Want to see something amazing?
Mike (Mike Drew) I found the pictures of my old Pantera we have discussed, it was the oldest one known. What was my serial number? I really don't remember! I will scan and send to you. He can drive all the VW he wants, he is a walking talking car encyclopedia.
I beg to differ. I'm not an encyclopedia on cars in general, but I do know an awful lot about a tiny, miniscule segment of the automobile landscape--De Tomasos specifically, and to a much lesser extent, Shelbys, Cobras and GT40s.
As for your car, the VIN on your Pantera, the fifth one built and oldest known car still in circulation, was/is THPNLK01006 (the first Pantera was #1001). It was built in February 1971.
Your car was one of a handful of preproduction prototypes that were sent to the USA to have all the DOT/EPA compliance testing done, by an outfit called Ogden Laboratories, in Orange County (CA). Records show it was to be crash-tested, but it's rather apparent that another car suffered that fate (and BTW it failed miserably, which is why the chassis was redesigned and subsequent cars passed with flying colors).
Afterwards your car went back to Italy where De Tomaso sold it to a fellow who had some questionable business practices; these practices resulted in him (and the car) being thoroughly ventilated by submachine gun fire in 1979.
The car was sold in an estate sale in '82 to a US Army Colonel stationed in Germany. He brought it back to the USA in '84, had it restored, and then you bought it in '89. You had it a few years and then sold it to Bill Borello in Houston, who re-restored it. He then sold it to somebody (unknown to me) in Florida, where presumably it still resides.
Supposedly #1001 is still in Italy, owned by the widow of Aurelio Bertocchi, who was the chief engineer for De Tomaso and Maserati (after Dallara left De Tomaso in 1973). Bertocchi kept the Pantera prototype and drove it occasionally, until his untimely death in a De Tomaso Deauville, being (badly) test-driven by a potential customer, in 1985. It was then parked and has been sitting in her garage ever since....
...but then that's probably more than you wanted to know. :laugh:
Returning to the general thread of the Monterey Historics--I was at the wrap-up ceremony for the drivers on Sunday afternoon. The Monterey Cup (which is the Grand Prize if you will, at the Historic Races, for the car best representing the spirit of the event) went to a friend of mine, Richard Clark, who nominally lives in Monaco but spends most of his time in Essex, England. He was driving the cream-and-blue '52 Porsche 356, which was also displayed at Pebble Beach. That car was prepared for the '53 La Carrera race in Mexico, and broke down on the last day just short of the finish. It was then shoved into a barn in Mexico where it sat totally untouched until Richard bought it about three years ago. It was mechanically refreshed, but otherwise untouched, and is now racing all over the world (Le Mans, various UK events, Monterey, Lime Rock etc.) wearing its original race livery.
Truly a spectacular car with a wonderful and genuine 'barn car' story behind it.
I don't know squat about Porsches--but I know about this car only because I know Richard, through Andy Prill, the guy who looks after it for him. :thumbsup: