Satan's barge - 1983 Ferrari 400i

Satan's barge - 1983 Ferrari 400i

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Rumdoodle

Original Poster:

704 posts

20 months

Monday 1st January
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Some real gems in the museum. This ex-Whitney Straight Deusenberg

The ex-Malcolm Campbell straight eight Delage, of the sort I saw hammering around Angouleme in September

And the 8 litre Barnato-Hassan special

Rumdoodle

Original Poster:

704 posts

20 months

Monday 1st January
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And some fine 80's Ferraris.






bolidemichael

13,866 posts

201 months

Monday 1st January
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Camber Sands Yellow on the e type. An evocative name that I’ll never forget from having chatted to an original owner at Brooklands around fifteen years ago. That may even be his.

It must’ve been a great event, good for you. I’m curious, were the jelly babies left untouched?

Rumdoodle

Original Poster:

704 posts

20 months

Monday 1st January
quotequote all
bolidemichael said:
. I’m curious, were the jelly babies left untouched?
They didn't all make it. I'm not familiar with Surrey. I panicked, and used them to bribe my way through the checkpoints.

Mr Tidy

22,359 posts

127 months

Monday 1st January
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Rumdoodle said:
It was really something to see for the first time the banking I knew so well from photographs in books.
It is very special - you don't realise quite how steep it is until you start walking up it!

Thanks for posting some great photos. thumbup

Rumdoodle

Original Poster:

704 posts

20 months

Monday 1st January
quotequote all
bolidemichael said:
Camber Sands Yellow on the e type.
I knew of primrose yellow. Hadn't heard of that one.

Rumdoodle

Original Poster:

704 posts

20 months

Monday 1st January
quotequote all
Mr Tidy said:
It is very special - you don't realise quite how steep it is until you start walking up it!

Thanks for posting some great photos. thumbup
Must have been a phenomenal spectacle back in the day.

Mr Tidy

22,359 posts

127 months

Monday 1st January
quotequote all
Rumdoodle said:
Mr Tidy said:
It is very special - you don't realise quite how steep it is until you start walking up it!

Thanks for posting some great photos. thumbup
Must have been a phenomenal spectacle back in the day.
Yes, it must have been. By all accounts cars occasionally went over the top of the banking. eek

bolidemichael

13,866 posts

201 months

Monday 1st January
quotequote all
Rumdoodle said:
bolidemichael said:
Camber Sands Yellow on the e type.
I knew of primrose yellow. Hadn't heard of that one.
Perhaps you’re right… memory fades in time!

I’ve had a quick google, but can’t find anything… Primrose Yellow was my initial thought, but I’m certain that’s what he told me.

carinaman

21,298 posts

172 months

Monday 1st January
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Even beside that Jensen GT that blue 328GTS looks small.

bolidemichael

13,866 posts

201 months

Monday 1st January
quotequote all
bolidemichael said:
Rumdoodle said:
bolidemichael said:
Camber Sands Yellow on the e type.
I knew of primrose yellow. Hadn't heard of that one.
Perhaps you’re right… memory fades in time!

I’ve had a quick google, but can’t find anything… Primrose Yellow was my initial thought, but I’m certain that’s what he told me.
A little further digging on original colours and there are ‘Golden Sand’, ‘Pale Primrose’ and ‘Sand’.

Pale Primrose is the colour that I recall having seen and discussed, but confusingly he referred to it as ‘Camber Sands’. Oh well.

Rumdoodle

Original Poster:

704 posts

20 months

Tuesday 2nd January
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The colours for the 400 were mostly, or possibly all, named after racehorses. Hence, Arancio Vaguely Noble, Celeste Gainsborough, Rosso Sir Ivor and others. Courtesy of the definitive Ferrari 400 blog https://erwin400.blogspot.com/2018/10/ferrari-400-...

Highway Star

3,576 posts

231 months

Tuesday 2nd January
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You wouldn’t have been on the A44 between Chipping Norton and Woodstock on a Sunday a few weeks back by any chance? A silver 400 passing the opposite way stood out and I’m sure it was your plate. Stunning car.

Rumdoodle

Original Poster:

704 posts

20 months

Tuesday 2nd January
quotequote all
Highway Star said:
You wouldn’t have been on the A44 between Chipping Norton and Woodstock on a Sunday a few weeks back by any chance? A silver 400 passing the opposite way stood out and I’m sure it was your plate. Stunning car.
Probably was. That is my manor thumbup

TEKNOPUG

18,960 posts

205 months

Wednesday 3rd January
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Brown Testarossa scratchchin

Bristol had this wonderful gift of making their cars look both expensive and cheap at the same time.

bolidemichael

13,866 posts

201 months

Wednesday 3rd January
quotequote all
I suspect that the Brown Testarossa belongs to ‘Duke of London’ which was red, so likely to be a wrap.

NomduJour

19,124 posts

259 months

Wednesday 3rd January
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It’s peelable (or not) PPS in Nocciola.

Rumdoodle

Original Poster:

704 posts

20 months

Monday 15th January
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bolidemichael said:
I suspect that the Brown Testarossa belongs to ‘Duke of London’
To quote Withnail and I

Brown kind of works on a GT4

and really works on a GTC/4

but on a mid-engined Ferrari, it confirms all I suspected about those metropolitan deviants. All of it. And more.

The Sunday after the Brooklands trip was the first Bicester Scramble of the year, with a dry day forecast. The afternoon before, I gave the 400 a good clean inside and out. Went to start it at sparrowfart, and it didn't want to play. Turned the key, dash lights came on, but no bananas. This had happened a couple of times before, also on cold mornings, and on the second attempt it had fired up as normal. Not this time. It was the coldest night it had ever spent outside, not exactly brass monkeys but cold enough for this to probably be temperature related. Tried jump starting it to no avail. Borrowed a hairdryer and went at the injectors and a few other bits with low expectations, which were met. It was early afternoon by the time we had all guns blazing. Too late for Bicester, so I took it for a run to Moreton and back.

When it's cold, it runs fine. But when it's up to temperature, it's running rough under 2k rpm and sometimes not pulling completely cleanly above that, although it's barely perceptible. It had been fine all the way to Glasgow and back. Some diagnostics required to keep this jewel of an engine purring as its creator intended.

Largely unrelated, I found myself reminiscing about my old 380SL and got in touch with my friendly local classic Mercedes specialist to ask them to keep an eye out for a budget classic smoker barge. The Ferrari has proven very useable, except for the parts supply these days. By way of an extreme example - as I don't need a whole engine - Eurospares are listing an engine for a 365GTC, basically a detuned Daytona engine and a smaller capacity version of mine, at £65k. And a 365BB engine (for non-Ferrari nerds, that's the early Berlinetta Boxer) at £130k. However, even at that level, the main problem is not actually price but availability. I'm not bothered about having to replace stuff, but I am bothered about not being able to. It wouldn't have been such an issue twenty years ago, but it genuinely is now.

Fortunately, I'm finding this such a delight I won't mind wrapping it in cotton wool more than originally envisaged. I'll still max out the mileage allowance. But it's such a treat when I do use it, I'm content to restrict it to mostly sunny days. But, with the onset of galloping old age, that's also kind of how I'm starting to feel about other things in life too weeping, so I'm probably just projecting that sentiment onto the car.

Hence, tapping into the still plentiful supply of old Mercs for mundane duties. I don't need anything more modern than that. When I looked at a car rental website a few weeks ago, it was bizarre to see that about half of the options were full electric things. I'm just not ready for that sort of st.