Cars Mansion: Ferrari 275

Sunday 6 September 2015

Ferrari 275


Ferrari 275


Ferrari 275
GTB, GTS, GTB/4, NART Spider
1967 Ferrari 275 GTB rosso.jpg
1967 Ferrari 275 GTB
Overview
ManufacturerFerrari
Production1964 — 1968
970 produced
DesignerPininfarina
Chronology
PredecessorFerrari 250
SuccessorFerrari 365 GTB/4
The Ferrari 275 is a two-seat front-engined Gran Turismo automobile produced by Ferrari between 1964 and 1968. The first Ferrari to be equipped with a transaxle, the 275 is powered by a 3.3 L (3286 cc) Colombo 60° V12 enginethat produces 280-300 hp. Pininfarina designed the body.

Two-cam

275 GTB

275 GTB, 275 GTB/C
1965 Ferrari 275 GTB by Scaglietti.jpg
Overview
Production1964 — 1966
Body and chassis
Body styleCoupe
Powertrain
Engine3.3 L V12
The 275 GTB was a two-seat Grand Touring automobile produced between 1964 and 1968 with a 3.3 liters (3,286 cc) Colombo 60-degree V-12 engine and produced 280-300 horsepower.
The standard 275 GTB coupe was produced by Scaglietti and was available with 3 or 6 Weber twin-chokecarburettors. It was more of a pure sports car than the GT name suggested. Some cars were built with an aluminium body instead of the standard steel body. A Series Two version with a longer nose appeared in 1965.

275 GTB/C

For the 1965 racing season, 4 lightweight 275 GTB Competizione Speciales (1964), a prototype and three production models, were built and equipped with 250 LM engines. The design was by Pininfarina and the coachwork by Scaglietti. The design incorporated reduced weight with a ten percent reduction in size, smaller diameter chassis, 21 gauge alloy body, Plexiglas windows, and magnesium was used in certain engine and transaxle castings. TheFédération Internationale de l'Automobile (FIA) at first refused to homologate the model as a GT contender but settled on a compromise when Enzo Ferrari threatened to abandon the motor sport[1]
For the 1966 season, Ferrari decided to build 12 lightweight 275 GTB/C cars, they were constructed between the end of the 275 two-cam production run and the start of the 275 four-cam production run; even though they very much resembled the road-going 275 GTB, not one body panel was the same and underneath very little of the road car remained.
Mauro Forghieri designed a special super-lightweight steel and aluminium version of the 275 GTB chassis. A regular suspension was fitted, but it was made slightly stiffer by the addition of extra springs. Scaglietti bodied the chassis with an ultra thin aluminum body; the panels were about half as thick as the ones used on the GTO and the Cobra - even leaning on the 275 GTB/C would dent the body; the entire rear section was reinforced by fiberglass to prevent it from flexing at the slightest impact. In all, this focus on saving weight made a difference of over 150 kg (331 lb) compared to the alloy bodied road cars.
Like the four 'Competizione Speciales', the 275 GTB/C was powered by the 250 LM engine. Somehow Ferrari 'forgot' to mention to the governing body that the 275 GTB had a six carburetor option, so only a three 'carb' engine could be homologated. Specifically for the 275 GTB/C, Weber constructed the 40 DF13 carburetor of which three would replace the six 38 DCNs found on the 250 LM. The rest of the drivetrain was similar to the 275 GTB, but strengthened slightly.
Two of the twelve built were sold for street use. Unlike the race cars, these street cars were fitted with alloy wheels shod with Pirelli tires. Competition cars were fitted with special Borrani wire wheels, shod with Dunlop's latest racing tires. It was this combination that would prove to be the weak spot of the 275 GTB/C; the tires had so much grip that they could overstress and break the spokes on the wheels. After the 275 GTB/C, no competition Ferrari would be fitted with wire wheels again.
A British-entered 275 GTB/C finished 8th overall, gaining class victory in the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans.

275 GTS

275 GTS
Ferrari 275 GTS - front right 1 (Argyle Place, Carlton, VIC, Australia, 3 March 2007).JPG
Ferrari 275 GTS in Melbourne, Australia
Overview
Production1964 — 1966
200 produced
Body and chassis
Body styleSpider
Powertrain
Engine3.3 L V12
Chronology
SuccessorFerrari 330 GTS
Pininfarina built 200 275 GTS Roadsters for the American market (including 14 in right hand drive) between 1964-1966 with entirely different bodywork. It was intended to be more of a GT car and less of a sports car than its GTB brother. The 275 GTS was replaced by the 330 GTS, leaving no 3.3 L convertible in the range until the creation of the 275 GTB/4 NART Spider.[2]

Four-cam

Ferrari 275 (1967)

275 GTB/4

275 GTB/4
Overview
Production1966 — 1968
Body and chassis
Body styleCoupe
Powertrain
Engine3.3 L 4-cam V12
Introduced at the Paris Motor Show in October 1966,[3] the 275 GTB/4 (or 4-cam) was a substantially updated car; built by Scaglietti, it featured new bodywork and was the first Ferrari to not be offered with wire wheels.
Power came from a substantially reworked Colombo V12, still with two valves per cylinder but now with a four-cam engine and six carburettors as standard. In a departure from previous Ferrari designs, the valve angle was reduced three degrees to 54° for a more-compact head. The dual camshafts also allowed the valves to be aligned "correctly" (perpendicular to the camshaft) instead of offset as in the SOHCFerraris. It was a dry-sump design with a huge 17 qt (16 L) capacity. The individual cylinder capacity remained unchanged at slightly under 275cc, which as before gave the model the first three digits of its name, and when multiplied by the number of cylinders equals 3,286cc total swept volume.[3]
The transaxle was also redesigned. A torque tube connected the engine and transmission, rather than allowing them to float free on the body as before. This improved handling, noise, and vibration. Porsche synchronizers were also fitted for improved shifting and reliability.
The 275 GTB/4 could hit 165 mph (266 km/h) with its 300 hp (220 kW). 280 4-cam versions were produced through 1968.[citation needed]
In 2004, Sports Car International named the 275 GTB/4 number seven on the list of Top Sports Cars of the 1960s.

275 GTB/4 NART

275 GTB/4 NART
1967.Ferrari.275.GTB-4.NART.Spyder.jpg
Overview
Production1966 — 1968
Body and chassis
Body styleSpider
Powertrain
Engine3.3 L 4-cam V12
275 GTB/4 N.A.R.T. Spyder version was only available from a single American dealer, Luigi Chinetti. He askedSergio Scaglietti and Enzo Ferrari to build a few Spyder, a convertible with no roof, versions of the 275 GTB/4, which he bought for approximately $8,000 each; N.A.R.T. stood for Chinetti's North American Racing Team. It was to be a custom run of 25 cars straight from Scaglietti, but because of low sales, just 10 were built in 1967 and 1968, making this one of the most valuable Ferraris.[4] The ten NART Spiders used chassis numbers 09437, 09751, 10139, 10219, 10249, 10453, 10691, 10709, 10749, and 11057.[citation needed]
In August 2013, a 1967 275GTB/4 (chassis #10709), owned by the late Eddie Smith of Lexington, North Carolina, sold for US$27.5 million at auction in California. This was a one owner car that, while was not driven daily, was driven on a regular basis. It had remained in the Smith Family for 45 years.
The NART driven by Faye Dunaway in the 1968 film The Thomas Crown Affair, was serial number 09437, the first produced. It came second in its class in the 1967 12 Hours of Sebring before being repainted and used for the movie. In August 2005, it fetched $3.96 million at auction. 



No comments:

Post a Comment