VeloceToday.com https://velocetoday.com The Online Magazine for Italian and French Classic Car Enthusiasts Mon, 17 Sep 2018 15:22:34 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 Ferrari Mondial S/N 0446MD https://velocetoday.com/ferrari-mondial-s-n-0446md/ https://velocetoday.com/ferrari-mondial-s-n-0446md/#comments Tue, 17 Jul 2018 14:42:43 +0000 https://velocetoday.com/?p=103772

By Wallace Wyss with news, and Pete Vack with history

Writes Wallace: A great barnfind goes on the block at Monterey

Yes, it’s true, what is today one of the most valuable Ferraris on earth, one which by the way will cross the block at Monterey this August, was found languishing at a Rambler dealership (read that and weep, you car hunters who never figured a valuable sports car would be found at such a dud brand dealer).

The guy who bought it for $2,225 was a Navy professional, Robert Phillips who found his 1955 Ferrari 500 Mondial Scaglietti Series II at a Rambler dealership in Richmond, VA, in 1960 with damage to its body, engine and transmission. The dealer referred Phillips to the actual owner, Robert Ready Davis, and a deal was done. When Phillips scraped off the dirt (oh, excuse me, patina) he discovered it is chassis 0556 (0446)/MD, Only 9 Series II Mondials were built with coachwork by Scaglietti.

When he bought his then battered five year old used car, he wasn’t married, but he subsequently married. Now right here, before going on, I have to congratulate his wife for not forcing him to sell what a lot of wives would view as “that useless old race car.” Phillips stayed in the Navy a long time, enough to work his way up to the rank of Rear Admiral.

He is lucky he didn’t become a full time Ferrari mechanic, admitting to one reporter that he “lost all rational sense when he first wiped the grease from the motor head and saw the letters that spelled out FERRARI.”

According to the auction company the car was originally sold to privateer Francois Picard who had it painted French racing blue. The factory bought the car back and subsequently raced it to a first place in class at the 1955 Grand Prix of Venezuela – the only time ever that a works Ferrari raced in a color other than red.

The Ferrari was raced 35 times in period on three continents. The restored car won Best in Class and Best Ferrari at the 2008 Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance.

When you buy this car, you buy a car that was piloted by some of the greats: Gino Munaron, Harry Schell, Eugenio Castellotti, and the immortal Porfirio Rubirosa.

It is expected to fetch between $5,500,000 to $7,500,000 at Gooding’s Monterey auction. Admittedly it doesn’t have a V12 (a rare Ferrari four cylinder instead) but this is a works race car with a racing history….

Thanks for the story, Wallace! Hey, (said the Editor), didn’t we do a story on this back in 2006? We did? Well why don’t we do an instant replay.
It was called….

In 1953, Ferrari decided to create a line of 2.0, 2.5, and 3.0 liter four cylinder race cars to be sold to privateers. These were the 500 Mondial, the 735S, and the 750S, followed in later years by the 860, 500TR, 500 TRC and 625 LM. The line of Mondials and Monzas were hugely successful both in terms of sales for Ferrari and wins for privateers. The Series II Mondials and Monzas looked very much alike and in fact were very similar. The Mondial were 2 liter cars while the Monzas were 3 liters.

The last of the red hot playboys

Both Fon Portago and his friend Porfirio Rubirosa, a “diplomat from the Dominican Republic” were Ferrari customers. Portago had to ask his mother for the money to buy new Ferraris, while “Rubi” was able to take large chunks of Eisenhower dollars from his rich wives and girlfriends.

In 1954, Portago purchased one of two Ferrari Monzas with which he would dominate the Nassau Speedweeks. The first was a 735S Sport Scaglietti, 0428MD. With 2.9 liters it was a cross between a 500 Monza 500 and a 750 Monza. He painted it black and took it to the Carrera Panamericana in 1954, but retired. However, by the end of the year, it was upgraded to full 750s specs and Portago drove it to one victory and two second overalls in the Nassau races. After an outing and DNF at Sebring in 1955, he sold it to purchase another Monza 750S, 0496M.

Teaming with Hawthorne at Goodwood, the pair retired, and similar results occurred at Aintree. Wrapping up the 1955 season, he entered the Nassau races, and this time won two overall victories and one second overall with 0496M.

