360 94
599 GTB Fiorano
120/142
599 vs Daytona
150
599 Drive Story
156
599 HGTE
159/166
599 Hybrid
172
599 GTO
178
599 Tribute Mille Miglia
188
599 XX
217
599 Buyers’ Guide
245
Ferrari Technology (Dron)
139
California GT 2008
151
California GT 2010
177
California HS
197
California T
223/242
California T HS
244
Ferrari at Palm Beach 2009.
157
Ferrari at Le Mans 1998.
18
Ferrari at Le Mans 2009.
160
458 Italian Launch.
167
458 Italia Sebring 12h.
187
458 ISpa 24h (2015).
238
458 by Oakley Design.
184
458 vs Gallardo Superleggera
186
458 Spider
191
458 Italia (EVO 2)
192
458 Italia Buyers’ Guide
248
458 Spider vs Gallardo Spyder 204
458 Speciale
216
458 Speciale on Silverflag ‘14. 225
458 Speciale v 430 Scuderia v 360
Challange Stradale
237
Ferrari Finales 2005 Monza
103
Ferrari 60th at Silverstone
135
Ferrari Racing days Silverstone 264
Ferrari 60th at Fiorano
136
Ferrari Superamerica
109
Ferrari Tribute Mille Miglia 2010. 176
Maranello Rosso Collection
182
Ferrari Mondiali at Mugello
219
Ferrari by Pininfarina 60 years 203
Ferrari by Bertone
221
Museo Casa Enzo Ferrari
196
Maranello Concessioniares
244
FF
183/202
FF by Oakley Design
219
F12 Berlinetta
201/212/222
F12 TDF
241
LaFerrari
207/221
LaFerrari vs Bugatti Veyron vs
F35 Lightning
249
488 GTB
237
488 GTB v Huracán
247
488 Spider
239
488 Spider
251
488 Pista
268
488 Pista
270
GTC4 Lusso
247
GTC4 Lusso
267
GTC4 Lusso T
256
GTC4 Lusso T
271
70 Years of Ferrari A-Z Pt1
256
70 Years of Ferrari A-Z Pt2
257
70 Years of Ferrari Top Racers 260
812 Superfast
259
812 Superfast
273
Under 50k Buyers’ Guide
271
V8 Buyers’ Guide:
308GT4/GTB/328/348/
Mondial/355/360 Modena
259
Ferrari Portofino Italy Launch
266
88
auto italia
FIAT
Mephistopheles
186
1899-1999 4hp
42
1905 60hp
226
1906 Fiat Heavyweights
16
803 Corsa
44
501
86
503 Spider
188
505
46
509
140
510S
173
521C
98
525SS
273
514 Spider
133
8V
37/157/239
2800 State Phaeton
115
1800
120
1900 Granluce
195
2300
117
2300S Coupe
235
Balilla 508S
26
Balilla Taxi
131
Topolino (Hotrod)
75
Topolino Variations (Sparrow)
69
Topolinos
80
Topolino 500B
106
Topolino Mare
204
500 (Modified)
27
500 (Sparrow)
58
500 Variations (Sparrow)
62
500 Jolly (Sparrow)
66
500 50th Birthday
134
500 Coccinella
136
500 Engine Feature
156
500 Buyer’s Guide
173
500 Based Spada Zanzara.
212
500 L. Readers’ Car
217
500 The Coachbuilt cars
243
500 Sixty Years
257
500 Ferves Ranger
259
600 (Modified)
18
600s
29
600s (Modified)
82
600GT (Tornado Lotus engine) 193
600 Prototype
205
600
234
600 Jolly
246
Fiat 1100S Millecento
52
Fiat 1100S Millecento MM.
162
Fiat 1100D Millecento
123
Fiat 1100 EZ Millecento
198
1100 TV
128
1100 103 TV
225
1100 Padmini
119
1200+1500 Cabriolets.
233
Formula Juniors
28
1500L
176
1600S Coupe
96
OSCA 1500S Coupe
41
1400B Junior
215
850 Buyers’ Guide
53
850 Bertone Race Team
221
850 Coupe v Spider
245
Dino Coupe vs Spider
118
Dino Coupe vs Spider
250
Dino Spider / Biturbo/Montreal 159
Dino 2400 Buyers’ Guide
175
Dino 2400 Buyers’ Guide
239
Dino Coupe (Fuel Injected)
264
124 Saloons
215
124 Special
252
Fiat Twin Cam Engine Feature. 149
124 Spider vs Barchetta
18
124 Spiders
50
124 Spider vs Fiat Barchetta
148
124 Spider vs Alfa Duetto
116
124 Spider Buyers’ Guide
164
124 Spider + Tom Tjaada
203
124 Coupes
52
124 Coupe/GT Junior/Fulvia 1.3 147
124 AC Coupe / 124 Spider
222
Fiat 124 Sport Coupé AC/BC/CC 261
125
49/95/220
125 S
161
125 Group 1
211
125 Samantha
105
125 Samantha Ireland
210
Superchargers 124 and Argenta 30
Fiat the Seat Years
35
Seat Rally Years
42
127 Sport 1050cc
76
127 Group Test
129
Fiat 127 ‘Stradale’ (Restomod) 266
Fiat 127 Rustica (Obscurati)
268
128 Racer (Giovanni’s)
22
128 1100 CL Fleet report
45
128 Golden Oldie
109
128 Rally (Michael Ward)
110
128 Rally
227
128 Fleet report (Michael Ward) 209
128 5 car test
163
128 3P Buyers’ Guide
177
128 3P Montecarlo Historic
195
128 MK1 4 door Restoration
248
130 (Steve Berry)
108
130 vs Gamma
151
131 Mirafiori
15
131 Sport (Golden Oldie)
118
131 Mirafiori (Abarth by RSD)
227
132 + Argenta VX
127
132 Flares by Michelotti
81
The Collectors 124/500/128
39
X1/9
12/23
X1/9 Best Buy
33
X1/9 Buyers’ Guide (Soper)
106
X1/9 (Modified)
41
X1/9 x 2 (Modified)
150
X1/9 Dallara (Val Saviore)
103
X1/9 Abarth Prototipo (Rep)
104
X1/9 Club Racer
115
X1/9 Buyers’ Guide
157
X1/9 (Time Machine)
181
X1/9 VX (Modified)
202
X1/9
219
X1/9 2 car test (Modified)
226
Strada 130TC vs Beta VX
35
Strada 130TC/105TC
26
Strada 130TC/105TC
132
130TC v Grande Punto Abarth 158
Strada 130TC
187
Strada/Ritmo 40 years
267
330bhp Strada Cabrio
34
BMW V8 Strada Cabrio
63
Strada (Time Machine)
197
Modified Pandas (MK1)
20
Panda Buyers’ Guide
75
Panda MK1 (Time Machine)
172
Panda Nuova (launch)
86
Panda 2004
91
Panda in Dozza
94
Panda 1.2
97
Panda 4x4 MK1 Buyers’ Guide
185
Panda 4x4 (2004)
99
Panda 4x4 (2005)
104
Panda 4x4 Cross
224
Panda 4x4 Cross (UK)
226
Panda MK1 (Time Machine)
172
Panda MK1 4x4 (Time Machine) 192
Panda MK1 4x4 v MK v MK3
262
Panda Cross 4x4 / Monster
129
Panda 100hp Italy Launch
126
Panda 100hp UK
136
Panda 100hp 3 car test
213
Panda 100hp v 500S
232
Panda Buyer’s Guide
149
Panda Group Test
179
Panda 160hp (Turbo)
184
Panda MK3 Italian Launch
193
Panda MK3 UK Launch
195
Panda MK3 4x4 Italy
202
Panda TwinAir Rally Phil Young 205
Panda MK3 4x4 UK
206
Uno
10
Uno 45 (Time Machine)
179
Uno Racer (Bailey)
29
Uno Racer (Neil Smith)
79
Uno Turbo MKII
23
Uno Turbo MKI vs MKII
125
Uno Turbo MKI vs Croma Turbo 224
Uno Turbo MKI vs MKII
247
Uno Turbo Buyers’ Guide
274
Tipo, Alfa 75 1.8, and Dedra
25
Tipo 2.0 16v
54
Tempra (Best Buys)
31
Croma IE Turbo(Time Machine) 178
Cinquecento Sporting
2
Cinquecento Abarth
12
Cinquecentos (Modified)
17
Cinquecento Buyer’s Guide
26
Cinq Sporting Buyer’s Guide
187
Cinquecento Sporting
41
Cinquecento Sport x2 Modified. 258
Cinquecento Trofeo 120bhp
66
Hormann Cinquecento SX
42
Seicento (Launch)
23
Seicento Turbo (Novitec)
30
Seicento Sporting
44
Seicento Sporting and S
56
Seicento (UAD Motorsport)
70
Punto Sporting MK1 (Launch)
16
Punto Sporting MK1
21
Punto (Buyers’ Guide)
56
Punto 1.2, 1.9 JTD, HGT
82
Punto MK2 Group test
120
Maggiore - Puntograle
31
Modified Punto GT Turbos
39
Modified Punto GT Turbos
64
Punto Mk2 - Turin launch
37
Punto LS design
46
Punto - Sicily launch
40
Punto Rally Super 1600
42
Punto Rally Super 1600
56
Punto Rally Super 1600 (Test)
78
Punto HGT
45
Punto HGT (jtd) 2004
98
Punto HGT 2005
104
Punto HGT Buyers’ Guide
166
Punto HGT Fleet report (M.Ward) 210
Punto Speedgear Launch
47/60
Punto JTD
51
Punto 1.9 JTD
67
Punto Sporting Turbo R&A
59
Punto/Seicento Abarth
60
Punto Facelifted
83
Punto Facelifted Driven (Berry)
85
Grande Punto Launch
112
Grande Punto UK Launch
116
Grande Punto Sporting (1.9).
