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A 1967 Ferrari 275 GTB/4 S NART Spider sold for $27.5 million at RM Auctions Monterey sale during the 2013 Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance. It was the highest priced car sale ever in the United States at the time and the second highest amount that a car sold for at auction after the Juan Fangio's W196 sold for $29.6 million also in 2013.
The NART cars are considered the pinnacle of 60s Ferraris and just 10 275 GTB/4 S NART Spiders were made. NART stands for North American Racing Team, and the cars were meant as a model that someone could buy, drive on the street and go racing. American Ferrari importer Luigi Chinetti created the cars to satisfy buyers who wanted a convertible version of the 275 GTB/4.
The cars used a 3,286cc, 300hp V12 with dual overhead camshafts and a five-speed manual transmission. They had dual wishbone suspensions in the front and rear with four-wheel disc brakes. The chassis was a tubular steel frame.
The NART team included American drivers like Masten Gregory and Phil Hill. Other 275 GTB/4 S NART Spider owners included Steve McQueen. Another car took second in class in the 1968 12 Hours of Sebring and was repainted later that year to be driven by Faye Dunaway in the film The Thomas Crown Affair.
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Ferrari
When it opened, the Scuderia Ferrari (Italian for “Ferrari Stable”) wasn’t meant to produce road cars, but rather for sponsoring amateur drivers and already made racing cars. It was actually supposed to be the first motorsport team independent from factory, although related to Alfa Romeo. Enzo Ferrari always worked for the Alfa Romeo company, in different job positions, until around 1940. Then he quit because that a... more