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Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11

1972 LAMBORGHINI MIURA SV

Auction 17.08.2006
17.08.2006
Schätzpreis
375.000 $ - 425.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
477.000 $
Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11

1972 LAMBORGHINI MIURA SV

Auction 17.08.2006
17.08.2006
Schätzpreis
375.000 $ - 425.000 $
Zuschlagspreis:
477.000 $
Beschreibung:

1972 LAMBORGHINI MIURA SV COACHWORK BY BERTONE Chassis No. 5012 Engine No. 30708 Rosso Corsa with blue leather interior Engine: V12, inboard rear, transverse mounted double overhead camshafts, 3,929cc, 385bhp at 7,850rpm; Gearbox: five speed within engine unit; Suspension: independent front and rear double transverse wishbones with coil springs; Brakes: front and rear ventilated disc. Left hand drive. Named after the famous breed of fighting bull, the Miura was introduced in completed form at the 1966 Geneva Salon and has since been widely regarded as the original 'supercar'. It was certainly the car that caused sleepless nights at Ferrari and got the Maranello firm thinking hard. Imagine, if you will, a sports GT for the street, with a transversely mounted V12 engine capable of 170mph! The Miura was nothing short of an astounding sensation at Geneva that year. Never one to miss a promotional opportunity, Ferruccio Lamborghini had his chief development engineer Bob Wallace drive the prototype Miura to Monte Carlo over the Grand Prix weekend. Strategically positioned in front of the Casino, crowds quickly gathered around what many now consider to be the most beautiful sports car ever built. With crowds ten persons deep, Ferruccio himself climbed in and fired up the V12. Within minutes, the number of awed onlookers doubled! Both beautiful and fast, the iconic Miura was the sports car to own in the '60s and '70s. Well-heeled clients waited a year or more for the Sant'Agata factory to complete their often personalized Miuras, in many cases taking delivery at the factory itself. The list included the likes of '60s Formula One driver Jean-Pierre Beltoise, King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, Briggs Cunningham, the Shah of Iran, Frank Sinatra and Rod Stewart. It is clear that Ferruccio Lamborghini adored the Miura indeed. Interviewed by the French magazine Automobiles Classiques for its Spring/Summer 1984 issue, he quite simply stated, 'When people ask me nowadays to describe my ideal sports car, I still answer with one word; MIURA... When we launched the Miura, our plan was for (just) 50 cars... I know sports enthusiasts all over the world who would have paid a king's ransom for a racing version... for the rest of my life I'll feel happy when I look at my Miura... I say that nobody has built anything better since. It was the first car of our wildest dreams, a car for absolute fanatics. We refused to make a single technical compromise in the Miura. Mounting the engine transversely in the center was a daring step in itself, one that no one had ever dared to try (for the street in 1966). As for its appearance, you can judge for yourself nineteen years later... when I miss the sound and fury, I take refuge in my garage and turn the key in the ignition of my Miura.' Ferruccio was probably referring to his beloved red Miura SV, no. 5028, that he drove during his years of retirement from the factory, and that he kept in the family, leaving it to his son Tonino when he passed away in 1992. 474 examples of the Miura's original P400 were thought to have been built before the Miura P400 S was introduced in 1968. The 'S' featured ventilated disc brakes halfway along its production run, which ended after 140 examples had been built. In 1970, Bob Wallace built the one-off Miura Jota in an experimental project sanctioned by Chief Engineer Paolo Stanzani. Some of the technical knowledge gained was employed for the Miura's ultimate version, the Miura P400 SV. The two letters SV ( Spinto Veloce , which translated means 'tuned fast') came to symbolize the very best version of Lamborghini's legendary Miura, a car that eventually gained cult status among its dedicated group of enthusiasts. 142 SVs were built by the factory from 1971 to 1973. The SV was introduced at the Geneva Salon of 1971, and the accompanying factory press release at the time stated that it would be built to special order for VIP clients only. The factory described the Miura's Swan S

