The first Ferrari production V8 model wasn't even allowed to
wear a Ferrari badge.
We begin the story of Ferrari's first production V8 with
what is probably the most confusingly named model in the history of the prancing
horse. This was not the only car called Dino, not the only one called 308 and
not the only one called GT4. Most of the other cars to bear these names were
more famous as well (the GT4 is debatable) and the Dino 308 GT4 is often
overlooked as part of Ferrari history. There might have been more significant
Ferraris, but the GT4 shouldn't be ignored.
The GT4 was a 2+2 which first debuted in 1973 to be sold
alongside the Dino 246, which at the time was Ferrari's entry-level sports car.
This would later be replaced by the V8-powered 308 GTB, which used the same
engine as the GT4. The other Dino-badged cars to come before it had used V6
engines, but for the bigger GT4, it was decided that it would be better to move
up to a V8. Thus we have the first production Ferrari with a V8, as well as
Ferrari's first mid-engine 2+2. The setup, it has to be said, is slightly
weird. Thing was, old man Enzo hated mid-engine cars.
Because the setup is even more unusual in a 2+2 than it had
been in previous Dino models, one would think this would be the sort of thing
which wouldn't have gotten past him. But the GT4 was built at a time just after
Fiat had bought a significant
portion of Ferrari, and it is suspected by many that the Dino 308 GT4 was the
result of Fiat exercising its influence. Though the GT4 was mechanically
related to the earlier Dino 246 and Dino 206, this isn't immediately obvious from
looking at it. The curvaceous Pininfarina bodywork on the two-seat models was
replaced by a Bertone design, and the GT4 was the first Ferrari to be designed
by the firm.
The angular look of the design was a more Seventies style,
and when Lamborghini replaced
the Miura with the Countach the following year, it was obvious that Bertone had
anticipated the trend correctly. The design was stretched to accommodate the
small back seats. Since this seems like it has to have been done in the same of
creating a better seller, this too is assumed to have been a Fiat move, since
Enzo didn't really care much about sales of road cars. The 3.0-liter V8 in the
GT4 was an all-alloy design with dual overhead cams. There were four Weber 40
DCNF carburetors, and the engine produced 250 horsepower.
This was really quite a good specific output for the time.
In 1975, Ferrari introduced the Dino 208 GT4, basically the same car but with a
2.0-liter V8 in place of the 3.0-liter unit. This was one of the smallest V8s
ever put into a production car, and it produced 180 horsepower. This was
actually primarily for the Italian domestic market, where engines that
displaced 2 liters or less got a break on insurance. This was another
concession in the name of sales which seems odd and out of place when talking
about an automaker like Ferrari.
But the GT4 wasn't expected to sell any more than that, and
it was certainly successful enough that Ferrari decided to bring out another
mid-engine V8 2+2 after it. The car still gets some flack today, and an
appearance on Top Gear where
a GT4 driven by Richard Hammond suffered multiple breakdowns over a relatively
short period of time certainly didn't help the car's reputation. But for all
its breaks with Ferrari tradition, the GT4 wasn't a bad car. It was perhaps a
completely unnecessary car, but there is no doubt there were more than a few
highly pleased GT4 owners in their day.
Of course, these were the days when Ferrari believed that
Dino-badged cars weren't thought of as Ferraris, but history has clearly proven
otherwise. It has been rumored, although never proven, that the GT4 was
originally designed by Bertone for Lamborghini, and was only given to Ferrari
after being rejected by the bull. Whatever its origins, the GT4 would stay in
production until 1980, when it was replaced by the Mondial 8. Ferrari would
sell more than 2,800 units of the car during its lifetime, this wasn't a huge
number, especially when compared to the 308 GTB, introduced in 1975.
source: www.carbuzz.com
by Jacob Joseph (Ferrari's V8: Dino 308 GT4
by Jacob Joseph (Ferrari's V8: Dino 308 GT4
No comments:
Post a Comment