RE: Sublime GTO Engineering 250 SWB Revival for sale
RE: Sublime GTO Engineering 250 SWB Revival for sale
Thursday 22nd February 2024

Sublime GTO Engineering 250 SWB Revival for sale

There are plenty of classics out there to be admired from a distance - this isn't one of them


‘Don’t call it a restomod’, say GTO Engineering, ‘it’s a Revival’. Before you roll your eyes, it does have a point. Anything remotely old-looking gets lumped under the restomod umbrella these days, because surely a car that’s been put through a nut-and-bolt restoration and lightly improved with a sprinkling of modern bits and pieces is a restomod in the truest sense of the word. But unlike a Singer 911 or Kimera Evo 037, GTO’s 250 SWB was designed to be a near-complete match to the car from the 1950s - to the extent where original Ferrari drawings were used to ensure parity.

Even the donor car had to be period correct. The Revival isn’t a re-bodied 550 Maranello or 456 (which would probably give you more trouble than an old SWB), with GTO instead requiring an existing 250 (!) chassis or, at the very least, a 330 GT. Thankfully, the donor cars used were said to be beyond economical repair; all that was really needed was the chassis number so that it could be road registered. Without it, the 250 SWB would be another one of the recreations, like Aston Martin’s DB4 GT Zagato, that can only be driven around the grounds of your stately home.

With that in mind, a few modern upgrades were available as optional extras for those who intended to actually use their 250 SWB Revival, including air con and a USB charger. Then there’s the way it’s put together. The original bodywork would have been beaten into shape by hand, and it’s unlikely the word ‘durability’ came up all that often in the Ferrari design room some 65 years ago. GTO Engineering, however, used cutting-edge production methods to piece the Revival together. Think 3D printing and laser scanning, rather than hammers and fists. Granted, it kills the illusion somewhat, but so too does blowing up five minutes after setting off - something you wouldn’t have to worry about with the Revival. 

Those fortunate enough to buy one new back in 2020 could choose between three engine options: a 3.0-, 3.5- or 4.0-litre V12 with a choice of either four- or five-speed manual gearboxes. You’ll need to give the seller a call to find out which was chosen for the car we have here and how the original owner had the car configured. GTO would quiz buyers on how they intended to use their cars, whether it be for road, cruising or race use, and adjusted the engine mapping to suit the owner’s driving style. What we do know, however, is that this car was based on a 250 GTE imported from the US and took three years to build. Conveniently, the steering wheel is on the right and proper side of the cockpit. 

Unless you were a diehard Ferrari fan who knows 250 GT Berlinetta SWB chassis numbers better than the back of their hand, it’s almost impossible to tell the Revival apart from the original. Not least because you’ll be too dazzled by this Rosso Chiaro over Nero Leather interior spec to care. And while there’s obviously huge amounts of charm in an old car’s wonky and rattly interior, the immaculate Veglia Benzina dials, sparkling switch gear and pristine leather offers a rare glimpse into what a 250 SWB would have looked like fresh out of the factory. If anything, the originals probably didn’t look nearly as good as what GTO Engineering has put together. 

The price? You’ll need to cover that when you give the seller a bell, but Revivals were somewhere in the region of £850,000 when new a few years ago. Not cheap at all, but if you’d rather the real thing then you’d be forking out at least ten times that amount, and wouldn’t you be too afraid to use it on the road? Or, if you already own a 250 SWB base, you can keep it tucked away and use this one instead for historic racing; it has all the necessary FIA papers to do so. The Revival relishes being stretched beyond its 6,000rpm redline - can't imagine doing the same in a 'proper' classic Ferrari, can you? At least not repeatedly.   


See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

Julian Scott

Original Poster:

4,308 posts

50 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
Revival, resto, reimagined,....whatever. That's a beautiful car. And in the world of $3m Singer 911s, it doesn't seem silly money. Figuratively speaking.

Fetchez la vache

5,889 posts

240 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
OK. wow.
This is one of the rare occasions I wish I had unlimited funds. I'd take this over pretty much anything "new" these days no matter the price...

edoverheels

576 posts

131 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
Fetchez la vache said:
OK. wow.
This is one of the rare occasions I wish I had unlimited funds. I'd take this over pretty much anything "new" these days no matter the price...
+1

AmazingGrace

270 posts

30 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
Stunning. Absolutely stunning.