117
Grande Punto Sporting Novitec 125
Grande Punto 120 Eleganza
123
Grande Punto T-Jet
141
Grande Punto 1.4 T-Jet + 1.9.
146
Grande Punto EVO.
165
Grande Punto EVO. (VBH)
168
Grande Punto Buyer’s Guide
184
Grande Punto Buyer’s Guide
221
Grande Punto TwinAir
195
Grande Punto 3 car group test 201
Coupe 20v/Turbo
13
Coupe 20v/Punto ELX
25
Coupe 20v Turbo LE
28
Coupe 16v Buyers’ Guide
30
Coupe 16v vs Integrale
68
Coupe 16v Turbo Prototype
259
Coupe/Honda/Pug 306
31
Coupe 20v
39
Coupe 20v Turbo (Modified)
40
Coupe 20v Turbo Plus
43
Coupe 20v Fleet report
45
Coupe 20v Fleet report
143
Coupe 20v Turbo Fleet report.
209
Coupe Buyers’ Guide
48
Coupe Buyers’ Guide (Soper)
109
Coupe Buyers’ Guide
137
Coupe x 3 Modified
126
Coupe 20v Turbo 185bhp
55
Coupe 20v Turbo Buyers’ Guide 153
Coupe 20vT/GTV6/integrale
155
Coupe 20v Turbo 3 x modified 200
Coupe 20v Turbo v GTV Cup
224
Coupe 20v Turbo 3 car test
242
Postert Fiats
13
Coupe + Barchetta by Novitec
19
Coupe v 3200 v GT 3.2 v GTV
265
Flying Fiats (Irish Racers)
113
Barchetta Buyers’ Guide
22/71
Stola Monotipo/Barchetta
25
Barchetta (Auto Haven)
25
Barchetta/Alfa 156/GTV
27
Barchetta/Punto (Modified)
31
Barchetta Turbo (Novitec)
33
Barchetta (Revisited)
54
Barchetta Facelift
97
Fiat Barchetta vs 124 Spider
148
Fiat Barchetta Buyers’ Guide
151
Fiat Barchetta Buyers’ Guide
254
Bravo/Brava
10
Bravo/Brava/Marea
59
Bravo/Brava Buyers’ Guide
69
Bravo SX
34
Bravo HGT & Marea
15
Bravo HGT
17
Bravo HGT
36
Bravo HGT DC Cook
41
Bravo HGT vs Alfa 145 CL
42
Bravo HGT vs Alfa 145 CL
180
Brava 105 JTD
41
Brava 100 16v
53
Bravo 1.4 T-Jet (Launch 2007) 130
Bravo (UK Launch 2007)
135
Bravo 1.4 T-Jet (Launch 2008) 140
Bravo ECO
148
Bravo 1.4 T-Jet + 1.6 M-Jet
202
Bravo Buyers’ Guide
207
Ulysse
10/80
500 2007 Launch
135
500 2007 1.3 Diesel
139
500 2007 1.3 Diesel (remap)
144
500 2008 1.4 Lounge
140
500 2008 UK launch
142
500 2008 1.4 Sport
159
500C
161
500 TwinAir
174/178
500 3 car test
174
500 Buyers’ Guide
181
500 3 car test
214
500 4 car test
192
500L Launch (Turin)
198
500L Launch
207
500L Trekking
211
500L Trekking
212
500L MY2017
258
500L MY2018
265
500 + 500L MY’14 Range Test
219
500x Italian Launch
228
500x Vs Renegade on Snow
232
500x Vs Renegade
249
500x UK
233
500x MY2018
273
500 MY2015
236/237
500 Anniversario
260
Multipla + Vignale Gamine
130
Multipla
36/44
Multipla Eco versions
45
Multipla 1.9 JTD
50/66
Multipla 1.9 JTD (Modified)
79
Multipla Facelift 2004
96
Multipla Facelift 2006
127
Multipla Buyer’s Guide
113
Multipla Buyer’s Guide
202
Doblo MPV and Van
62
Doblo and Iveco Truck
63
Doblo 1.9 JTD MPV
73
Doblo Italian Launch 2006
114
Doblo Family MY2009
171
Ducato 160 Multijet
121
Ducato MY14
223
Marea HLX
17
Marea 20v Weekend
42
Marea Weekend 2.4 Team Cars 124
Marea Buyers’ Guide
115
Importing Italian Cars
40
Ecobasic (News)
49
Stilo (Launch)
62/67
Stilo Multiwagon (Launch)
80
Stilo 1.8 16v
71
Stilo 1.9 JTD
72
Stilo 1.9 JTD (Modified)
79
Stilo 2.4 Abarth
92
Stilo Schumacher
108
Stilo Schumacher Buyers’ Guide 208
Stilo Buyers’ Guide
145
Idea Launch
88
Idea (Steve Berry)
93
Idea Fleet report
107
MPV multitest Doblo/Idea/
Multipla/Ulysse
102
Croma Turbo vs Uno Turbo MKI 224
Croma (2005)
107
Croma (UK Steve Berry)
111
Croma in Ireland
118
Croma 2.4 20v Multijet
122
Croma Buyers’ Guide
210
Sedici 4x4 Italy Launch
115
Sedici 4x4 UK Launch
120
Sedici 4x4 1.9 Multijet
131
Scudo
129
Fiorino
142
Linea
144
Qubo
151/157
Dualogic Panda/Punto/500
186
Freemont 4x4
197
Freemont 4x4 Cross
224
Freemont 4x4 Cross
231
124 Spider MY2016
240
124 Spider MY2016
246
124 Spider MY2016 UK
250
124 Spider Spa Road Trip
270
Tipo / Spider MY2016
245
Tipo / Spider MY2016 UK
250
Fullback
257
Fullback Cross
273
Million Sellers
272
LAMBORGHINI
Miura V12 Engine Feature
147
Miura S (Twiggy)
18
Miura (Shah of Iran)
39
Miura (Giordanelli Rebuild)
106
Miura (3 car test)
111
Miura Jota (Piet Pulford)
120
Miura P400
145
350 GT
152
400 GT
11
400 GT Monza
113
Espada vs Ferrari 365GTC4
36
Espada
119
Espada Restoration Parts 1-7
197/199/200/201/203/206/210
Espada 3 car test
239
Silhouette
13
BACK ISSUES INDEX - DOWNLOAD AT WWW.AUTO-ITALIA.CO.UK
Jarama GTS
141
Jalpa
35
Islero
96
Islero S
177
Urraco vs Ferrari 308 GTS
65
Urraco vs Merak vs 308GT4
149
Urraco vs Merak vs 246 Dino
190
Urraco vs Gallardo Balboni vs
Huracán Spyder
262
LM002
133/264
Countach LP400
17
Countach LP400 v LP560-4.
156
Countach vs Testarossa
33
Countach Pagani’s own car
271
Diablo SV
24
Diablo/355/F1/ Tornado
28
Diablo SVR Track Test
14
Diablo GT/SV/SE30
42
Diablo GT
46
Diablo 6.0 VT
50
Diablo GTR (Reiter Eng)
137
Murcielago
63
Murcielago
64
Murcielago (Road Test)
72
Murcielago (Track Test)
83
Murcielago Vs Porsche 996
86
Murcielago Roadster
106
Murcielago Roadster (Batman). 117
Murcielago LP640
121
Murcielago LP640 vs Typhoon. 136
Murcielago R-GT (GT1 racer)
129
Murcielago R-GT (GT1 racer)
142
Murcielago LP670-SV
165
Gallardo
81
Gallardo (Track Test)
84
Gallardo (Road Test Italy)
93
Gallardo Police Car
108
Gallardo Spyder
116
Gallardo By Hamann
118
Gallardo By IMSA
126
Gallardo GT3 by Reiter Eng.
130
Gallardo by Reiter Eng.
139
Gallardo GT3 Adria Track test. 145
Gallardo Superleggera
132
Gallardo Superleggera
143
Gallardo LP570-4 Superleggera 171
Gallardo LP570-4 Superleggera 199
Gallardo Superleggera v 458.
186
Gallardo LP560-4
146
Gallardo LP560-4 v Countach.
156
Gallardo LP560-4 Spyder.
162
Gallardo Super Trofeo.
159
Gallardo Super Trofeo.
166
Gallardo Balboni.
163
Gallardo Spyder Performante.
194
Gallardo 5-95 by Zagato.
263
40 years of Lamborghini
83
Countach/Diablo/ Murcielago. 135
4 car test: Urraco/Silhouette/
Jalpa/Gallardo
94
Jalpa vs Ferrari 308 GTS
162
Aventador
185
Aventador
195
Aventador + Typhoon
225
Aventador/Murcielago/Diablo 198
Aventador LP760-2 by Oakley
200
Aventador vs Abarth 595 by
Oakley Design
213
Aventador LP750-4 SV
235
Aventador S
256
Aventador Roadster
207
Lamborghini Aventador SVJ
274
Huracán LP610-4
222
Huracán LP610-4
236
Huracán HM680-4 (Oakley)
230
Huracán Spyder
242
Huracán Performante
258
Urus
264/266/272
LANCIA
Lancia Collection K Sport
Lancia Reunion (Miki Biasion)
Lancia Theta 35hp
Lancia Tipo 55 Corsa
Lancia D25
Lancia D50 (Track Test)
Lancia D50
90 Years of Lancia
Lambda
Lambda Airway
Lambda
Lambda 7th Series Torpedo
Lambda 73 car test
Dilambda S2 Carlton DHC
Dilambda S2 Offord Cabriolet
Lancia/Alfa Ghia Coupes
Lancia Commercials
Augusta
175
180
102
78
242
71
240
12
11
32
53
186
211
143
184
22
66
240
Ardea
96
Appia
36
Appia Vignale
63
Appia meets Ypsilon
113
Appia Zagato
138
Appia Furgoncino
180
Appia Convertible
194
Lancia Appia S1,2,3
261
Aurelia V6 Engine Feature
148
Aurelia
43
Aurelia B20 Series 1
107
Aurelia B20 Pichon Parat
125
Aurelia B20 (S2+S3)
200
Aurelia B20 Irish Racer
213
Aurelia B20 ‘Outlaw’ TK
242
Aurelia B24S
23
Aurelia B24 Spider
46
Aurelia B24 Spider
127
Aurelia B24 Spider
+ B52 Rosa d’Oro
154
Aurelia B24S Convertible
87
Aurelia GT 2500 Spider
190
Aurelia B24 Spider + Flavia.
249
Aprilia + Aurelia
100
Aurelia B50 Cabriolet Farina
274
Aprilia Langenthal
108
Aprilia
166
Aprilia (Fred Gallagher)
188
Astura
88
Astura by Pinin Farina
185
Astura by Castanga (Villa D’este) 95
Astura + Appia
111
Astura MM Sport
203
Astura
241
Flaminia
39
Flaminia Sport
42
Flaminia GTL
76
Flaminia 3 car test
172
Flaminia 2.5 3C Zagato.
258
Flaminia 3c Speciale (Lopresto). 218
Lancia Flaminia Cinvertible vs
Alfa 2600 Spider.
255
Flavia Coupe
17
Flavia Coupe (Golden Oldie).
123
Flavia Zagato + Convertible
170
Fulvia Zagato x 2
19
Fulvia Zagato Historic racer
60
Fulvia Zagato twin test
213
Fulvia/Abarth/124/Alpine
32
Fulvia Spotters’ Guide
33
Fulvia Classic Choice
83
Fulvia F&M Specials
90/232
Fulvia 1.6 HF
92
Fulvia S05
98
Fulvia 2C (racer)
103
Fulvia Zagato Club Racer
115
Fulvia 1600 HF (Simister)
121
Fulvia V4 Engine Feature
146
Fulvia 1.3/124 Coupe/GT Junior 147
Fulvia Marlboro (Munari)
192
Fulvia 1.6 HF Fanalone + integrale
Fulvia 1600 HF
Fulvia 50th Anniversary
212
Fulvia v 131 Alitalia v Stratos
273
Competizione Prototype
204
Final Edition
181
Gamma
101
Gamma vs Fiat 130
151
Gamma 4 car test
189
Gamma Coupe (Time Machine). 206
Sibilo by Bertone
206
Stratos Alitalia/Prototype
2
Stratos Replicas vs Original
10
Stratos (San Remo 1974)
47
Stratos GTO/GT car
51
Stratos vs Dino 246 GT
81
Stratos vs Dino 246 GT
265
Stratos – 30 years of
85
Stratos World Meeting 2007.
140
Stratos Stradale + Group 4.
117
Stratos Prototype.
152
Stratos (Heseltine).
233
Stratos Chequered Flag Story. 243
Stratos Group 4 x 2
244
Stratos Group 4 Track Test
249
Stratos – 2005
103
Stratos New 2010
179
Rally multi car feature
99
Rally multi car feature
255
Betas Modified
32
Beta
13
Beta Historic racer
60
Betas Coupe/HPE/Saloon
55
Beta VX vs Strada Abarth
35
Beta Coupe/Saloon/Montecarlo. 139
Beta Coupe Alitalia (Colvil)
150
Beta HPE (Time Machine)
177
Beta Volumex x 2
260
Trevi Bimotore
237
Montecarlo
16
Montecarlo V6 Alfa engine
34
Montecarlo Buyers’ Guide
161
Montecarlo Turbo (Martini)
206
Martini LC1
207
Martini LC2
208
Martini 48pg special (Campion) 272
LC2 Track Test
96
037 Rally Stradale
67
037 Rally Stradale
245
037 Rally Martini (Volta)
62
037 Rally Olio Fiat (Grifone)
144
037 Rally Olio Fiat (Grifone)
199
037 Rally Wurth
230
Delta HF Turbo
29
Delta S4
31
Delta S4 Cesare Fiorio’s
72
Delta S4 ride (Val Saviore)
78
Delta S4 ECV1
179
Delta S4 Martini
210
Delta S4 Stradale
222
Delta 40th Anniversary
161
Delta 4HF 4WD
169
Delta Integrale 8v Team Cars
198
Integrale Special Editions
21
Integrale v Escort Cosworth
15
Integrale 8v/Nissan Skyline
23
Integrale vs Caterham
44
Integrale Buyers’ Guide
49
Integrale/Coupe/131 Abarth
58
Integrale Evos (Modified)
63
Integrale vs Coupe 16v
68
Integrale 8v, 16v, EVO
93
Integrale Track test (Drivedata) 95
Integrale Repsol Group A
105
Integrale 5 car test (Modded)
127
Integrale/Coupe 20vT/147 GTA 164
Integrale Buyers’ Guide
156
Integrale/Coupe 20vT/GTV6
155
Integrale Group A Martini
182
Integrale Group A Martini
228
Integrale Martini
212
Integrale Martini Safari
272
Integrale 500bhp (Walkers)
217
Integrale 3 car test
226
Integrale 30th-48 page Special 262
Hyena
64
Magia “Concept”
22
Dedra/Alfa 75/Fiat Tipo
25
Dedra
27
Dedra Integrale/Alfa Q4
32
Thema 8.32
12
Thema 16v Turbo vs 164 3.0
17
Thema 8.32 vs 16v Turbo
35
Thema 8.32
220
Thema 8.32 Buyers’ Guide
247
Thema Buyers’ Guide
110
Thema v Saab v Croma v 164.
153
Thema Plus
240
Delta HPE HF Turbo
37
Delta HPE Evo 500
54
Delta HPE Turbo Buyers’ Guide 169
Delta HPE Turbo (Imports)
71
Delta (New) 2008
147
Delta vs Ypsilon
174
Delta vs Ypsilon (Chrysler)
190
Ypsilon
24
Ypsilon 2004 1.4
89
Ypsilon 2011
185
HPE & Y
11
Y10 (Time Machine)
175
Y10 + Turbo
223
Lybra
38
Lybra 2.4 JTD SW
65
Kappa
20
Kappa Coupe
54
Kappa 3.0 Saloon
58
Kappa Coupe v Shamal v SZ
274
Thesis (Launch)
65
Thesis 2.4 JTD (San Remo)
80
Musa 1.9
105
Centenary Celebrations
126
Centenary Celebrations (Collins) 127
Thema / Chrysler 300C
199
Kennedy Collection
263
MASERATI
250F
250F (CM9)
250F (CM5)
250F (Fangio’s Car)
250F vs Ferrari 246
Cooper Maserati
8CL
8CM + 6CM
8CM
4CS
11
63
215
73
172
72
24
82
222
54
Bugatti-Maserati (1937)
245
V4 Sport
229
Eldorado
29
Alfieri Collection (pre Panini)
16
Heritage 450S
26
150S + Maria Luisa IV Boat
234
150 GT Spyder
267
300S (Spa)
110
300S
209
450S (Recreation)
84
450S (Spa)
91
Tipo 63
36
Tipo 63 (Panini)
102
Tipo 61
89
Tipo 61 Birdcage Ch.2461
211
A6GCM
47
A6G2000 Zagato
34
A6GCS Pininfarina Coupe
49
A6GCS
245
A6G 2000 by Frua
49
A6G Frua Coupe
72
A6 1500
63
A6GCS (Blue)
132
A6GCS (2053)
211
A6G 54 Zagato
202
A6G 54 Frua
203
A6G 54 Coupe by Frua
230
A6G 2000 (Baillon)
270
Race Transporter
112
Cegga (Hillclimber)
48
Mistral/250 California Spider
30
Mistral vs AC 428
56
Mistral Coupe
70
Mistral 3.7 Spyder
144
Mistral + Speedboat
210
Mistral Collectors’ Guide
264
Sebring
45
3500GT
43
3500GT Special Body
58
3500GT Replica Body
75
3500GT Spyder Vignale
80
3500GT Spyder Vignale
167
3500GT Spyder Vignale
Collectors’ Guide
254
3500GT
59
3500GT
99
3500GT (Giordanelli)
201
3500GT (25CLO)
249
5000GT
48
5000GT (Variations)
81
5000GT (Frua)
85
5000GT (Allemano)
93
5000GT (Joe Walsh)
191
Cooper Maserati T61P
154
Khamsin
41
Khamsin Collectors’ Guide.
