This car took part in the Shell Ferrari Maserati Challenge race at the Coys International Historic Festival meeting at Silverstone in July 1999.
It's the 1971
Ferrari 512M of Engelbert Stieger, chassis #
1018, and was driven in the race by his son Patrick. The description of the 512M in the barchetta.cc website reads as follows:
'During 1969 Ferrari developed a sports racing model to compete in the 1970 Group 5 Sports
Car Championship, this was the 512 S model, built to do battle with the Porsche 917. The
regulations required that twenty five examples of the model had to be built to achieve
homologation, and in January 1970 Ferrari presented the requisite number of cars to FIA
officials in Maranello for inspection. The motive power was a mid-mounted 5 litre V12 engine
with Lucas indirect fuel injection, producing a claimed 550bhp @ 8500rpm, coupled to a five
speed + reverse transaxle. The body was available in either closed, berlinetta, or open,
spider, configuration, and the fibreglass panels were mounted on a semi-monocoque chassis
in aluminium with a supplementary steel tube frame. For the Le Mans 24 Hour Race a “coda
Lunga”, long tail, body section was available, which was designed to provide greater
aerodynamic efficiency on the long Mulsanne Straight.
The 512 S model ran through the 1970 season both as works and private entries, its best
result being a victory on its second outing in the 12 Hours of Sebring, this being a works
entry driven by Andretti/Giunti/Vacarella, with Andretti joining the driving squad after his own
car retired with transmission failure when leading. A 512 S also won the non championship
Fuji 200 Mile Race in Japan, and a 512 M version won the Kyalami 9 Hour Race in South
Africa. Although there was little to choose in performance between the 512 S and the
Porsche 917, the latter had the greater reliability, which enabled it to take the
Manufacturers’ Championship.
For the 1971 season, Ferrari concentrated on their 312 P(B) sports prototype, and left the
512 entries to the privateers, although they did offer a revised more aerodynamic body
package, which had first appeared on the Kyalami winning car in late 1970. This was called
the “M” package, “Modificato” or modified, featuring a more wedge shape flatter profile, and
all cars converted to this form were coupés. In the USA the Roger Penske team developed
their own 512 M, chassis # 1040, which was the quickest 512 of all time, but like the regular
cars didn’t meet with much overall success, with no 512 victories during the season. Late in
1971 chassis # 1010 was fitted with a 7 litre engine and converted to run in the American
CanAm series. It managed a 4th place at Watkins Glen driven by Mario Andretti, before the
car was sold to the NART organisation.'
#1018 was originally supplied to German driver Georg Loos but at the end of the 1971 season it became part of Pierre Bardinon's Ferrari collection for 20 years before ending up with Englebert Stieger in 1991.
On
4 July 2017 I showed a photograph of Patrick Stieger driving the car in the pit lane at this meeting during a practice session.