Wheels (Australia)

365 GT 2+2 Life in the large lane

THE BIGGEST-EVER FERRARI AT THE TIME ALSO TOOK THE BRAND INTO A STATE OF LUX

- WORDS MICHAEL STAHL

FERRARI HAS RECENTLY confirmed that the Purosangue SUV will go into production this year. Spy photos suggest the familyfrie­ndly Ferrari is more oversized hot-hatch than soccer-mum SUV, but we still can’t shake our vision of Enzo Ferrari spinning in his grave at 7500rpm. Il Commendato­re famously declared there would never be a four-door Ferrari. His view was reinforced in 2014 by Sergio Marchionne, CEO of Ferrari (and Fiat-Chrysler) until his sudden passing in 2018: “There will be no four-door or SUV from Ferrari.” Three years later, Marchionne announced the SUV project. Four-seater Ferraris had long been another matter. The first true production Ferrari four-seater (overlookin­g various lowvolume coachbuild­s) was the 250 GTE 2+2, launched in 1960. With more than 950 made, the 3.0-litre V12 250 GTE became the biggest selling Ferrari model to that time. It’s said that Enzo used a 250 GTE 2+2 as his personal car; better documented is his use of a subsequent 2+2 model, the 4.0-litre 330 GT. If Enzo liked the practicali­ty of his four-seaters, he surely loved the lire that they brought in to help fuel the golden age of Ferrari’s dominance at Le Mans. In 1967 came the 365 GT 2+2. With a 4.4-litre version of the Colombo V12, the new 2+2 retained the 330’s 2647mm wheelbase, but with longer overhangs and a flowing shape that took cues from designer Aldo Brovarone’s recent 500 Superfast and concurrent Dino 206 GT. At almost five metres overall, it was the largest Ferrari ever, prompting the US Road & Track to nickname it Queen Mary (the legendary liner was moored permanentl­y in California the same year). The familiar steel-tube spaceframe chassis carried a steel body, with fibreglass floor pan and firewall. Grand touring sophistica­tion extended to the dual Ferrari firsts of power steering and air conditioni­ng, along with an independen­t rear suspension (versus the 330’s leaf-sprung live axle) with a hydraulic self-levelling system. The 365 GT 2+2’s success was also boosted by its compliance with newly introduced US safety and emissions regulation­s; it was briefly Ferrari’s sole model in the US market. Ultimately 801 examples were built, 52 of them in right-hand drive, before it was replaced in 1971 by the ‘Daytona’-based 365 GTC/4. Since 1960, Ferrari has only twice been without a V12 2+2 in its range – from 1989-’92 and right now, after the 2020 axing of the GTC4Lusso.

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