257
124 GT Prototype
60
Simun Prototype
60
Ghibli SS
52
Ghibli SS
200
Ghibli v Ferrari Daytona
127
Ghibli 3 car test new v old
222
Ghibli Collectors’ Guide.
261
Bora
12
V8 Engine Feature
152
Bora 4.7
35
Bora 4.7 vs 365 Boxer
78
Bora v 512 BBi v Pantera.
154
Bora v 4.7.
194
Merak
33
Merak vs Ferrari 308GT4
50
Merak vs 308GT4 vs Urraco
149
Merak Turbo Prototype
67
Merak vs 246 Dino vs Urraco.
190
Kyalami vs Longchamp
64
Karif
90
Indy
68
Biturbo Spyder
76
Biturbo Spyder
225
Biturbo (Heywood)
107
Biturbo V8 Engine Feature
171
Biturbo (Time Machine)
190
Biturbo Buyers’ Guide
251
Ghibli Cup GT racer
34
Ghibli GTvs BMW M3
13
Ghibli Cup
40
Ghibli Buyers’ Guide
51
Ghibli Primatist
65
Barchetta + Parmisan
38
Barchetta (Bone)
42
Barchetta (Bone)
217
Shamal
18/238
Shamal v Alfa SZ v K Coupe
274
Quattroporte Series I (Antas)
134
Quattroporte Series I
66
Quattroporte Series I
121
Quattroporte by Frua
233
Quattroporte by Frua Aga Khan 271
Quattroporte Series II
122
Quattroporte Series II v SM
265
Quattroporte Series III
46
Quattroporte Series III
123
Quattroporte Series IV v BMW
21
Quattroporte Series IV Evo
38
Quattroporte Series IV
124
Quattroporte Series V
91
Quattroporte Series V (2004)
96
Quattroporte Series V (Yellow) 103
Quattroporte V Sport GT
119
Quattroporte V Sport GT
125
Quattroporte V Auto 2007.
130
Quattroporte V GTS Auto 2008. 140
Quattroporte V + P1 Boats.
142
Quattroporte V v QP IV.
256
Quattroporte S.
149
Quattroporte Sport GT S
156
Quattroporte Sport GT S
172
Quattroporte Bellagio Touring 196
Quattroporte Evo Superstar.
196
Quattroporte VI Launch
204
Quattroporte VI GTS in Venice 214
Quattroporte VI S
241
Quattroporte VI MY2018
247
3200GT
27/36
3200GT vs Porsche C4
48
3200GT
53
3200GT Club Fiorano
59
3200GT vs Aston Zagato
62
3200GT Buyers’ Guide Heywood 140
3200GT/Gransport Spyder/GT 157
3200GT Buyers’ Guide Heywood 162
3200GT Buyers’ Guide Heywood 250
3200GT vs 4200 Gransport
240
Spyder
64/69
4200 Coupe
66/71
4200 Gransport 100/108/126/220
Coupe/Spyder Cambiocorsa
79
Coupe/Spyder Ice Driving
105
Spyder Cambiocorsa
94
Spyder (Jodie Kidd)
86
Coupe Trofeo
84
Coupe Trofeo (Monza)
106
Coupe Trofeo (Silverstone)
111
Gransport Trofeo (Silverstone). 120
GS Zagato.
133
GT Masterclass 2003
88
GT Masterclass 2008
154
90 Years of Maserati
102
Maserati at Silverflag 2005
104
MC12 Stradale
105
MC12 Corse
141
Maserati MC12 vs Enzo
158
GranTurismo Italy Launch
137
GranTurismo (Giordanelli)
144
GranTurismo S
146/177
GranTurismo S Auto
160
GranTurismo MC
161
GranTurismo MC Trofeo
172
GranTurismo MC Trofeo
177
GranTurismo MC Trofeo (Donington
2011 race) Giordanelli
188
GranTurismo MC Trofeo (Silverstone
2015 race) Giordanelli
230
GranTurismo Trofeo/Stradale
176
GranTurismo
189
GranTurismo Whisky Tour
195
GranTurismo Sport
198
GranTurismo Sport / GranCabrio
Sport + Monaco Yacht
203
GranTurismo Buyers’ Guide
249
Grand Tour with QP5 S & GT
150
MC Stradale
183/221
MC Stradale (Lago d’Iseo)
224
GranCabrio
169
GranCabrio
180
GranCabrio Sport
188
GranCabrio Sport
194
GranCabrio Sport + Yacht
198
GranCabrio/GranTurismo S/
Quattroporte GTS
175
GranCabrio/GranTurismo/MY18 260
GranCabrio/GranTurismo S MC
Sportline / GranTurismo S Auto 186
Maserati Museum (100years)
224
Maserati Centennial
227
Maserati Ice Driving
193
Maserati Trofeo 2013
209
Maserati Trofeo World Series
212
Ghibli MY2013
211
Ghibli MY2014 Group Test
217
Ghibli MY2017
253
Ghibli S MY2018
264
Levante
243/252/272
Levante Q4 Ice Dr1ving
255
Levante S in Dubai
263
Levante S + Granturismo MY18 265
auto italia
89
EVENTS
CLUBS
Alfa Romeo Owners’ Club
www.aroc-uk.com
Alfaowner.com Club
www.alfaowner.com
Alfa Romeo Association of California
www.alfaromeoassociation.org
Alfa Romeo Club Quadrifoglio Belgium
www.clubquadrifoglio.be
Alfa Romeo Owners’ Club of Canada
www.alfabb.com
Alfa Romeo Owners’ Club Australia
Victoria Division. The most active and
passionate owners in Australia.
www.alfaclubvic.org.au
Alfa Romeo Owners’ Club Australia
(South Australian Division)
www.alfaclubsa.org.au
Malcolm Ebel
[email protected]
Abarthisti
www.abarthisti.co.uk
www.abarthforum.co.uk
Abarth Owners Club
On-line club for owners, fans and
enthusiasts of the Abarth brand
www.abarthownersclub.com
De Tomaso UK Drivers’ Club
www.detomasodc.co.uk
Ferrari Owners’ Club
Cavallino House, 2 Church Way,
Whittlebury, Northamptonshire, NN12 8XS
[email protected]
www.ferrariownersclub.co.uk
Fiat Motor Club GB
The original UK club for owners of all Fiat
models.
[email protected];
[email protected];
press-officer is
[email protected]
chairman is
[email protected]
www.fiatmotorclubgb.co.uk
Fiat Club America
www.fiatclubamerica.com
Fiat Club Africa
www.fiatclub.co.za
Fiat Club of New South Wales
www.fiatclub.com.au
Fiat Club of Victoria
www.fiatclub.org.au
Fiat & Lancia Club of Western Australia
www.fiatlancia.org.au
Fiat 500 Club
www.fiat500club.org.uk
DIARY DATES 2019
Fiat 500 Enthusiasts Club GB
www.fiat500enthusiasts.co.uk
Sporting Fiats Club
www.sportingfiatsclub.com
Fiat Barchetta UK Owners’ Club
www.fiatbarchetta.com
Fiat Forum
www.fiatforum.com
Fiat Multipla Owners’ Club
www.multiplaowners.co.uk
Fiat Cinquecento & Seicento
www.clubcento.co.uk
Fiat X1/9 Owners’ Club
www.x1-9ownersclub.org.uk
Fiat 127 Forum
www.fiat127.com
Fiat 131 Mirafiori Forum
www.131mirafiori.com
The Fiat Coupe Club UK
www.fccuk.org
Fiat Punto Forum
www.puntosports.co.uk
The Other Dino (Fiat)
[email protected]
Fiat Scotland
Scotland’s dedicated Fiat community
www.fiat-scotland.com
Lamborghini Club UK
[email protected]
www.lamborghiniclub.co.uk
Lancia Motor Club GB
Contact: Sarah Heath-Brook
31 Creffield Road, Colchester, CO3 3HY
[email protected]
Lancia Montecarlo Consortium
www.montecarlo.org.uk
International Association of Lancia
Clubs www.viva-lancia.com
Club LanciaSport
www.lanciasport.com
Stratos Enthusiasts Club
www.stratosec.com
Maserati Club
Dave Smith
[email protected]
www.maseraticlub.co.uk
Sports Maserati Club
Matthew Yates www.sportsmaserati.com
Northern Ireland Italian Motor Club
www.niimc.net
Italian AutoMoto Club
www.italianAutoMotoClub.co.uk
Italian Made Cars Club
www.italianmadecarsclub.org.au
Scuderia Italian Car Club South Australia
www.scuderiaitaliancarclub.asn.au
January 10-13
III May 15-18
Autosport International
Mille Miglia
NEC Birmingham
Brescia-Padova-Rome-Parma-
www.autosportinternational.com
Brescia
III January 31-February 3
www.1000miglia.eu
Automotoretrò
III May 24-26
Lingotto, Turin
Concorso d’Eleganza
www.automotoretro.it
Villa d’Este
III February 6-10
Lake Como, Italy
Rétromobile
concorsodeleganzavilladeste.com
Porte de Versailles, Paris
May 31 – June 2
www.retromobile.com
Sliding Pillar Rally (Lancia Motor
February 14-17
Club)
London Classic Car Show ExCeL
Dinant, Ardennes
London
www.lancia.myzen.co.uk
www.thelondonclassiccarshow.co.uk
June 1
February 22-24
Alton Italian Car Breakfast
Race Retro
The Departure Lounge Cafe, Hants
Stoneleigh Park, Warks
GU34 4BH
www.raceretro.com
thedepartureloungecafe.co.uk
July 4-7
Goodwood Festival of Speed
Chichester, Sussex
www.goodwood.com
July 14
Supercar Sunday
Brooklands Museum, Surrey
www.auto-italia.net
March 22-24.
