In the Ferrari factory yard in Maranello on September 27, 1947, this new sports car is the final envelope body iteration of, we believe, chassis 01C, the very first Ferrari sports car. This latest body, showing its new hood scoop to feed the three centrally located Weber carburetors of its now 1.9-liter motor, was modified in-house at Ferrari by Aristide Govoni who may well be sitting in the passenger seat, looking somewhat nervous. At the wheel is Signor Armando Pastorino di Tortona, owner of a tool company and a friend of Enzo Ferrari, so he gets to sit in this important sports car just to have his picture taken. The new motor is simply an enlarged version of its original V12 of 1.5 liters, as first created by Gioacchino Colombo, a highly successful engine design that will endure at Ferrari in various iterations for the next 20 years.
But this car is not for show. It has just been rolled out of the Racing Department where it has been prepared for the Circuito di Modena for sports cars on the next day with its race number 16 visible on the hood and the left side as shown here. This race would be held on the streets of nearby Modena where this car will be driven by one of Ferrari’s good clients from Modena, Ferdinando Righetti.
Unfortunately, Righetti will crash the Ferrari and be forced to withdraw. During the following F1 race, there was a more serious accident which resulted in the deaths of five spectators. As a result the Modena Grand Prix was not held again inside the city but was moved to the Modena Aerautodromo starting in 1950.
However, Righetti’s car will return to Maranello where it will be repaired and again modified with a different body and another new engine to become a cycle-fendered 166 Spyder Corsa. And of course it will then have its chassis renumbered so it could be sold as a “new” racing car.
Photos from the Archivio Corrado Millanta ©The Klemantaski Collection – http://www.klemcoll.com
How is this car related to the example which raced as Watkins Glen and which is now in the REVS museum at Naples (FL)?
The car in the post was probably updated as a 166 Spyder Corsa and renumbered, it is thought, as 010I. Thereafter it was raced for a time in both Italy and England. It most recently was in the USA. The Collier car is also a 166 Spyder Corsa, but probably not a redo of an earlier chassis. It showed up with Chinetti in 1948 for a number for races in Europe before being sold to Briggs Cunningham. It is the car in which Sam Collier was killed on the old Glen course in 1950.
Terrific, was this car ever in S. Africa and being pimped out as a non copy ? tom davis TIDE ferrari racing, palm beach, Vezelay, France. tom davis TIDE pozzi ferrari France 81 Le Man 5 th. O.A. IMSA class winner.512 BBLM #31589. Last ferrari to finish in top 5 and win class @ Le Mans 42 years ago. Owner tom davis 09/1980– 07/1989. Jess Pouret sold me this car $91,000. after Le Mans 1980 race flop.
this car is not for show. It has just been rolled out of the Racing Department where it has been prepared for the Circuito di Modena for sports cars on the next day with its race number 16 visible on the hood and the left side as shown here. This race would be held on the streets of nearby Modena where this car will be driven by one of Ferrari’s good clients from Modena, Ferdinando Righetti.
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