The Rubirosa Mondial

In the meantime, Rubirosa was achieving excellent results in a look-alike car, a Mondial 500, 0446MD. Portago and Rubirosa were often seen together in the pits at both Sebring in 1956 and the earlier Nassau events. “Rubi” was usually accompanied by Zsa Zsa Gabor, while Portago was trying to avoid Dorian Leigh, Suzy Parker’s equally beautiful sister.

Rubi was not Portago’s equal on the track, but he did win the Governor’s Cup at Nassau in 1955 in the Mondial. At Sebring four months later, Rubi and Jim Pauley took 0446MD to a first in class and 10th overall. Sometime after the Sebring event, Rubi sold the car to Charles Hassan of Cincinnati.

Since both cars and drivers were together at several events, it is possible that Portago had a go in Rubi’s car. Pure speculation, of course.

When Hassan bought 0446MD, it was good value for the money, and still competitive in the E Modified SCCA class. In April of 1959, Robert Ready Davis bought 0446, still in dark blue livery, but with body damage commensurate with its many battles. Davis apparently left it for at a Rambler dealer in Richmond Virginia, where it was found by a young Naval Officer.

Admiral Phillips

The Naval Officer would eventually become not only an Admiral but arguably the world’s leading authority on Series II 500 Mondials. For the 25-year-old Robert Phillips, a Ferrari was an absolute gotta-have, and Robert Ready Davis was ready to sell. Phillips bought 0446, “ a forlorn blue wreck with the transaxle in a wooden box” in May of 1960. Robert Phillips, as it turned out, proved to be a mechanical clairvoyant. Having no mechanical experience save replacing the head gasket on his MGA, Phillips repaired the five speed dog clutch gearbox and differential unit. He also rebuilt the engine and did bodywork.

The Phillips Mondial in 2001. Both the Mondial and the Monza made use of the Type 509 transaxle, Mondial pistons and the 510 chassis, as well as Marchal plugs and Borletti instruments.

Nine months later he entered a driver’s school at Cotati, California and from 1961 to May 1967, Phillips competed in nine events across the U.S, entering the car when his Naval career would permit. He also drove it from coast to coast, an amazing feat then or now. From 1968 to 1988 when he retired, the US Navy kept Phillips globe trotting, unable to either work on or race 0446MD.

By the mid-80s, he was very aware of the rising value of the car. Yet he, nor his wife, could bear to part with it as it had become so much a part of their life. Conversely, while he considered having it restored, the investment was both risky and required a huge bank account. “When in doubt, do nothing” applied here. Phillips, now settled in Arlington Virginia, made a special garage unit for the Mondial, provided every measure for long-term storage, and went on about life.

And so, having found a patient and understanding owner, and by escaping the turmoil of the 80s, 0446MD was never restored.

Today, however, the car is in the shop, where, according to Robert’s son Bryan, the livery will be restored to the one it wore for its most significant race; first in class at the 1955 Grand Prix of Venezuela in Caracas, October 1955. This was the only time 0446(0556) wore the team SF shield; it started the race driven by Harry Shell, and then taken over by Eugenio Castellotti to first in class.

On the Beach

But there is more and it should be written now, while we have the opportunity to do so. Robert Phillips, in addition to being as bright a man as we’d ever met, looks more than a bit like the late actor Fred Astaire.

Astaire starred in a movie classic called “On The Beach”, a 1959 novel by Nevil Shute which portrayed the end of the world as seen from the perspective of the Australians, who were to be the last to suffer the events of massive atomic bomb radiation poisoning which was enveloping the earth. Astaire played a race car driver, whose four wheel passion was, you guessed it, a Ferrari Monza, nearly identical to the Series II Mondial, parked in his garage. The Ferrari played a decisive part in the movie.

Robert Phillips in 2001, standing by the Mondial he drove across country.

Upon meeting Phillips and walking into his garage, with his very original Mondial beside him, scenes from the movie immediately came to mind. “On The Beach” I blurted. “Right on,” said Phillips. And the last bit of gossip. “On The Beach” also starred Ava Gardner, who was often romantically linked with, well, Rubirosa.