Restoration & Classic Car Show
NEC Birmingham
www.necrestorationshow.com
April 6
July 26-28
Alton Italian Car Breakfast
Silverstone Classic
The Departure Lounge Cafe,
Silverstone Circuit
Hants GU34 4BH
www.silverstoneclassic.com
thedepartureloungecafe.co.uk
August 3
April 6-7
Alton Italian Car Breakfast
Goodwood Members Meeting
The Departure Lounge Cafe, Hants
Goodwood Circuit, Sussex
GU34 4BH
www.goodwood.com
thedepartureloungecafe.co.uk
April 10-14
September 13-15
Techno-Classica Essen
Goodwood Revival
Essen, Germany
Chichester, Sussex
www.siha.de
www.goodwood.com
April 14
September (date TBA)
Spring Alfa Day (AROC)
50 in Five
National Motor Museum, Beaulieu
50 Alpine passes in five days
www.aroc-uk.com
50infive.strikingly.com
April 19-22
October 5
Horsham Piazza Italia
Alton Italian Car Breakfast
Horsham, Sussex
The Departure Lounge Cafe, Hants
www.horsham.gov.uk
GU34 4BH
May 4
thedepartureloungecafe.co.uk
Auto Italia Italian Car Day
October 13
Brooklands Museum, Surrey
Autumn Motorsport Fesitval
www.auto-italia.net
Brooklands Museum, Surrey
May 12
www.auto-italia.net
Classics at the Villa
III October 24-27
Villa Scalabrini
Auto e Moto d’Epoca 2018
Shenley, WD7 9BB
Padova, Italy
www.classicsatthevilla.com
autoemotodepoca.com
auto italia
91
AUTO ITALIA CLASSIFIEDS
SELLING YOUR ITALIAN CAR? FREE SERVICE TO READERS.
EMAIL
[email protected]
CLASSIFIEDS ITALIAN CARS FOR SALE III
ALFA ROMEO
Alfa Romeo 105 Spider 2.0. 1987,
54,000 miles, Ivory, superb condition,
garaged all year, summer use only, full
MOT and history, new hood, 2 owners,
£13,500 ono, AROC member for 16 years.
Tel: Bryan Pooley, 01883 342483. Email:
[email protected]. A276/025
Alfa Romeo 33 Turbo. 1700 16 valve with Turbo dynamics ball bearing water cooled
turbo, dry sump etc etc, 280 bhp at 7500 rpm. AHM race transmission, strengthened
case, limited slip diff AP competition clutch and concentric slave. Bodyshell seam
welded, welded in cage linked to suspension, false floor, lightened and strengthened
extended wheel arches and side skirts, dry sump tank in rear plumbed in armoured
hose. Tilton adjustable bias pedal box. Stack dash system and lap timer, JRZ 3 way
adjustable suspension with remote reservoirs. Tubular rose jointed suspension. OZ
racing wheels. AP racing brakes. This car was built and maintained regardless of
cost, when recommissioned would again be a formidable race car. Tel: Dave Thomas,
07818 410009. A276/005
Alfa Romeo Giulietta TI. Desirable
Series 2 but with rhd and floor change,
Limoncello, the well known Don Sanders
car, that has reliably completed multiple
European long distance trips, including a
Monte Historique. Sorted with good
handling and performance for a single
carb 1300 with standard cams etc.
Recently spruced up and retrimmed by
Tony Ives so she now looks as well as
she goes. Series 3 front seats with
recline, fitted with harmonised trim but
with original uncomfortable bench seat
available if you insist. On alloys but
steels available, range of spares
available to taste, seeking £27,500. For
full details please call Jon Dooley on
07885 636745. Email:
[email protected]. A276/010
Alfa Romeo 145 TS 1750. 2000, Rosso
Red, unfinished project, the car is
complete, in my ownership for 16 years,
offers invited. Tel: 01477 500607.
A276/024
Classifieds are free! Just email
[email protected]
92
auto italia
1953 1900 RHD Alfa Farina Coupe.
Red, completely restored in the 1990s by
Symbolic Motors with a later 1955 larger
engine with twin sand-cast Solexes.
Many concours awards over the years,
the car was refreshed with new paint
approximately a year ago, Peter Marshall
knows the history on this automobile.
Many photos at Bob Schnittger’s ‘1900
Companion’ website. Tel: Tim Gallagher,
828 778 2732. Email:
[email protected]
(North Carolina, USA). A276/016
Fisher Alfa 1965 racing car. Full
restoration, professional set-up ‘on the
button’, 2000cc high torque fresh engine
(Jim Evans input), rebuilt Hewland,
complete with spares and box trailer,
400kg, suitable Italian and French
hillclimbs, £44,500. Tel: Peter, 01229
716016 (Cumbria). A276/017
Alfa Romeo Spider 105 2000. 1971,
96,200 miles, yellow, fully photographed
frame off restoration and in the same
family since 1989. Needs minor cosmetic
work, such as interior and paint chips,
choke cable needs correct knob. Full
current MOT and MOT history, always
garaged, taken for short drives every
few weeks, hood in good order with
small crease on rear window, underside
cleaned and treated, included in sale are
spare centre console, rear light cluster,
rear bumper, engine block, £9000 ono.
Tel: 01727 812992. Email:
[email protected] (N.Yorkshire).
A276/020
1977 Alfa Spider 105 2000 Veloce.
47,400 miles, blue, genuine RHD UK car,
owned since 2002, restored over the last
3 years, recent full respray in 2 pack,
new water pump, alternator, petrol
pump, petrol tank. Brakes completely
refurbished with new cylinders, seals
and servos, new windscreen, carpet and
mohair hood. Many other new small
items as well, it is in excellent condition,
only sign of wear driver’s door card.
Being very critical, the only obvious
external fault is the rear bumper which
has a slight bump, £12,500 ono. Tel:
07980 184480. Email:
[email protected]. A276/015
Alfa Romeo S4 Spider. 1990, RHD,
Rosso Red, 2 litre injection, power
steering, 5 speed, alloy wheels,
Alcantara/leather seats, electric
windows, no rust, desirable reg number,
MOT to April 2019, garaged/covered,
summer use only, £12,500 ono. Tel: 020
8997 2039 (West London). A276/018
Alfa Romeo 105 Giulia. My very special
silver Bertone Junior is up for sale, it
attracts a lot of admirers and has 2
characters, one is a performance Classic
road car sitting on period GTA Corsa
wheels, the other allows the owner to
take part in Classic hill climbs, sprints
and continental speed events. It
complies with MSA scrutineering
requirements, a well known car in AROC
circles. This is an excellent car which is
maintained regardless of cost and is in
top mechanical condition, it was
originally restored in 2000 and altered to
the GTA style together with Harvey
Bailey fast road suspension, GTA
exhaust system, Monza fuel cap and
GTA Corsa wheels. The 1300 engine was
rebuilt as a 1962cc Nord engine (original
engine). This is an exciting car to drive
on the road or track with the instant
response from the lively engine and the
great intuitive feedback from the
suspension set up, a car which is fettled
and ready to use, £29,500 ovno. Email:
[email protected]. A276/011
1984 Alfasud Ti 105 Green Cloverleaf.
54,650 miles, silver, in good condition
and garaged since 1990, I have had her
since 1988. Well maintained and
serviced: new clutch, discs all round plus
new front calipers, new rad and Koni
sport shocks, has clean interior, (little
split in gear gaiter rubber/leatherette
and small worn patch on driver’s seat), I
put in rear belts. Drives beautifully and
sounds great, recent service and MOT
this August, £7700. Tel: Marek, 07879
448289 (London). A276/019
CLASSIFIEDS
Alfetta GTV. Silver, only 15,000 miles
from new, excellent original condition,
only 2 owners, owned by me since 1989.
