RE: Lamborghini Miura at 40

RE: Lamborghini Miura at 40

Tuesday 10th May 2005

Lamborghini Miura at 40

Lamborghini’s seminal supercar is 40 years old. Andrew Noakes tells its story.


Lamborgini Miura
Lamborgini Miura

Ferruccio Lamborghini was the son of a farmer, but he was more interested in machinery than in agriculture. He made his name -- and more importantly his fortune -- making tractors, first converting discarded military vehicles and later producing purpose-built machines under his own name. By the early 1960s Lamborghini had branched out into heating and air-conditioning equipment, and the success of these ventures meant Ferruccio was wealthy enough to drive Italy’s ultimate cars, Ferraris.

Not that Lamborghini was always impressed with Maranello’s cars, nor their autocratic creator. One story suggests that Lamborghini’s Ferrari had a noisy gearbox. When he complained, Enzo replied that Lamborghini should stick to tractors and let him worry about sports cars. Another tale is that Ferruccio spotted components on his Ferraris that he was also using on his tractors, but that spares cost three times as much - and he realised that there was money to be made building sports cars.

Whether either story is true is open to doubt, but it’s certainly true that Lamborghini decided to take on Ferrari at its own game.

Ferrucio's first anti-Ferrari

The Miura's launch with Ferruccio Lamborghini (third from right)
The Miura's launch with Ferruccio Lamborghini (third from right)
Lamborgini Miura (above and below)
Lamborgini Miura (above and below)
none
Ill-fated Lamborgini Jota
Ill-fated Lamborgini Jota
Miura SV (above and below)
Miura SV (above and below)
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Engine from the SV
Engine from the SV
Roadster (above and below) never made it into production
Roadster (above and below) never made it into production
none
Miuras are wasted in museums...
Miuras are wasted in museums...

Lamborghini’s first car began to take shape towards the end of 1962, designed by a group of ex-Ferrari engineers. Giotto Bizzarrini was responsible for the V12 engine, Giampoalo Dallara and Giampaolo Stanzani looked after the chassis and the styling was initially entrusted to Franco Scaglione. But the first show car’s wild shape was given a rather cool reception, and the definitive 350GT production car carried bodywork restyled by Carrozzeria Touring of Milan.

Lamborghini built a new factory at Sant’Agata, just outside Bologna, and by 1964 production of the 350GT was in full swing.

It was soon followed by the 4.0-litre 400GT and a succession of prototypes and show cars which sprang from the fertile imaginations and boundless enthusiasms of the young engineers Dallara and Stanzani. The wildest of these projects ditched the steel-tube frame and front engine of conventional GT cars in favour of a monocoque built up from sheet steel, with its V12 engine mounted transversely behind the cockpit. It was a flight of fancy by the engineering team, inspired by the then-new Ford GT40 racing car, but when Lamborghini saw it he sanctioned a production version - it would be good publicity, he said, though clearly they would never sell more than 50 of them...

The chassis made its first public appearance at the Turin show in 1965, where pundits queued up to opine that Lamborghini would never put it into production. They were wrong. Barely four months later, in the Spring of 1966, Sant’Agata unveiled a production-ready version which now had an eye-catching body designed by Bertone’s new styling chief, Marcello Gandini. It had also acquired a name, Miura, after the famous Spanish breeder of fighting bulls, Don Antonio Miura. And it stole the show.

Miura moves the game on

In every area the Miura seemed head and shoulders above its competition, which meant the red cars from Maranello. Its space-age looks were enough to stop bystanders in their tracks as you drove by, and if you stopped to lift the huge front and rear lids you could count on a crowd gathering.

Technically, it was very advanced: the mid-engined layout was sweeping motor racing, and like the 350GT and 400GT before it, the Miura had all-independent suspension in an era when some Ferraris still sported rigid rear axles. Bizzarrini’s 3.9-litre four-cam V12, developing a claimed 350bhp, was fitted in a unit with its transmission, the engine and gearbox sharing a common oil system. There was talk of a top speed of 180mph: the reality was ‘only’ a little over 170, but even that was fast enough...

Orders streamed in, soon surpassing Lamborghini’s predictions and quickly making the Bolognese company the hottest property in sports cars. Further new models -– the Islero GT and Espada four-seater -- were introduced to capitalise on the publicity generated by the Miura, and a Miura roadster prototype was shown to the public at the Brussels show in 1968, though it never made it into production.