Serial number postscript

“There are two Ferraris which have had the serial number 0446MD”, said Robert Phillips. “They were both purchased by the same person, which may tell us something about French and Italian tax laws of the era. The first 0446 was a 735 Sport built in July 1954. It was later re-numbered 0556MD.” The car sitting quietly before us, however, was built in May of 1955, a Series II Mondial. To avoid confusion and clarify the issue, Phillips refers to his 0446MD as “0556 (0446) MD”, indicating that this 0446MD was built on May 5, 1955. The fact that 0556 is also the second serial number assigned to the first 0446MD bothers the retired Admiral not one whit. Therein lies an ironic sense of humor, something not to be lost whilst tracking Ferrari serial numbers.

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Michael T. Lynch on the Ferrari Tre Posti https://velocetoday.com/michael-t-lynch-on-the-ferrari-tre-posti/ https://velocetoday.com/michael-t-lynch-on-the-ferrari-tre-posti/#comments Tue, 29 Jul 2014 13:53:14 +0000 https://velocetoday.com/index.php/?p=63197

Gooding & Company announced this week that the Chinetti 365 P Tre Posti had been consigned for their Pebble Beach sale. This is an incredible confluence of design, performance and provenance. It will certainly be near the top of the charts during the Monterey auctions in August. Photo by Hugues Vanhoolandt.


By Michael T. Lynch

In our last piece (Is the End Nigh?) we mentioned a yet-to-be-announced Ferrari that would be one of the highlights of the auctions during the Monterey Bay auto week. Last week, Gooding and Company confirmed that they will have the Ferrari 365 P Berlinetta Speciale “Tre Posti” in their Pebble Beach sale.

The Tre Posti s/n 8971 is an outstanding example of not just Italian coach-building and engineering excellence, but represents an era when Italy was a style leader in many design disciplines. The Tre Posti is an artifact that takes its place as a symbol of mid-century Italian design on a par with Olivetti’s Lettera 22 and Pier Luigi Nervi’s Exhibition Hall in Turin. The nickname comes from the car’s three abreast seating with the steering wheel in the middle, a feature that preceded the McLaren F1 by a quarter century.

The center-steer cockpit is a combination of luxury and competition references. The latter include the gated shifter, the P2 pedal box and the untrimmed lower panels. Photo by Hugues Vanhoolandt.

Provenance contributes greatly to the value of a collector car and the Tre Posti’s includes three of the most important people in the history of sporting automobiles. It was designed by the famous coachbuilder, Pininfarina. It was built on a racing chassis created at Enzo Ferrari’s factory where the greatest sports and racing cars of the era were produced. Finally, it was specially modified for and imported by the man who built the Ferrari marque in both Europe and the U.S., Luigi Chinetti, Sr. He won Ferrari’s first Le Mans 24 Hours in 1949 and was the entrant for the marque’s last win there in 1965.

In 2001, Concorso Italiano had an impressive display of Pininfarina concept cars of which the Tre Posti was one. Three accomplished sons of three famous automotive personalities drove it across the ramp. Luigi Chinetti, Jr. (l) enjoys the ride, Piero Ferrari drives and Sergio Pininfarina talks to the crowd on the microphone. Credit: Concorso Italiano.

Ferrari once said that rear-engine cars “…put the cart before the horse.” That sentiment kept Ferrari behind the curve with his racing efforts when rear-engine cars began winning Grand Prix races in 1958. Ferrari finally reacted in 1960 with a 1.5 liter V-6 rear-engine Formula 2 car that was among the fastest in its class. The same concept was applied to both Ferrari’s Grand Prix and sports racing cars in 1961 with the 156 and 246 models. That year, the 156 “Sharknose” won both the Drivers (Phil Hill) and Manufacturers Grand Prix Championships. The season included a remarkable 1-2-3-4 finish at the Belgian Grand Prix. Success continued in the 1961-62 Sports Car Manufacturers Championship, with both front-engine V-12s and rear-engine V-6s.

In 1963, Ferrari introduced the 250 P, a sports racer that was his first V-12, rear-engine car. Variants of up to 4.4 liters would dominate the sports car championship for two of the next three seasons. In 1966, the combination of Ford and Goodyear money allowed the former to take the Manufacturers Cup, but Ferrari regained the title in 1967.

