Ferrari 166
Ferrari 166MM (Mille Miglia) | |
---|---|
Manufacturer: | Ferrari |
Class: | front-engined sports car |
Production: | 1948 — 1950 39 produced |
Predecessor: | Ferrari 125 |
Successor: | Ferrari 195 Ferrari 212 |
Body styles: | Coupe Barchetta Spyder |
Engines: | 2.0 L Colombo V12 |
The Ferrari 166 was an evolution of the 125 S race car that became a sports car for the street. It shared its Aurelio Lampredi-designed tube frame and double wishbone/live axle suspension with the 125. Like the 125, the wheelbase was 2420 mm long. 39 examples were produced from its introduction at the Turin Motor Show in 1948 to its retirement in 1950. It was replaced by the 2.3 L 195 and 2.6 L 212 for 1952.
As was typical at the time, a bare chassis was delivered to the coachbuilder of the customer's choice. Many used Carrozzeria Touring, who produced a somewhat-standard barchetta and coupe, but Stabilimenti Farina, Ghia and Vignale also dressed 166s. 166 S competition models generally used Allemano.
The 1.5 L Gioacchino Colombo-designed V12 engine of the 125 was changed, however, with single overhead camshafts specified and a larger 2.0 L (1995 cc/121 in³) displacement. This was achieved with both a bore and stroke increase, to 60 by 58.8 mm respectively. Output was 110 to 140 hp (82 to 104 kW) at 6,000 rpm with one to three carburettors.
The oldest Ferrari car still in existence is VIN#002C, a Model 166 Spyder Corsa owned and driven by James Glickenhaus.
Motor Trend Classic named the 166MM Barchetta as number six in their list of the ten "Greatest Ferraris of all time".
Racing
166 racing cars won Mille Miglia in both 1948 and 1949, driven by Clemente Biondetti and Giuseppe Navone the first year and Biondetti and Ettore Salani the next. A 166 chassis with the bigger 195 engine won that race again in 1950 with drivers Giannino Marzotto and Marco Crosara.
The car went on to win the 24 Hours of Le Mans (in the hands of Luigi Chinetti and Lord Selsdon) and the Targa Florio (with Clemente Biondetti and Igor Troubetzkoy) that first year, the only car in history to win all three races. A 166 also won the Spa 24 hours in 1949.
Ferrari used its 2 L (1995 cc/121 in³) V12 engine in a number of models, all called 166 for the displacement of a single cylinder. Most early 166es were sports cars built for racing, though a later line of GT cars launched the company's street model line.
The following models used the 166 name:
- 1948 Ferrari 166 F2 — Formula 2 racer
- 1948 Ferrari 166 S Allemano — racing barchetta and coupe
- 1948 Ferrari 166 SC — motorcycle-fender Corsa racing roadster
- 1948 Ferrari 166 MM Touring — Superleggera racing barchetta and coupe
- 1949 Ferrari 166 MM Zagato — Racing barchetta and coupe
- 1949 Ferrari 166 Inter — Coachbuilt street coupe and cabriolet
- 1953 Ferrari-Abarth 166 MM/53 — Racing barchetta and coupe
Ferrari timeline, 1948-1967 | Ferrari road car timeline 1960s-1990s > | |||||||||||||||||||||
Type | 1940s | 1950s | 1960s | |||||||||||||||||||
7 | 8 | 9 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 0 | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | |
Sports | 125 S | 166 S+166 SC | 195 S | 212 Exp | 225 S | 250 MM | 250 Monza | 250 GT Tour de France | 250 GT SWB | 250 GTO | 250 LM | |||||||||||
159 S | 250 S | 250 Export | ||||||||||||||||||||
GT | 166 Inter | 195 Inter | 212 Inter | 250 Europa | 250 GT Europa | 250 GT Boano | 250 GT Ellena | 250 GT Coupe PF | 250 GT Lusso | 330 GTC | 365 GTC | |||||||||||
275 GTB | 275 GTB/4 | |||||||||||||||||||||
Spyder/Cabriolet | 250 GT | 275 GTS | 330 GTS | 365 GTS | ||||||||||||||||||
2 plus 2 | 250 GT/E | 330 GT | 365 GT | |||||||||||||||||||
America | 340 | 375 America/MM | 410 Superamerica | 400 Superamerica | 500 Superfast | 365 California |