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Abarth & Co Turin, Italy 1950 - 1971 The company was formed in 1950 by Carlo Abarth following his involvement with Cisitalia in the late 1940's. Initially the company concentrated on making tuning equipment for Fiat and other makes and in particular exhaust systems where Carlo Abarth had built up a reputation during the 1930,s. Some Fiat based 1000cc coupes were built but serious car production commenced in 1955 with the Tipo 207/A Spyder using the pre-war designed Fiat Millecento mechanical components. The 1100cc front engine's power output was raised from 32bhp of the original to 66bhp. The coachwork was by Boano. The first rear engined sports cars based on the new Fiat 600 appeared in 1955 with open 2 seater bodies and the 633cc engines output increased to 39bhp from the production figure of 21.5bhp. Fiat components were the main source of supply until 1962 although some special coupe bodies were built for Porsche in 1960 and a 1 litre coupe was built based on the Alfa Romeo Guilietta in 1958.
Some larger coupes and cabriolets were built based on the Fiat 2.2 litre six with four wheel disc brakes, but these front engined cars were only made in 1960. 1961 saw the introduction of a new range of attractively styled coupes based on the new Simca 1000. In 1964 a very fast Berlina was built on the Fiat 850 floor pan using the 1.6 litre Abarth twin overhead camshaft engine and capable of 137 mph. By 1966 there were numerous options available on the 500 and 600 Fiat based derivatives with engine specifications ranging from 27bhp to 38bhp giving top speeds from 75 to 87 mph. The 1000 Corsa was fitted with a front mounted radiator, 5 speed gearbox and disc brakes all round.
The marque came to prominence in 1956 with a series of attempts on the long distance International Class Records for 500, 750 and 1100cc engines. The rear-engined streamlined 750cc car averaged 111.92 mph for 72 hours in July 1957. They were also very successful at the Nurburgring, winning the 1000 kilometre sports car race for 5 consecutive years (1960 to 64) and finishing second in 1965. They were unsuccessful with their Le Mans entry for 1961 and thereafter abandoned the swing axle rear suspension and introduced a front mounted radiator on the more powerful models. A Formula 2 racer was built in 1964 using a 995cc twin overhead camshaft engine and other projects included a 3 litre Formula 1 engine and a 6 litre V12 sports car engine. These were far too ambitious for a small company and had sereios financial consequences. |
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