Tel: 01606 888470 (Cheshire).
A271/026
Alfa Romeo 156 Sportwagon. Diesel,
2004,123,000 miles, MOT’d till
September 2019. Spare set of Alfa alloy
wheels with tyres will come with the car,
new radiator, thermostat, EGR valve,
boot liner included, £1500. Tel: 07749
522251 (Fife). A276/021
Alfa Romeo 156 GTA V6. In Miro Red
with black and light tan upholstery. Reg
Oct ‘02, MOT’d to 06/06/19 and mileage
of 113,526, full service history file
available and also paperwork covering
paintwork, interior, wheels and exhaust,
the car is further enhanced with a Bose
sound system. The vehicle has been
maintained to a very high standard,
viewing by appointment, genuine
enquires only as the vehicle is being sold
due to the sudden passing of its owner.
For further info tel: Paul, 07712 777853.
Email:
[email protected].
A276/014
Alfa Romeo 156 2.0 Twin Spark.
85,000 miles, owned by us since first
registered on 5 June 1998, regularly
serviced and cared for by Alfa specialist
garage. Cosmo blue bodywork, navy
velour seats etc, leather steering wheel,
bodywork, interior trim, engine, gearbox
etc, all in good condition. Recently failed
MOT due to rust in sills but could be
restoration project or source of parts,
£150 or offer. Tel: 07775 851362
(located in Wiltshire). A276/026
auto italia
93
III ITALIAN CARS FOR SALE CLASSIFIEDS
Alfa Romeo 33 1.5 IE non-cat. 1992,
51,000 miles, gold, FSH and tons of bills
from day one, in near mint condition
with excellent bodywork and very tidy
underneath, MOT April 2019. I bought
the car from Phil Parfitt (Alfa Craft) in
London three years ago, loads of work
carried out since 2012 including rebuilt
heads, new clutch, radiator, shocks, cam
belts this year, full brake overhaul and
gearbox overhaul, contact me for a full
list. Original, unmolested, unmodified,
£2500. Tel: Mark, 01935 882689. Email:
[email protected]
(Chiselborough, Somerset).
A276/023
Alfa 146 Ti. Lovely original 146 Ti,
owned for over 9 years, one previous
owner, always garaged. Great to drive
with lovely exhaust note, it’s done 123K
miles but these cars like to be used as
long as they are properly maintained.
Mark at Alfa Lusso in Cowfold has looked
after it for many years and kept it in top
condition, recent full service, belts,
wheels, tyres, battery, wipers and
various other bits and is MOT’d to
September 2019. Rarely for these it’s
never been welded, bodywise it’s in
great condition and it gets lot of nice
attention, it’s still bright red all over. The
interior is also excellent, there are
newish Alfa logo mats which match the
ti style seats, the glove box is now too
small for all the history. Along with the
original Alfa wallet and book pack,
there’s a stamped up service book, old
MOTs, invoices, original bill of sale, spare
and master keys etc. This is not your
average 146 as you can probably tell and
there aren’t many left now, you are more
than welcome to come and have a look,
£2495. Tel: 07809 221500. Email:
[email protected] (near
Brighton). A276/022
2003 Alfa Romeo 147 GTA. Just turned
70K miles in the classic red with black
leather interior. The teledials in stunning
shadow chrome help to set the car
apart from the crowd, the private
number plate is included in the sale.
The car has the mandatory Q2 fitted,
Autodelta intake, Scorpion stainless
steel exhaust, colour coded strut brace
and 330mm Brembo brakes. The engine
is beautifully detailed and the cambelt
and water pump has been done, this car
is also in the lower car tax bracket,
£8995. Tel: Jamie Porter, 01763 244441.
A276/012
CLASSIFIEDS ITALIAN CARS FOR SALE III
FERRARI
Alfa Romeo 156 2.4 JTD 20V Ti. 2005,
genuine Ti spec, rare 156, only 27 left.
Gunmetal Grey, 98,000 miles, owned 7
years, thousands spent, vgc all round.
Ti’s have unique badging, interior, lower
than standard suspension, quicker
steering rack and wider wheels, ride is
firm ,goes round corners like she is on
rails, 0-60mph in low 8 second and lots
of torque make this a great driver’s car.
Needs new cam and aux belt/water
pump, reflected in the price (can be
done for £420), £2495 ono, open to
sensible offers, ring for more details. Tel:
07531 136178 (east Devon). A276/054
1999 GTV Lusso 3.2 24v. c80,000
miles, Gunmetal Grey/red leather, once
much loved, but now not used for
several years due to family. Needs work
and tlc, clutch slips if revved hard, needs
good service, crack in windscreen, few
other bits. Great opportunity to have the
best colour combo with the big engine if
you have some time to spend, love to
see someone get this back on the road,
£2500. Tel: Chris, 07796 337839.
A276/056
2004 Alfa Romeo GTV 916 3.0 V6
coupe. Cup variant which is number 122
of only 155 limited edition cars in the
UK, legendary Busso V6 engine which
sounds absolutely fantastic, body is
styled by Pininfarina. New cambelt kit
just done, Alfa Romeo GT 18-inch jetfin
alloys with Pirelli Rosso PZero tyres, I do
have the original 17-inch teledial alloys
which are in excellent condition and
included in the price, Momo half leather
seats and Momo steering wheel, Q2
limited slip differential, stainless steel
Raggazon exhaust with one silencer,BMC
air filter, Powerflex bushes with Koni
dampers fitted, Brembo brakes with
drilled and grooved front discs, paint
recently refreshed, replacement engine
was fitted at 146,000 miles, FSH, great
condition, £12,000 ovno. Tel: 07411
262957. A276/013
94
auto italia
Alfa Romeo GTV 3.0 V6. 2001, Alfa
Rosso, stunning GTV 3.0 owned by AROC
member last 15 years. New MOT and
service, low mileage 87,800, huge
history file and FSH, £6500 ono. Tel:
07743 864373 (Devon). A276/058
Alfa Romeo Spider Twin Spark Lusso.
Pearlescent blue, 2000, W-reg, 55,000
miles, 2 owners from new, in present
ownership for last 15 years, regularly
maintained by specialist garage, no
expense spared, new hood and
clutch, ill health forces sale, £3950.
Zender, anti-roll bars fitted from new,
breathable cover. Tel: Ian, 01202
744028 or 07740 780905 (Dorset).
A276/057
Alfa Romeo Spider Twin Spark Lusso.
1997 2.0L CF1, 78,912 miles, red, black
leather, a/c, serviced annually, new
parts in my ownership: front wishbones
and bearings, rear wishbone bearings,
radiator, cambelt, water pump, variator,
all drive belts, thermostat, exhaust, new
tyres, discs and pads, FSH. MOT
12/11/19, all bills and documents are
available + set of original wheels, £2850
ono. Tel: 01302 772140 (South Yorks).
A276/009
2004 Alfa Romeo 916 Spider. Silver,
bodywork in very good condition, less
than 49,000 miles, good service history
with invoices, all the usual refinements
including electric hood. MOT till January
2019, £5500 ono, can be seen in
Parkgate Cheshire, or Birkenhead. Tel:
Alan, 07867 617839. A276/055
2002 Ferrari 360 Spider. Manual in
Grigio Alloy with crema leather piped
with blue seats, blue leather dashboard
and crema roll hoops giving a striking
alternative to the more common red!
£6000 extras when new, document
pack, keys, fitted Ferrari car cover etc
are with the car, always garaged and
summer use only – no track day use. In
my care for 13 years, £70,000, 3 years
with full Ferrari dealer history every year,
belts changed this year. Email:
[email protected]
(Northamptonshire). A276/059
Ferrari Mondial 3.4T Cabriolet. 40K
miles and full Ferrari service history, very
original car, all handbooks, keys and
tools present, £52,950. Tel: 07816
310683. A276/027
Ferrari 308 GT4. Very early GT4
registered 1/1/75 to Toleman Ltd, was
originally metallic Viola which I believe
maybe unique in a UK RHD car, now red.
Cloth interior, comes with the incredibly
rare leather Dino wallet and service
book, needs complete and total
restoration but could be an amazing
project, 95% complete, £25K. Tel: Nick
Record, 07836 573204. A276/028
Ferrari 308GTS QV. Very rare Azzurro
metallic blue Ferrari 308 GTS QV with
contrasting Crème leather c/w blue
piping. Huge history file going right back
to the original order made with Ferrari,
including front and rear spoilers, air
conditioning, toolkit, service book and
manuals. Last service included new
belts, etc in March 2018, long-term FOC
member, inspection and/or
demonstration can be arranged. Email:
[email protected]. A276/062
Ferrari 328 GTS. 1987, 21K mls, Rosso
Red and Crema, with a/c and colour
coded roof aerofoil, I bought this from a
main dealer approx 1990. Excellent
service history, just had a major belt
service and complete suspension and
brake refurbishment, all invoices and
MOTs present, original jack, tools,
leather service wallet pack and mapreading lamp. Original NCT spare tyre
has never been used, 328 private
number subject to negotiation, in
impeccable condition, totally standard
and unmolested, £99,995. Tel: 07801
659093. A276/073
Ferrari 360 Modena. Rosso Corsa with
Crema leather, F1 gearbox, 2000/W, RHD,
41,500 miles. Excellent condition inside
and out with full service history, new
brake discs and pads front and rear, new
cambelts and Hill Engineering
tensioners. Challenge rear grille and
front grilles, 6 CD changer, original books
and manuals in leather pouch, Ferrari
tool kit, 2 keys, 3 alarm fobs. Owned
past 8 years, always garaged, £69,950.
