A four-door Ferrari? It doesn’t seem right. We sent
photographer Rémi Dargegen to capture the essence of the Ferrari that never was
– and, very unusually, he was invited along for a ride, too.
A concept to tempt Enzo
Sergio Pininfarina longed to create a four-door Ferrari to
rival the high-performance saloons ofMaserati, Jaguar and Mercedes.
Pininfarina’s 50th anniversary, in 1980, seemed the perfect opportunity to
develop a four-door Ferrari concept to tempt Enzo Ferrari into considering a
step in this direction. So the design studio created the ‘Ferrari Pinin’, on a Ferrari 412 chassis, in time for that year’s Turin
motor show.
Longing looks
Thirty-five years later, photographer Rémi Dargegen’s first
impressions are mixed: “The car appears strangely long when you see it from a
distance, even though it’s only a little bit longer than a 365, 400 or 412. The
shape is very late 70s or maybe early 80s, so it’s a style you’re going to love
or hate – but either way, you can’t deny that it exudes a huge helping of
elegance.”
Back to the future
But it was when Dargegen climbed inside the Pinin that he
really started to appreciate the avant-garde nature of this luxury sports
saloon. “You look around and start to realise that the modern high-end saloons
– cars such as the Panamera, Rapide and new Lagonda –
really aren’t the first of their breed. This Ferrari got there first: four
seats, controls for the rear passengers, an incredible level of comfort,
magnificent leather everywhere and some impressively innovative (for the
period) technology. The dashboard is positively futuristic.”
Shoehorned engine
Since the Pinin was purely a show car, it wasn’t designed
around an engine – although it contained a non-working, front-mounted, flat-12
engine when it was displayed at Turin. When the engine was adapted to make it
work, it created some problems; as Dargegen discovered when he was invited to
be a passenger on a short test drive. “The car is drivable, but it’s not that
easy; since it wasn’t originally designed around an engine, there’s very little
room. The result of squeezing a 512 BBengine under the bonnet is that you find yourself in
a historically fascinating concept car that can hardly turn to the left, and in
which you need to look out for every little stone on the road, as the power
unit has been fitted so very, very low in the engine bay.”
Bad timing
Although Enzo Ferrari was deeply impressed by Pininfarina’s
concept – so much that he seriously considered a production run of the
four-door Ferrari – he eventually decided against adopting the radically
different design direction. The concept car itself was instead sold to Jacques
Swaters. “The Pinin was coherent with Ferrari’s philosophy, but unfortunately
it wasn’t the right time for such a car…
The car that should have been
…but riding in it today, especially through the streets of
Maranello, past the factory and on to the Cavallino restaurant – it’s pure
magic. Even if the Pinin isn’t the most useable of cars on the road, it’s a
great honour to find myself inside the four-seater Ferrari never made – but
should have done.”
Photos: Rémi Dargegen for Classic Driver © 2015
source: https://www.classicdriver.com/en/article/cars/spin-pinin-worlds-only-four-door-ferrari-saloon
http://www.fzrestoration.com
No comments:
Post a Comment