Lamborghini wisely chose to consolidate, concentrating on getting the Miura and its stablemates to waiting customers, while behind the scenes work began on the important new ‘mid market’ Lamborghini, the P250 Urraco which would debut in 1970.

More performance

Lamborghini needed to do little to the Miura to keep orders rolling in, but a revised Miura S was introduced later in 1968. Though it looked much the same as before there were many detail improvements under the skin, including a claimed 20bhp power hike.

Considerably more power was available from the Jota, a racing machine based loosely on the Miura. Developed by New Zealander Bob Wallace, the Jota carried a 440bhp V12 in a revised, lightweight chassis, clothed in a Miura-style body with a prominent front air dam. Weighing in at just 890kg the Jota could reportedly despatch the 0-60mph sprint in well under four seconds, but the car’s performance was to hasten its demise. The Jota was sold on by the factory, and shortly after it was completely destroyed in a crash in Brescia.

But the idea of a faster Miura lived on, and the result was the launch in 1971 of the Miura SV incorporating many of the lessons learned with the Jota. There were wider tyres, the suspension geometry was revised, the chassis was built from heavier-gauge steel and there were individual oil systems for the engine and gearbox. Power rose to 385bhp, making the SV the quickest of the Miuras as well as the strongest and best handling. A handful of SVs were given some of the more extreme Jota modifications by the factory, and were known as SVJs.

Countach ousts Miura

By then, though, the biggest news at Lamborghini was no longer the Miura. Instead the Sant’Agata factory had a brand new supercar - even faster and even more outlandish than anything it had produced before. At the Geneva motor show in 1971, alongside the brand new Miura SV, there it sat: the prototype LP500 Countach.

Links

Author
Discussion

dinkel

Original Poster:

26,932 posts

258 months

Monday 9th May 2005
quotequote all
www.web-cars.com/miura/

"Lotus boss Colin Chapman and race car driver Jimmy Clark discuss the Miura. THAT would be a conversation worth listening to!"

Sorry, but here are pics to yum . . .

Great story, fav supercar of all time . . . Check out the Miura registry for a testride
www.lamborghiniregistry.com/Miura/

robdickinson

31,343 posts

254 months

Monday 9th May 2005
quotequote all
What no mention of the beutiful ZN-75 one off?

klassiekerrally

2,543 posts

255 months

Monday 9th May 2005
quotequote all
[quote]At the Geneva motor show in 1971, alongside the brand new Miura SV, there it sat: the prototype LP500 Countach[/quote]

Wasn't that an LP400? Or did the prototype have a five litre engine?

The Miura is one of my all-time favourites. Would absolutely buy one if I had the money...

dinkel

Original Poster:

26,932 posts

258 months

Monday 9th May 2005
quotequote all
klassiekerrally said:
[quote]At the Geneva motor show in 1971, alongside the brand new Miura SV, there it sat: the prototype LP500 Countach


Wasn't that an LP400? Or did the prototype have a five litre engine?

The Miura is one of my all-time favourites. Would absolutely buy one if I had the money...[/quote]

No . . .

www.countach.ch/History/LP500/

klassiekerrally

2,543 posts

255 months

Monday 9th May 2005
quotequote all
Ah, so it was an LP500, but it did have the four-litre engine... One learns every day!

dinkel

Original Poster:

26,932 posts

258 months

Monday 9th May 2005
quotequote all
www.classicdriver.com/uk/find/4100_results.asp?bsubmit=true&lmodelflag=10331&lmanufacturer=10066&whatbutton.x=0&page=0&lCarID=1688792

My gawd what beautifull stuff there . . . .

>> Edited by dinkel on Tuesday 10th May 10:09

Miguel

1,030 posts

265 months

Tuesday 10th May 2005
quotequote all
I thought that the prototype really had a 5 liter engine. I remember that there really was one (or more) 5 liter engine in the early Countach days--long before the 4.8 and 5.2--though that engine was never put into production. I also remember that Canadian racing F1 team owner Walter Wolf had one of these, and that the factory owned the engine but let him use it in his own Countaches, passing it from one of his Countaches to the next one. Well, it seems that the real story is similar to what I remember, but perhaps the 5 liter engine wasn't in the prototype and was only made later. Here is the story:

www.lambocars.com/archive/countach/wolf.htm

Miguel

dinkel

Original Poster:

26,932 posts

258 months

Tuesday 10th May 2005
quotequote all
www.lamborghiniregistry.com/Countach/CountachLP500/index.html

" The engine on the prototype was a 5 litre (4971cc) V12 with a bore of 85mm and a stroke of 73mm. The engine was fed by six horizontal Weber 2 barrel carburators and spark was fired by one 12 point distributor driven by one of the engine's four overhead camshafts.

