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Showing posts with label Maserati A6GCS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maserati A6GCS. Show all posts

Sunday, 18 November 2018

Maserati A6GCS

This car competed in rounds of the Shell Ferrari Maserati Historic Challenge series at the VSCC's SeeRed meeting at Donington Park in September 2004.
It's the 1955 Maserati A6GCS of Lukas Hüni, with a 1,978cc straight-6 engine designed by Gioacchino Columbo and the body by Carrozzeria Fantuzzi, chassis #2093.

On 16 April 2018 I showed a photograph of this car that I'd taken at Donington Park in 2003.

Sunday, 2 September 2018

Two Maseratis

These cars both belonged to Burkhard von Schenk and competed in a 10 Lap Scratch Race for 1950s Sports Cars at the VSCC's Richard Seaman Memorial Trophies meeting at Donington Park in May 2001.
Number 40 is a 1955 Maserati A6GCS which belonged to Maserati's A6 series of cars and was driven in the race by Robertino Wild. The A6GCS was built from 1953 to 1955 to compete in the 2 litre class of the World Sportscar Championship and had a 1,986cc straight-6 engine. Burkhard von Schenk's car is chassis #2098.
Burkhard von Schenk himself drove this car in the Donington Park race, and it's a 1957 Maserati 300S, a car built from 1955 to 1959 to compete in the 3-litre class of the World Sportscar Championship. The 300S had a 2,991cc straight-6 engine and Burkhard von Schenk's car is chassis #3082.

Friday, 8 June 2018

Friday's Ferrari

This is a car I've featured several times before, and it's seen here again at the SeeRed meeting at Donington Park in September 2004.
It's Alexander Boswell's 1952 Ferrari 625, originally a 2 litre Formula 2 Ferrari 500, but fitted with a 2½ litre engine in 1954 and converted to a 625 to compete in the new 2½ litre Formula 1. By 2004 it had acquired a 3 litre sportscar engine, and this barchetta.cc record shows the history of #0482. There are three other Ferraris in this photograph, as well as the 1953 Maserati A6GCS of Carlo Vögele (no. 37): the yellow car in front of the 625 is Carlos Monteverde's 1958 Ferrari Testa Rossa (#0738TR), next to that is the 1958 Ferrari 250GT LWB Berlinetta TdF of Thomas Studer (#0909GT), and in front of that is Erich Traber's 1954 Ferrari 250 Europa GT Coupe (#0357GT).

Monday, 16 April 2018

Maserati A6GCS

This was one of three such cars competing in the Shell Historic Ferrari Maserati Challenge race at the VSCC's Richard Seaman Memorial Trophies meeting at Donington Park in June 2003.
It's the Carrozzeria Fantuzzi bodied 1955 Maserati A6GCS of Swiss driver Lukas Hüni and is chassis #2093. The A6GCS has a 2 litre straight-6 engine and was designed by Gioacchino Columbo to compete in the World Sportscar Championship, which it did from 1953 to 1955.

On 22 December 2015 I showed photographs of another Maserati A6GCS that I took at Silverstone in 1998.

Wednesday, 26 July 2017

Maserati A6GCS

The Coys International Historic Festival meeting of July 1993 took place at Silverstone in a typical mixture of British weather with sunshine and rain at different parts of the day. Here's a couple of photographs I took of one of the competing cars just after a particularly heavy spell of rain.
It's the 1955 Maserati A6GCS/53 of Maurizio Grazzi that took part in the Champagne Charles Heidsieck Sports Car Race. It's chassis #2090 and has the Massimino/Colombo 2-litre engine with a body designed by Medardo Fantuzzi. As far as I know it's the only A6GCS Spider with this style of body - all the others seem to have the same Fantuzzi body as chassis #2058 that I featured on 22 December 2015.

Tuesday, 22 December 2015

Maserati A6GCS

Here are a couple of photographs I took of a car at the Coys International Historic Festival meeting at Silverstone in July 1998.
It's a 1954 Maserati A6GCS, and as it's green at first I thought it may have been the ex-Gilby Engineering car (chassis number 2052) I mentioned in yesterday's post, but it appears to be chassis number 2058. I think the Gilby Engineering car was a darker shade of green.
I don't think it took part in the race meeting - there's no race number on the car and it isn't listed in the programme of the event.

The early Maserati A6GCS models were cycle-winged versions, and I showed some photographs of a 1947 car on 14 December 2014.

Sunday, 21 December 2014

Maserati A6GCS

This is one of the cars that took part in one of the Shell Ferrari Maserati Historic Challenge races at the SeeRed meeting at Donington Park in September 2004.
It's a 1947 Maserati A6GCS and www.ultimatecarpage.com says this about the car:

'When the Maserati brothers sold their ailing company to the Orsi family in 1937, they agreed to stay on for a decade. One of their final contributions to the company they founded was a new naturally aspirated straight six engine. It was dubbed the A6 in honour of Alfieri Maserati, who had died in 1932 from complications after an accident. Introduced to the public in 1946, the new 'six' would serve Maserati for over a decade.
While the engine had debuted in the company's first road car, it was quickly adapted for competition use. One of the biggest changes was an increase in displacement from 1.5 to 2 litre, by virtue of a larger bore and stroke. The engine was constructed using a cast-iron crank case with an alloy head. Relatively simple in design, this head featured a single overhead camshaft. Breathing through triple Weber carburettors, the 2-litre A6 engine produced around 130 bhp.
Mated to a four speed gearbox, the A6 engine was installed in a conventional ladder frame. This was constructed from round-steel side and cross members by specialists Gilco, who were also responsible for many of the early Ferrari chassis. Suspension was by double wishbones and coil springs at the front and a live axle and semi-elliptic leaf springs at the rear. Houdaille lever arm shock absorbers were found on all four corners, as were the hydraulic operated drum brakes.
Although officially known as the '2000 Sport', the new Maserati sports racer was much known as the A6GCS. That was short for Ghisa (cast-iron, referring to the engine), Corsa (competition) and Sport. The first A6GCS sported a coupe body but this was quickly abandoned in a favour of a much lighter 'siluro' or cycle fender body, created for Maserati by Medardo Fantuzzi. One of the design's most recognisable features was a single headlight (monofaro) mounted in the grille.
The A6GCS was campaigned by the works team and also offered to customers. Development on the car was continuous, so no two were exactly alike. Among the first changes was the adoption of an alloy cylinder block and to the final models dry-sump lubrication was also fitted. The very last car sported a twin-cam cylinder head that had been developed for the A6GCM Formula 2 racer.
Eventually little over a dozen of the original A6GCS were produced before it was replaced by a new model that included all the updates. Introduced in 1953, this 'series 2' was accordingly known as the A6GCS/53. Due to rule changes, Fantuzzi developed a new fully-enveloping body, replacing the original siluro style.
Raced by some of the time's most talented drivers like Luigi Villoresi and a young Alberto Ascari, the A6GCS faced strong competition from among other machinery the very first Ferraris. They nevertheless managed to score victories in sports car races throughout Italy in the late 1940s. That success would lay the foundation for a long range of Maserati sports and Grand Prix racers.'

Behind the car in this photograph is the later version of the A6GCS, the 1955 model of Lukas Hüni.
Here's the car at Redgate Corner during the race, being driven by Belgian Marc Devis.