Tel: 0844 3302026. Email:
[email protected] (London).
A276/060
Ferrari 458 Spider. Purchased from
Meridien Modena in Feb 2018, 3250
miles, one previous owner, Ferrari power
warranty to Feb 2020, free servicing to
Aug 2020, recently MOT’d and serviced,
all stamps present. Perfect
specification, Corsa Red, red carpets,
black carbon sports seats, carbon driver
zone, centre console, carbon kick plates
and carbon rear tailgate, grey alloys with
yellow calipers. This is a reluctant sale
with genuine reasons to pass on this
wonderful machine, £194,995 ono,
strictly no canvassers. Email:
[email protected]. A276/063
1987 Ferrari 328 GTB race car.
Campaigned in the Ferrari Owners’ Club
Classic race series over the years as a
front running car, this is a very well
known car, modified to group 4
specification, for more information
please contact Robert, 07802 638618.
A276/029
Ferrari 348TB. LHD, 1993, 38,500km,
Rosso with tan, one previous owner, full
history, belts 2016, just serviced
October ‘18, always garaged and used
by me in the south of France, now in UK,
needs to be seen, really is superb, call or
whatsapp, £45,750. Tel: 07768
028400. Email:
[email protected] for
full update and full photo
specification (FOClub member).
A276/030
Ferrari 328 GTS. 1989, Rosso/Crema,
56,830 miles, FSH, original tools, books
etc, stunning perfect car, welcome to
any test or inspection. Recent service
and new MOT, this car is as good as it’s
going to get! Email:
[email protected]
for more pics and info, or phone FOC
member Anthony, 07779 726845.
A276/061
CLASSIFIEDS
SITUATIONS VACANT
This fast growing, single marque, specialist garage in Hertfordshire, has
two full time vacancies for experienced classic car Mechanic/Restorers.
This renowned workshop has a field leading reputation and attracts
customers from all over the world so the successful candidate should be
able to demonstrate that they can deliver against high expectations.
AVANTI MOTORSPORT
ABARTH / ALFA / FIAT / LANCIA
1000s of used parts in stock
Performance Engine Parts
Engine & Gearbox Rebuilds
5 & 6 Speed Close Ratio Gearkits
LSD Units, Final Drives
Tel.: 01458 446517
Email:
[email protected]
Both roles are full time jobs, working 40 hours/week Monday to Friday.
Salary dependent on experience.
Product knowledge training will be given.
Basic IT skills using Microsoft Office (word, outlook, excel) is essential.
Full UK driving licence.
Overall, the applicant should be able to demonstrate a steady career, a
passion for the subject, attention to detail and a desire to meet the high
standards set by our discerning customers.
Please contact Elspeth Heywood on
[email protected]
McGrath Maserati, Unit 8, Claggy Road,
Kimpton, Herts, SG4 8QB, UK
Phone: 00 44 (0) 1438 832161
auto italia
95
III THE DIRECTORY SPECIALIST SERVICES
• One vacancy is as a Mechanic on the ‘modern classics’, cars from the
1980’s through to current day. An ability to work against an estimate and to
deadline is essential. The job requires ‘old school’ as well as modern,
computerised diagnostics
• The second vacancy is as a Restorer, working on classic cars from the
1950’s to 1970’s. A knowledge of older technologies is essential including
electrical, mechanical and engineering. Project management skills would
be a distinct advantage on the longer term projects
CLASSIFIEDS ITALIAN CARS FOR SALE III
MASERATI
Maserati 4200 Spyder. Available now, a beautiful 4200 Spyder maintained
throughout my ownership by McGrath, exterior and interior professionally detailed
and sealed for life (no more polishing!), garaged with 78,000 miles. Well known car in
the club and cherished for the last decade by former Trident editor, great
opportunity to acquire a fully sorted and very pretty car, £18,250. Tel: 01406 490087.
Email:
[email protected]. A276/004
FIAT
Fiat Abarth 1.4 M/A T-Jet
Competizione. Reg 27/11/18, 8000
miles, Abarth Red, paddle shift,
Supersport wheels, Celtic tuning,
205bhp, 210lb/ft (0-60 5.5 sec, 150mph
est), auto/manual, recent service,
immaculate condition, £17,000. Tel:
01668 283462 (Northumberland).
A276/064
1995 Fiat Coupe 16V N/A. 81,500
miles, long MOT to 15.08.19, cambelt and
tensioners replaced August 2014 at
72,000 miles, exhaust replaced from the
cat in August 2014, exhaust front
downpipe replaced in August 2017,
recent two front Dunlop tyres, cloth
interior in good condition, history file,
drives very well, call for further details,
£750. Tel: 07854 932595 (Orpington
area). A276/065
Fiat Uno 45S. Black, 1984, 140,000
miles, price: open to offers, one owner
car, in need of MOT and more TLC, phone
for details. Tel: 07710 486059 or 01992
465304 or 01992 476300 (Herts).
A276/007
LANCIA
Fiat 130 Coupe. Rare manual ZF
gearbox model, one of just 900 hand
built by Pininfarina at their Cambiano
facility from the total production of
4,491 cars. Original Bianco paint, and
orange velour interior, paint is excellent,
the interior is good with the exception of
the front seats which show some wear
and would benefit from some attention
(I have been quoted £600 to repair both
front seats), there are a set of tailored
seat covers on the front seats, so the
interior does look very acceptable.
Vehicle is showing an Indicated 35,000
kms from new with 2 Italian and 2 UK
owners, full 12 months’ MOT and
registered as Historic Vehicle, so road
fund licence is free. These cars,
especially the rare ZF manual versions,
are being talked up by journalists such
as Quentin Willson, who feel that they
will increase in value rapidly in the
future. A comfortable and sure footed
mile eater that looks great and should
handsomely repay your investment,
£10,950 or offers, would part exchange
anything, ancient or modern,
cash either way. Tel: 07831 290806.
Email:
[email protected].
A276/001
96
auto italia
2007 Maserati Quattroporte 4.2
Sport GT ZF auto. As owned by Auto
Italia editor, Chris Rees, and featured in
this magazine (June 2017). 400hp V8
engine with ZF six-speed paddle-shift
auto - much nicer to drive than the Duo
Select transmission and more reliable.
Dark grey with red-and-black duo-tone
leather upholstery. Full spec including
‘Sport’ driving mode, front and rear
climate control, sat nav, Bose audio, CD
changer, electric rear sun blind, Xenon
lights, cruise, parking sensors, heated
seats, 20-inch alloys, piano black trim.
Private plate ‘V88 MSR’ included. Fully
stamped service book. New battery, two
new Michelin Pilot Sport rear tyres.
Excellent condition inside and out,
46,350 miles, MOT to November 2019,
£16,900. Tel: 07721 913282. Email:
[email protected]. A276/070
PARTS
Lancia Kappa Coupe. 1999, 88,550
miles (142,426km), 2.44cc 5cyl with VIS.
As featured in the December issue of
this magazine. Two owners from new,
the first was a Lancia main dealer in
Karlsruhe, Germany, who kept it for his
own use until I bought it in 2012. The car
is in very good condition with Poltrona
Frau leather, auto climate control,
heated and electric seats, stereo radio
with 6CD changer. Cam belt changed at
58,500 miles. MOT until April 2019. The
car is quite rare, as not many were built.
A car in similar top condition in Germany
would fetch about 11,000 euros. The
insured value is £7500 and would be
increased at next renewal. The current
registration is T450 SAA. I am looking for
offers around £7600. Tel: 07739 897477
or 01962 715817 (Winchester).
A276/006
Ferrari 355 wheels. 1 set of genuine
Speedline wheels to fit a Ferrari 355 for
sale, with Prelli P Rosso tyres,
295/680/18 and 235/645/18, all in
good condition, £2700. Tel: Robert,
07802 638618. A276/031
Marchal spotlights. Pair of spotlights,
believed ex California Spyder, £650,
contact John Lewis for photos and spec.
Email:
[email protected]. A276/032
365GT2+2 parts. 365GT2+2 plastic
perspex headlight covers, £500;
handbrake cable, £150; and oil filter, £10.
Tel: 07836 239377 (Haslemere).