Not long after the Geneva show the first 5 litre engine (4971cc) proved to be too fragile and was quickly but unintentionally destroyed in testing while flying down the highway at flat out speeds. The engine caught fire after the explosion but the car was saved from completely burning to the ground."

Wolf's wheels:
www.lamborghiniregistry.com/Countach/CountachLP400/1120006.html

www.lamborghiniregistry.com/Countach/CountachLP400/Wolf1.html

www.lamborghiniregistry.com/Countach/CountachLP400/Wolf2.html

Carefull here, don't get wet . . .

Andrew Noakes

914 posts

240 months

Tuesday 10th May 2005
quotequote all
robdickinson said:
What no mention of the beutiful ZN-75 one off?


ZN-75 was what the Bertone Miura Roadster became known as later, when it was bought by a zinc research association and given zinc bumpers, amongst other things.

RacerX

40 posts

276 months

Tuesday 10th May 2005
quotequote all
Beseides lovely cars, Lamborghini probably enjoys more lore and legend than any other manufacturer. Two that come to mind -
The disintegrating clutch in Sig. Lamborghini's Ferrari was a Borg Warner- same as used in his tractors.
Giugiaro and Lamborghini showed the sketches of the LP500(400) to a very ill long-time employee and friend of Lamborghini. From his bed, the old man took one look and said "Countach!" (apparently Piedmontese dialect for....wow!)
Lamborghinis are named after fighting bulls or bull fighting; except the Countach! Murcielago, although meaning bat, was one heck of a mean bull.
The stories are as good as the cars are great. Which ones have you heard?

Elfboy

51 posts

228 months

Tuesday 10th May 2005
quotequote all
AAAAAAH!!! Is it just me that thinks that the miura could just, maybe, well, be a little bit...

I know it was had many most beutiful awards but I think it looks weirdly...deformed or something like that.

4WD

2,289 posts

231 months

Tuesday 10th May 2005
quotequote all
It is definately you. It's gorgeous.

Marki

15,763 posts

270 months

Tuesday 10th May 2005
quotequote all
Most beautiful of all supercars ever

Proffesor McNab owned one i belive .

>> Edited by Marki on Tuesday 10th May 19:30

HearingAidBeige

3,632 posts

227 months

Tuesday 10th May 2005
quotequote all
Stunning...JK has a lime green SV I think.
Cheers


>> Edited by HearingAidBeige on Tuesday 10th May 19:00

Alex M

1,457 posts

237 months

Tuesday 10th May 2005
quotequote all
Elfboy,

Search these forums for 'Miura', there was a looooong thread about the Miura a couple of months ago with heaps of pictures, but I can't recall anybody NOT liking it.
Take another look at the pictures, are you really really sure?

Alex, thinks Miura's are totally and utterly perfect

HearingAidBeige

3,632 posts

227 months

Tuesday 10th May 2005
quotequote all
Rear 3/4 angle to die for...

dealmaker

2,215 posts

254 months

Tuesday 10th May 2005
quotequote all
"You buy a Ferrari when you want to be somebody. You buy a Lamborghini when you are somebody." - Frank Sinatra

Sinatra was a big Lambo fan - he is purported to have made that comment on a couple of occasions, including once during a visit to Sant'Agata in 1969 to spec his Miura.

www.forbes.com/2003/05/27/cx_mf_0527vow.html

Yeah - GREAT colour as well - ARANCIO ATLAS (Orange Metallic) - the choice of those in the know!

dinkel

Original Poster:

26,932 posts

258 months

Wednesday 11th May 2005
quotequote all

guydw

1,651 posts

283 months

Wednesday 11th May 2005
quotequote all
The Miura is the most beautiful car ever made ! - and the SV is the best of the lot.

Lamborghini have done so much for car design, as they followed the Miura with the Countach, which imho is the supercar by which ALL subsequent supercars are measured - even the likes of the Enzo, the Zonda etc have all taken something from the Countach.

The Countach stands out as one of the most remarkable, daring ahead of its time style statements ever.

I'm sure that the "I hate anything retro" brigade would hate the idea, but wouldn't it be cool if Audi were to do a Ford GT equivalent of the Miura ....

Imagine those looks coupled with Gallardo performance and reliability...