And, to be honest, if I had the means to buy this I’d drive it every day and go to my grave a very happy soul

Wheel Turned Out

2,282 posts

64 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
A truly delightful thing. Hopefully someone will pile some very happy miles on it.

lauda

4,348 posts

233 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
That does look rather magnificent.

And being a period-correct car, it doesn't suffer the issue with lots of the 'reimagined' classics of looking totally ridiculous on large wheels and low profile tyres.

thegreenhell

22,661 posts

245 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
article said:
Thankfully, the donor cars used were said to be beyond economical repair; all that was really needed was the chassis number so that it could be road registered
Is there such thing as 'beyond economical repair' with these cars? It's just more fashionable to have a SWB replica than an original GTE. The cost is the same to do.

It looks like it could be the same car that sold at auction for £800k last year - https://www.brightwells.com/timed-sale/5430/lot/61...

Dr G

15,880 posts

268 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
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I'll have mine with Toyota MR2 badges, please.

CKY

2,268 posts

41 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
lauda said:
That does look rather magnificent.

And being a period-correct car, it doesn't suffer the issue with lots of the 'reimagined' classics of looking totally ridiculous on large wheels and low profile tyres.
Agreed, gorgeous thing - I mightn't have chosen red if it were mine, but that's something I could get over with time.. Looks miles better than any of the Singer/other restomods to my eyes, however my eyes also don't stare at a 7+ figure bank balance all day, so I suppose taste is subjective.

lukeharding

3,519 posts

115 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
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I'd still rather the GTE!

Leins

10,328 posts

174 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
I wonder how these are viewed by Maranello, given they took an extremely dim (legal) view of similar approaches back in the 80s

WPA

14,257 posts

140 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
Beautiful car but I struggle to see why you would buy it, yes it is lot cheaper than a real one but I do not understand why anybody would want a replica.

Also I wonder what Ferrari thinks about this.

Julian Scott

Original Poster:

4,308 posts

50 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
WPA said:
Beautiful car but I struggle to see why you would buy it, yes it is lot cheaper than a real one but I do not understand why anybody would want a replica.

Also I wonder what Ferrari thinks about this.
....perhaps, but it is still a Ferrari.

RDMcG

20,680 posts

233 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
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Gorgeous car, and I would not care that its a replica.

LotusOmega375D

9,180 posts

179 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
Much more my cup of cappuccino than a restomod. Strip out the needless USB charger and you’re good to go.

myhandle

1,293 posts

200 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
Leins said:
I wonder how these are viewed by Maranello, given they took an extremely dim (legal) view of similar approaches back in the 80s
I was wondering this. I guess it IS a Ferrari, it's just that it has been rebodied in a different style to a high standard. So it's not a replica, it's a real Ferrari, with a different bodystyle to new. There is a very long history of specially bodied Ferraris. Some of the most outrageous are by Sbarro, for example the Alcador and Autobau. Also Colani and the Testa D'Oro. I don't think Ferrari has done anything (at least anything effective) about those.

So the question might be, Ferrari are semi-ok with those (although forget Classiche haha) as they are an entirely new bodystyle. I heard they were angry with Pininfarina over Glickenhaus' Enzo-based P4/5 and that was one factor leading to them taking the styling in-house, but that might well be heresay and the prospect of an additional internal profit centre is perhaps more likely.

This car is different as it is a lesser 1960s Ferrari derivative rebodied as one of the more valuable ones, and which looks pretty much exactly like a real 250SWB. I am sure mega-experts could tell it from an original. So they might have a problem with it in that regard.

WPA

14,257 posts

140 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
myhandle said:
This car is different as it is a lesser 1960s Ferrari derivative rebodied as one of the more valuable ones, and which looks pretty much exactly like a real 250SWB. I am sure mega-experts could tell it from an original. So they might have a problem with it in that regard.
Looks pretty close but I can spot a few differences




thegreenhell

22,661 posts

245 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
WPA said:
Looks pretty close but I can spot a few differences



You can spot those same differences between different examples of original cars, depending what year it was built, street or competition, steel or alloy body etc.

Here's James Cottingham of DK Engineering explaining the differences - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98zCbDBrbHM&t=...

Arsecati

2,748 posts

143 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
For that money, I'd rather save a few hundred grand and get myself one of those new Zagato Apine Longtail things.

















(Clearly I'm fuhqin joking - this is divine!!)

MDL111

8,679 posts

203 months

Thursday 22nd February 2024
quotequote all
This as a a daily and a Carrera GT for weekends is my dream garage (plus a G63 or FF for winter driving)