A276/033
Alfa Romeo GTV 916 speedo and rev
counter console, black, good working
order, £50 ono. Tel: 01564 772714 (West
Midlands). A276/034
Ferrari 612 rear exhaust. Rear
exhaust system for sale, £500. Tel:
07836 239377 (Haslemere). A276/035
Ferrari F430 Spider exhausts and
headers. I have replaced the exhaust
and headers on my F430 Spider and
these parts are available for purchase.
Car had done around 20K on the
exhausts and as far as I know the
headers are the MkIIs which were fine
and were replaced because I wanted the
louder sound of the aftermarket ones.
Available for collection from
Bromsgrove, any questions please ask,
open to sensible offers. Email:
[email protected] (West
Midlands). A276/036
Fiat Stilo Abarth parts. Rear hatch
with glass and spoiler, set of wheels,
side skirts, rear lights, mirrors and parcel
shelf, £150 job lot. Tel: 07541 310419.
A276/037
Ferrari 348 genuine rear window seal.
New boxed 348 rear window seal, I am
told these are over £400 and no longer
available, £150. Tel: 07787 52813.
A276/038
MISCELLANEOUS
330/365 Borrani alloy wheel. Ferrari
330/365 Borrani alloy wheel with new
tyre, £500. Tel: 07836 239377
(Haslemere). A276/067
Genuine Ferrari 458 indoor car cover.
Email:
[email protected].
A276/069
CLASSIFIEDS
Alfa Romeo Alfetta Haynes workshop
manual, all models 1973-1981, clean
condition, £10 ono. Tel: 01564 772714
(West Midlands). A276/039
Ferrari F430 Coupe custom indoor
cover. Complete with storage bag, this
cover has never been used. Soft liner to
protect paintwork, breathable fabric,
originally purchased from Classic
Additions. Colour red with yellow piping
and yellow mirror pockets, Ferrari badge
on bonnet, £250. Email:
[email protected]. A276/040
Enzo magazine issue 1. Brand new.
Email:
[email protected]. A276/041
Ferrari 458 Spider luggage. Full set in
very new condition, sensible offers
considered. Email:
[email protected].
A276/042
Meguiars G220 polishing machine. No
longer needed and still boxed and very
light use. With some pads – some are
new and unused, plus a range of
chemicals for polishing, all included,
£100 collected from SW London. Email:
[email protected]. A276/043
‘250M’. Registration for sale, Ferrari
member. Email:
[email protected].
A276/044
Hand made 3D A.T.S emblem wall art.
Measuring 500mm diameter, all wood
construction, £85 plus shipping. Tel:
07564 637636. A276/002
C
‘Ferrari World’ magazine. I have 14
editions of Ferrari World magazine for
sale including 4 year books
2010/2011/2012/2013. I’m open to
offers as I want them out of the way,
they are all immaculate, never been
read. Email: bi.electricalsolutions@
gmail.com. A276/071
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March issue. April issue deadline: 14th February. All adverts received after the deadline
will be inserted in the following issue.
Private adverts cannot be submitted by telephone.
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For your vintage garage. 7 tin petrol
sign, 8x12 inches, £45 post free. Tel: 020
8399 7541 (Surrey). A276/008
‘SPY 16M’. 430 Ferrari Scuderia 16M
Spider, the number plate looks perfect
on the car. Tel: 07483 940688.
A276/045
Ferrari books/brochures/prints.
Moving house so looking to sell various
Ferrari related items: automobilia books,
various models 412/456/550/360/
430/612; ltd edition Clarkson on Ferrari
silk bound book; brochures 412/456/
575/FF/California; large Pininfarina
sketch prints 456/360 (obtained from
Marenello Egham) currently framed but
frames tatty; 11” x 8” plastic Scuderia
shield, ideal for garage; limited edition
no 28/50 signed David Wilson
Schumacher F1 cars 97-03, all 7 cars,
please email for prices. Email:
[email protected]. A276/046
‘430 WOW’. It’s what bystanders will
say when you drive past in your
beautiful 430. Tel: 07770 880958.
A276/047
‘ENZ 123’. Ideal dateless plate for an
Enzo model, £7500. Tel: 07773 078074.
Email:
[email protected].
A276/048
‘EFF 488’. On retention, £5K ono. Email:
[email protected]. A276/049
‘GTC4’. Great registration for your GTC4
Lusso. Tel: 07770 880958. A276/050
‘F360 GTO’. Currently on retention
certificate, £3500. Tel: 07773 078074.
Email:
[email protected].
A276/051
Ferrari 275 GTB and GTS original
owner’s handbook. 1965, first edition,
small amount of water damage to a few
corners, cover loose on spine, sensible
offers. Email:
[email protected]
(N.Wales). A276/052
3 Ferrari books. Enzo Ferrari, Yates;
Enzo, Richard Williams; Ferrari
Testarossa, £60 lot. Tel: 07968 659967
(Kent). A276/066
Ferrari handbooks. I have a collection
of genuine Ferrari handbooks in mint
condition that I wish to sell. They are for
the following models, Dino 246 GT, 308
GT 4, 308 GTB, 365 GTC 4, 400 I, 330 GT
(Mopar reprint), brochure 308 GTB/GTS
and finally a 308 QV, 328 GTB/GTS
workshop manual, POA. Tel: Martin,
07897 352555. Email:
[email protected]. A276/072
‘F430 BOY’. Great reg for your F430,
offers around £5K. Tel: Paul, 07974
595056. A276/053
WANTED
Wanted Alfa 166 ‘04 on: any info,
workshop manual, brochures etc. Tel:
07960 538909 (Leics). A276/003
auto italia
97
III ITALIAN CARS FOR SALE CLASSIFIEDS
SellyourItaliancar,
bikeorspareshere
FREEOFCHARGE!
Ferrari F1 model. Schumacher 1/6th
scale, £5000. Tel: 07836 239377
(Haslemere). A276/068
OBSCURATI
CURIOSITIES FROM THE AMAZING WORLD OF ITALIAN CARS
GIO PONTI’S ‘LINEA DIAMANTE’
65 YEARS IN THE MAKING, GIO PONTI’S ADVANCED SALOON WAS,
IN 1953, THE RIGHT IDEA AT THE WRONG TIME. IT’S FINALLY BEEN
BUILT – AND IT WAS WORTH THE WAIT
Story by Gary Axon
T
he gestation period for
a new car transitioning
from concept to
production reality can
often be a painfully
slow and arduous one. Italy has
had its fair share of long-lead
production waits, including the
Lamborghini Countach and
current Fiat 500, both of which
appeared in production form
three years after their initial
concepts were first shown to
test the water and whet the
public’s appetite.
But the record for a car being
conceived to finally being built
must go to the ‘Linea Diamante’.
This was first revealed in 1953,
but only became a physical
reality 65 years later, in 2018.
The Linea Diamante (Diamond
Line) was created by the
influential Italian architect and
industrial designer, Giò Ponti
(1891-1979), the creator of the
iconic 32-storey Pirelli Tower in
Milan – acknowledged as one of
the world’s most ‘elegant’
98
auto italia
skyscrapers – and the famous
Superleggera chair. He was also
the co-founder of the respected
design and architecture
magazine Domus in 1928.
A key reason why it took 65
years to for Ponti’s Linea
Diamante pass from a forwardthinking paper-only prototype
to a full scale vehicle – it
debuted at the recent Grand
Basel car exhibition in
Switzerland – was that his 1953
vision was simply too advanced
and radical for its time.
In an era when car design was
characterised by large,
swollen shapes, small
windows and dark,
claustrophobic
interiors (the
contemporary
bulbous Fiat 1400
and Standard
Vanguard, for
instance), the sharpedged Linea Diamante
began with an aerodynamic
teardrop shape and soon
developed into the more angular
and futuristic Diamond Line with
flat-form body panels and a
generous glass area to flood the
cabin with light.
The car’s dimensions allowed a
generously-proportioned interior
and a spacious, pioneering
‘hatchback’ boot. Its profile was
perhaps mimicked by
Pininfarina’s influential BMC 1800based Aerodinamica concept
almost 15 years later, a car that
sired the Citroen GS and CX.
Ponti also added innovated allround rubber bumpers, in
collaboration with the Pirelli tyre
company, just like the early Fiat
Panda, with spring-mounted
‘buffers’ front and rear.
Ponti’s original drawings and
1:10 scale models show that he’d
planned his Linea Diamante to be
built on an Alfa Romeo 1900
Berlina chassis. He sought a
production partnership with
Milan-based
Carrozzeria
Touring,
which
was
rebuffed, so then turned to Fiat
for production of a subcompact
model, which was also refused.
65 years on, this fascinating
car was finally brought to life for
the inaugural 2018 Grand Basel,
with a full-sized model created
by a team of experts, led by FCA
Heritage director and father of
the current Fiat 500, Roberto
Giolito. He collaborated with
Pirelli and Editoriale Domus,
reflecting their historic
connections with Giò Ponti‘s farsighted concept. Pirelli even
provided period early 1950s tyres
to the correct Alfa Romeo 1900
specification as a fitting tribute
to this remarkably advanced car.
If Ponti’s ‘right idea at the
wrong time’ automotive vision
had been accepted and built in
the early 1950s, imagine what
the cars we are driving today
might have looked like…