This Dino isn't perfect, but a beautiful example of the classic "baby Ferrari." Has won numerous awards at the Cincinnati/Ault Park Concours d'Elegance and other car shows. Service records available. Lovingly owned and cared for for the past six years. Additional photos available on request. The Dino road cars came to be because of 's need to a V6 engine for racing cars. In 1965 the had drawn up new rules, to be enacted for the 1967 season. F2 engines were required to have no more than six cylinders, and to be derived from a production engine, from a road car homologated in the GT class and produced in at least 500 examples within 12 months. Since a small manufacturer like Ferrari was in the mid 60s did not possess the production capacity to reach such quotas, an agreement was signed with and made public on 1 March 1965: Fiat would produce the 500 engines needed for the homologation, to be installed in a GT car which remained to be specified.Dino was the nickname of Enzo's son , who had died in 1956 and was credited with the concept for Ferrari's Formula 2 V6 racing engine, believed to be designed by with a peculiar 65° angle between the . In his memory, V6-engined Ferrari racing cars had been named Dino since the late 1950s. The conversion of this racing engine for road use and series production was entrusted to the engineer , who had previously designed several 4-cylinder Ferrari engines. Interviewed in the early 1980s, Lampredi noted that "things didn't work out exactly as Ferrari had foreseen": Enzo Ferrari had counted on building the engines at , but Fiat's management insisted on taking control of production, to avoid any breaks in the engine supply. The resulting Fiat-built V6 ended up being installed in two very different vehicles: the Fiat Dino, a front-engined grand tourer assembled in Turin by Fiat, and in Ferrari's first series-produced sports car, built in Maranello and sold under the newly created marque. Even on the cylinder block casting, the name FIAT was visible which was not in line with the newly created DINO make.Fiat Dino, 1966–1969[]The Fiat Dino was introduced as a 2-seater Spider at the in October 1966; a Coupé version, built on a 270 mm (10.6 in) longer , bowed a few months later at the in March 1967. The two bodies showed very different lines, as they had been designed and were manufactured for Fiat by two different coachbuilders: the Spider by , and the Coupé by —where it had been sketched out by . Curiously the Spider type approval identified it as a 2+1 seater. The Spider had poorer interior trim than the Coupé, below par for its class: the dashboard was covered in vinyl, the metal-spoke steering wheel had a plastic rim, and the interior switchgear was derived from cheaper Fiat models. After a few months this issue was addressed, and Spiders produced after February 1967 had a wood-rimmed steering wheel as well as a wood trim on the dashboard like the sister Coupé car had since the beginning. Option lists for both models were limited to radio, metallic paint, leather upholstery, and for the Spider a vinyl-covered with roll-bar style stainless steel trim.The car was offered with an all-aluminium 2.0 L V6, coupled to a 5-speed . The same 2.0-litre engine was used in mid-engined, Ferrari-built , which was introduced in pre-production form at the 1967 Turin Motor Show and went on sale in 1968. Fiat quoted 160 PS (118 kW; 158 hp) for the Fiat Dino, while in 1967 Ferrari—presenting the first prototype of the Dino 206 GT—claimed 180 hp (130 kW) despite both engines were made by Fiat workers in Turin on the same production line, without any discrimination as to their destination. Jean-Pierre Gabriel in "Les Ferraris de Turin" notes that, "La declaration de Ferrari ne reposait sur aucun fondament technique"—Ferrari's statement had no technical basis. The real reason for this difference was a mistake in between quotes made in SAE and BHP power output. |