Chassis no. 2735 was one of
only three right-hand drive
Ferrari 250 GT Berlinetta
Competitizione
short-wheelbase cars. It was
also the second Rob
Walker/Stirling Moss GT
Berlinetta, the other being
chassis no. 2119. This
successful sports car has
just completed a painstaking
restoration by the Ferrari
Classiche department in
Maranello, which included
recasting an engine block to
the original specifications,
coinciding with the
anniversary 50th of this
famous model.
This particular sports car was also the only 250 GT
Berlinetta to be raced in
period by no fewer than
three of the great drivers of the
day – as well as Stirling
Moss, it was also raced by
Graham Hill and Innes
Ireland. The car was
delivered to Le Mans on the
6th of June 1961, in Rob
Walker colours, but to race
for Luigi Chinetti’s NART
team. The car weighed in at
1107 kilogrammes.
The Race History
1961 -
Le Mans 24 Hours:
Stirling Moss and Graham
Hill. GT Lap record. DNF.
Running 3rd overall in the
9th hour, well ahead of the
other works prototypes until
a fan blade broke loose and
sheared the water pump.
Silverstone International
Trophy:
Stirling Moss 1st OA, Pole
Position and GT lap record.
Moss faces the newly
launched and all-conquering
E-Types for the first time
and beats Graham Hill, Bruce
McLaren and Roy Salvadori,
all driving E-Types.
Brands Hatch. Peco Trophy:
Stirling Moss 1st OA, Pole
Position and GT Lap record.
Moss again sees off Mike
Parkes in the other SWB as
well as Graham Hill,
Salvadori and McLaren in the
E-Types.
Goodwood Tourist Trophy:
Stirling Moss 1st OA. Moss
wins his 7th and last TT,
defeating Parkes in a SWB
and Jim Clark and Salvadori
in Aston Martin DB4 Zagatos.
Giotto Bizzarrini, who
oversaw the Ferraris at the
race, then drove #2735 over
the Alps and back to
Maranello.
Nassau Tourist Trophy:
Stirling Moss 1st OA. This
is the last race Moss will
win before his accident.
1962 -
Daytona USA 3 hours:
Innes Ireland DNF. The car
was now assigned to
UDT-Laystall although still
racing in Rob Walker colours
Oulton Park GT Race:
Innes Ireland 4th OA. GT Lap
record. Pole Position.
Chassis no. 2735 was the
Ferrari most raced by Moss
(five races out of 12
Ferrari drives) and also the
car he won most races in. He
describes it as the ‘best GT
car in the world’.
The car was then bought by
Chris Kerrison, painted
silver and raced with some
distinction, before crashing
into John Surtees’ GTO and
Jim Clark’s Aston Martin DB4
Zagato at the 1962 Goodwood
Tourist Trophy. After this
it was sent to Ferrari for
repairs, but Kerrison then
entrusted the car to
Bizzarrini who had Drogo
build a pseudo GTO on the
chassis. The car was
variously raced at Spa, the
Nürburgring, the Tour de
France and many British
circuits. It was later owned
and raced by the Hon.
Patrick Lindsay, Dick
Crosthwaite and Vic Norman
amongst others. In 1983 the
Drogo body, which had been
crashed and was
deteriorating, was removed
by a UK specialist and
replaced with new bodywork
to the original Scaglietti
GT Berlinetta
short-wheelbase design.
In late 2007 the current
owner, Clive Beecham,
entrusted Ferrari Classic
with a complete body-off
restoration. The car, which
has a continuous,
uninterrupted history, had -
naturally enough for a
racing car - been subject to
numerous repairs over the
years. When stripped by
Ferrari Classiche, a number
of incorrect repairs to the
chassis came to light, and
these were rectified
according to the factory’s
original chassis blueprints.
The engine was totally
overhauled, with a
correct-specification engine
block being cast by the
factory to replace the
non-original block that had
been fitted in 1967. At the
same, the original
specification Weber 46s were
fitted, the transmission and
differential were
overhauled, and all worn or
non-original components
repaired or replaced with
original parts. Where
original parts were no
longer available - such as
pistons and connecting rods,
cam shafts, gear selector
forks, aluminium riveted
fuel tank and exhaust system
- these were remanufactured
by Ferrari Classiche using
the designs from the
company’s extensive
archives.
In respect of the car’s
provenance, Ferrari
Classiche carried out a
fine-tuning operation on the
bodywork. All the existing
body panels were retained,
but a number of structural
areas were rectified where
modifications had been made
in period when the car was
rebodied by Drogo and the
scuttle line lowered. The
result is a 250 GT
Berlinetta that completely
respects the criteria of
correct technical
specifications and
authenticity as laid down by
Ferrari, with every single
component corresponding to
the exact description of the
car according to the build
sheet when it left the
factory in June 1961.
Ferrari Classiche
This department was set up
in 2006 to provide owners of
classic, veteran and
historic Ferraris with
dedicated maintenance,
repair and renovation
services, technical
assistance and authenticity
certification. Thus far a
total of 1,000 certification
requests have been
processed. The certification
process involves researching
the original designs of the
historic Prancing Horse cars
held in the Company’s own
Archive which houses details
of all of the GT,
competition and sports
prototype cars built by
Ferrari since its
foundation. Any work done on
the cars is carried out in
compliance with those
original designs. In all, 28
full restorations have been
carried out at Ferrari
Classiche’s dedicated
workshop. 2009 is a very
important year for Ferrari
collectors as they are
celebrating the 50th
anniversary of the launch of
the 250 GT Berlinetta SWB.
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