Ferrari 166 Inter #1
Ferrari 166 Inter #1
Lack of charisma can be fatal.
Visca Catalunya!
A bit strange, small but a bit to high. My opinion.
But gorgeous never the less.
Is that the first 4-seater Ferrari?
Nope, actually the first four seater Ferrari was 005 S, with a Coupe body by Touring built on 166 Sport running gear in 1947. This would eventually be a predecesor of the 166 Inters built from 1949 which came in a variety of bodies, some of them four seaters, and were the first serious road going Ferraris.
Lack of charisma can be fatal.
Visca Catalunya!
It isn't really a true four-seater (2+2), and is actually quite compact. 166 Inter Touring Coupe #0077, unrestored with wonderful dark blue paint is in the Ferrari Museum at Modena. Some years ago a poster was available from the factory that showed the three 166 models together, in profile. A wonderful illustration. When visiting Ferrari in 1997, our host gave us a copy that still hangs in my office.
The Galleria Ferrari is a much larger facility now, with a good website.
http://www.galleria.ferrari.com/Gall...rari/index.jsp
EDIT: My mistake, #0077 is the car housed at the Galleria Ferrari. According to the 166 Registry, the photo provided by Ferrer
is #013S; the most notable identifying detail are trafficators located in the front fenders.
Last edited by csl177; 12-03-2009 at 10:06 PM. Reason: added link/corrected info
Never own more cars than you can keep charged batteries in...
I hope nobody minds me saying it looks quite like a Morris minor.
Buying a car and not driving it is like buying a meal and not eating it.
"Oh sh*t, we're going..25!!" - A dear friend of mine.
17S, 29S, 43S and 77S respectively (29 is currently for sale)
"I find the whole business of religion profoundly interesting, but it does mystify me that otherwise intelligent people take it seriously." Douglas Adams
Ferrari 166 Inter Coupé by Carrozzeria Touring 1949
115 bhp, 1,995 cc front-mounted V-12 engine, five-speed manual transmission, independent double wishbones and transverse semi-elliptic leaf spring front suspension with hydraulic dampers, live rear axle and longitudinal semi-elliptic springs rear suspension with anti-roll bar and hydraulic dampers, and four-wheel drum brakes. Wheelbase 2,420 mm (95.3)
• One of just 38 Inters produced from 1948 to 1951
• Ferrari Classiche certification
• Known ownership history from new
• 1949 Geneva Motor Show and Villa d’Este participant in 1949
In November 1948, at the Turin Show, Ferrari unveiled the first Ferrari at show in the company’s history. On the stand were both the 166MM and 166 Inter, a pair of racing and road variations, respectively. Between 1948 and 1951, Ferrari sold some 38 Inters, plus around 46 examples of the 166MM, in various body styles created by various coach builders. This not only put money into Ferrari’s racing coffers, but also demonstrated his ability to juggle both racing and selling.
The 166MM and 166 Inter on display at the Turin Show were dressed in coachwork by Touring of Milan. Unlike the MM Barchetta, the Inter was a coupé and the first road going Ferrari to be produced in any real numbers. It was designed by Carrozzeria Touring’s styling chief, Carlo Felice Bianchi Anderloni. Touring used its patented Superleggera coach building system for the body’s construction. Using the same basic mechanical setup as the 166MM, the Inter was a more civilised package, intended for the road rather than racing. The wheelbase was stretched 300 mm, providing enough additional interior space for two small rear seats. The frame was of tubular construction, with coachwork of the buyer’s selection. Power was supplied via a front-engine, 110 bhp, V-12, breathing through a single twin-choke Weber carburettor and 5-speed manual transmission. Top speed was around 178 kmh.
Enzo Ferrari had a keen interest in his new Inter. Said his son Piero in a 2001 interview, “You must remember that my father was then 50 years old. Whilst his name would become famous with our sports cars, he had a very strong affinity to the 2+2 because of their comfort and room”.
Chassis No. 015 S belongs to the initial series of touring coupés produced. It was shown at the Geneva Motor Show in March 1949 and then sold to its first owner by Ferrari through Carlo Botticelli to Paolo Castelnuovo on 1 July 1949. Just two months later, its owner showed the car at the Concours d’Elegance at Villa d’Este in Lake Como, Italy. It remained in the possession of Castelnuovo until he sold the car to Massimo Alesi, its second owner, on 1 October 1953.
A succession of owners followed, with it spending a period in South Africa in the 1960s and then finding its way to the US. In the early 1980s, it was purchased by well-known Ferrari connoisseur, Peter Sutcliffe. Sutcliffe kept the 015 S for some 10 years, showing it at various Ferrari events before it found its way into France and then finally back to Italy.
A stylish early Ferrari with known history to this present day, it benefits from a full restoration by well-known Italian specialists, including Autosport in Modena for the bodywork and Luppi for the interior. Certainly a rare and stylish 1940s Ferrari coupé, its Ferrari Classiche certification only adds to its immense desirability.
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