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11
Auktion:
Datum:
17.08.2006
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
17 August 2006, Monterey, Jet Center
Beschreibung:

1972 LAMBORGHINI MIURA SV COACHWORK BY BERTONE Chassis No. 5012 Engine No. 30708 Rosso Corsa with blue leather interior Engine: V12, inboard rear, transverse mounted double overhead camshafts, 3,929cc, 385bhp at 7,850rpm; Gearbox: five speed within engine unit; Suspension: independent front and rear double transverse wishbones with coil springs; Brakes: front and rear ventilated disc. Left hand drive. Named after the famous breed of fighting bull, the Miura was introduced in completed form at the 1966 Geneva Salon and has since been widely regarded as the original 'supercar'. It was certainly the car that caused sleepless nights at Ferrari and got the Maranello firm thinking hard. Imagine, if you will, a sports GT for the street, with a transversely mounted V12 engine capable of 170mph! The Miura was nothing short of an astounding sensation at Geneva that year. Never one to miss a promotional opportunity, Ferruccio Lamborghini had his chief development engineer Bob Wallace drive the prototype Miura to Monte Carlo over the Grand Prix weekend. Strategically positioned in front of the Casino, crowds quickly gathered around what many now consider to be the most beautiful sports car ever built. With crowds ten persons deep, Ferruccio himself climbed in and fired up the V12. Within minutes, the number of awed onlookers doubled! Both beautiful and fast, the iconic Miura was the sports car to own in the '60s and '70s. Well-heeled clients waited a year or more for the Sant'Agata factory to complete their often personalized Miuras, in many cases taking delivery at the factory itself. The list included the likes of '60s Formula One driver Jean-Pierre Beltoise, King Fahd of Saudi Arabia, Briggs Cunningham, the Shah of Iran, Frank Sinatra and Rod Stewart. It is clear that Ferruccio Lamborghini adored the Miura indeed. Interviewed by the French magazine Automobiles Classiques for its Spring/Summer 1984 issue, he quite simply stated, 'When people ask me nowadays to describe my ideal sports car, I still answer with one word; MIURA... When we launched the Miura, our plan was for (just) 50 cars... I know sports enthusiasts all over the world who would have paid a king's ransom for a racing version... for the rest of my life I'll feel happy when I look at my Miura... I say that nobody has built anything better since. It was the first car of our wildest dreams, a car for absolute fanatics. We refused to make a single technical compromise in the Miura. Mounting the engine transversely in the center was a daring step in itself, one that no one had ever dared to try (for the street in 1966). As for its appearance, you can judge for yourself nineteen years later... when I miss the sound and fury, I take refuge in my garage and turn the key in the ignition of my Miura.' Ferruccio was probably referring to his beloved red Miura SV, no. 5028, that he drove during his years of retirement from the factory, and that he kept in the family, leaving it to his son Tonino when he passed away in 1992. 474 examples of the Miura's original P400 were thought to have been built before the Miura P400 S was introduced in 1968. The 'S' featured ventilated disc brakes halfway along its production run, which ended after 140 examples had been built. In 1970, Bob Wallace built the one-off Miura Jota in an experimental project sanctioned by Chief Engineer Paolo Stanzani. Some of the technical knowledge gained was employed for the Miura's ultimate version, the Miura P400 SV. The two letters SV ( Spinto Veloce , which translated means 'tuned fast') came to symbolize the very best version of Lamborghini's legendary Miura, a car that eventually gained cult status among its dedicated group of enthusiasts. 142 SVs were built by the factory from 1971 to 1973. The SV was introduced at the Geneva Salon of 1971, and the accompanying factory press release at the time stated that it would be built to special order for VIP clients only. The factory described the Miura's Swan S

Auktionsarchiv: Los-Nr. 11
Auktion:
Datum:
17.08.2006
Auktionshaus:
Christie's
17 August 2006, Monterey, Jet Center
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