It was against this backdrop that Batista Pininfarina and his son, Sergio had tried to convince Ferrari to build a road-going rear-engine car. However Ferrari was not interested, feeling a traditional Ferrari V-12 behind the driver would be too demanding for the casual Ferrari customer.

The 1965 Dino prototype. It is seen at a Pininfarina design exhibition at last year’s Geneva show. The years have not been kind to the Plexiglas covering over the front lighting system.

To further their case, Pininfarina created a prototype V-6 rear-engine concept that was introduced at the Paris Salon in October, 1965. It was a street version of the 206 S race car built on 206 S chassis s/n 0840. The car had styling cues that would resonate with future Ferraris for some time – the rear flank air intakes with strakes, the flying buttress rear window treatment and the exaggerated high front fender line with the sloping front deck were examples. The full width Perspex screen for the lighting would inspire the Daytona. With its impossibly low roofline and poor integration of the front and rear of the car, it was not an entirely successful design, but it was influential and launched other concepts that led to the production 246 Dino.

The 5 liter engine has separate coils and distributors for each cylinder bank. Note the traditional Ferrari riveted tank at the right. Photo by Hugues Vanhoolandt.

At this point Ferrari was contemplating a rear-engine design as long as it had the limited power of the small V-6. However, Pininfarina had visions of a PF-bodied supercar and secured a lengthened version (2200mm to 2400) of a 365 P2 chassis. The 365 P2 was a sports racer built for private teams like Chinetti’s NART. It was almost identical to the 330 P2 works cars except that the factory cars used a 4-liter engine with dohc, while the 365 P2s had the less complicated 4.4-liter sohc engine. Chinetti’s 365 P2 won the 12 Hours of Reims in 1965 with Pedro Rodriguez and Jean Guichet.

The spare tire is carried in the same position as on the racing P2. Photo by Hugues Vanhoolandt.

Pininfarina took the race-oriented chassis and showed what a modern supercar could be. He would make the first rear-engine Ferrari V-12 road car. Sergio never liked to credit any one design to an individual, but on this car he wanted to make a statement about his firm’s prowess and worked closely with his Chief Designer, Aldo Broverone. In the process, he created one of the great Ferraris of all time.

The body reflects some of the 1965 Dino concept cues, but there is no mistaking this 380 horsepower bolide for a Dino. It is more like a luxury Grand Prix car for the road and its central seating allows you equidistant views of the front fenders just like a Grand Prix driver looking at his open wheels.

The rear ¾ view shows the car off to its best advantage. The curved rear light and the swoop from the roofline that doesn’t resolve itself until the very end of the rear deck are a classic example of an invocation of speed while standing still. Contrasting that flow are the rear deck louvers and the vertical vents on the rear valance. At the very bottom are the oversize exhaust pipes which suggest the power of the car. Photo by Hugues Vanhoolandt.

The side intakes are more pronounced, and the rear window is similarly tunneled. The competition heritage is invoked by an outside racing fuel filler. Some of the details harkened back to Vignale bodies where the smaller items were jewel-like. One was the polished metal air intake on the rear deck. Besides the central seating, another feature that was very advanced and expensive for the time is the athermic transparent roof.

This view shows the polished air intake, the specially cast wheels, the outside fuel filler and the transparent roof. Credit: Gooding and Company

The five-spoke wheels are a theme in many following Ferraris. Unlike many show cars that were rushed to make a date, the Tre Posti is a completely finished road car. The interior, with special instrumentation, switches and hand-formed controls is that of a Grand Routier. The Gardenia White paint brings attention to the darker moonroof.

With the Tre Posti, Pininfarina had created a masterpiece and wanted to be sure the press and public saw it. In the fall of 1966, it was on the Pininfarina stand at the Paris Salon and the Earls Court Motor Show. The following year it was shown at Brussels and Geneva and it was entered at the Florence Concours in May.

This is Ferrari’s invoice to Chinetti for the bare chassis and the upgrade to the engine. There was a further invoice from Pininfarina for $11,560, making a total of $21,160. Other documents show that Carton was credited $8,000 for his 500 Superfast and the Tre Posti’s delivered price was $26,000, the most expensive car the Chinettis had sold to that point. Credit: Chinetti Family Archive

Meanwhile, as Luigi Chinetti awaited the car’s delivery to the States, he put his own stamp on it. From the late 1940s, Chinetti had pushed Ferrari to make larger engine cars, explaining that the 2.0 and 2.6 liter cars Ferrari was delivering to the U.S. had a hard time matching the pace of the Cadillac and Chrysler-engined Allards and American specials with displacements of well over five liters. Chinetti wanted to be sure the Tre Posti was the fastest car on the road, and had Ferrari take the engine out from 4.4 to 5.0 liters. Some claim this displacement cannot be achieved with the Type 209 block, but the attached invoice from Ferrari to Chinetti would seem to indicate otherwise.

The Agnelli version of the Tre Posti is not as elegant as the Chinetti car. The painted beltline and overwhelming spoiler break the spell of the flowing lines. Credit: Pininfarina

Another automotive personality was also taken with the Tre Posti – Gianni Agnelli, the head of FIAT. He had Pininfarina make another one – s/n 8815 but with some modifications. They included a large lateral spoiler which conflicts with the complex lines of the flying buttress rear window and deck treatment and elegant Kamm rear end. There is little doubt that the Chinetti car is the more successful design.

The Tre Posti came to the U.S. in 1966 after its tour of the world’s great auto shows, having been presold to Marvyn Carton, the Executive Vice President of investment bank Allen & Company, a firm known for its privacy. Carton traded in a Ferrari 500 Superfast.

Chinetti sent the car to the Los Angeles Imported Automobile and Sports Car Show in October 1967 and it was delivered to Carton when it returned from the West Coast. The car proved to be more than Carton had bargained for, and it was traded back to Chinetti that year for a 365 2+2, a car more appropriate for driving in New York City.

Two unknown VIPs are about to be driven around Bridgehampton by Stirling Moss in the Tre Posti during the 1968 Can Am weekend. Moss did promotional work for Johnson Wax, the series sponsor. Moss arrived for the weekend in an Intermeccanica Italia. Bridgehampton was the Chinettis’ home track, and their driver, Pedro Rodriguez took a 3 liter 250 P to a 5th place finish against Can Am cars with twice the displacement. Credit Johnson Wax.

In mid-1968, the car was sold to one of the most colorful Ferrari characters of the era, Dutchman Jan de Vroom, who traded a 275 GTB/4. De Vroom was a Chinetti customer and backer of the Chinetti’s North American Racing Team. He owned some great Pininfarina designs including the striking 410 Superamerica s/n 0719. He also raced Ferraris. He was a regular on the New York society scene, often accompanying Margaret Rockefeller Strong, who was married to George Cuevas, the founder of the Ballet Russe, later the Le Grand Ballet du Marquis de Cuevas. Cuevas was a true impresario and had Nijinsky as a choreographer and introduced Nureyev to Western audiences. De Vroom’s relationship with Margaret is unclear, but she did buy him a house in Palm Beach. After enjoying the car in the South of France as a guest at the Cuevas’ Villa San Lorenzo in Cannes and having the car serviced at the factory, De Vroom traded it back to the Chinettis in 1969 where it has remained for 44 years.

Over the years, Luigi Chinetti, Jr. has shared the Tre Posti with enthusiasts around the world. The car has been to Goodwood, Concorso Italiano, Meadowbrook, the Louis Vuitton (New York and Paris), and the Ferrari Festival at Brands Hatch. It is seen here at Pebble Beach as the dreaded morning fog is just beginning to break up.

This Ferrari, the fruit of the collaboration of Enzo Ferrari, Sergio Pininfarina and Luigi Chinetti, will be sold at the Gooding and Company Pebble Beach sale during the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance. If you want a nice, original condition vintage Ferrari icon with less than 5,000 miles, here’s your chance. If you happened to submit the winning bid, remember the Brockbank cartoon – don’t take your wife and mistress for a ride at the same time.

In Autosport, British cartoonist Russell Brockbank created this image of the Tre Posti in period. It is indicative of the attention the car received in all media. Credit: Autosport

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