Cavallino Magazine issue 62
April / May 1991
Language |
American English |
Editor | Stanley Nowak |
Publishing | John W. Barnes, Jr., ISSN 0889-2504 |
Dimensions | 48 pages, 208 x 277 mm |
The Enthusiast's Magazine of Ferrari
Cavallino is the journal of Ferrari history, covering Ferraris old and new for over 40 years. It's the most reliable, most trusted source of everything Ferrari. Ever since the first issue in 1978 Cavallino presents extensive stories and detailed information from knowledgeable experts and enthusiasts who share the passion for Ferrari. All Ferraris are unique, and each one has its own chassis serial number. This is how the Ferrari world keeps track of all the great cars. Cavallino is the only publication that prints the serial number for every Ferrari mentioned in our stories, articles, and race results.
Table of Contents
Page | Section | Description |
---|---|---|
1 | Ecco | Ecco Our menu for today |
4 | Commento | Ferrari 348 Some thoughts from some of your fellow enthusiasts Andrew Cohen Still causing controversy more than a year after its introduction - the Ferrari 348. |
10 | Notizie | San Fransico Ferrari opens San Francisco Ferrari |
10 | Lettere | Lettere More Daytona numbers Gerald Roush |
13 | Viaggiando per il Mondo Travelling with Ferraris around the World Gary Schmidt Gary Schmidt The ethereal body buck for a Ferrari P3, on display as a work of metal sculpture in a garden in Germany. | |
14 | Calendario | Calendario Provisional Calendar for 1991. Where Ferraris can be seen... |
16 | Feature | A Mystery solved How the Testa Rossas changed from 1960 to 1961 - the Answer may surprise you Paul Frère Alexis Callier, Antoine Prunet A few weeks after Olivier Gendebien and I had won the Le Mans 24 Hours Race of 1960, driving a three litre V-12 Testa Rosso, I drove to Maranello and spent some time with Enzo Ferrari in his office. Of course, we talked a lot about Le Mans. If we had won, it was because the car was utterly reliable, and it accelerated strongly compared to most others, but certainly not because it was fast. |
18 | Feature | When is a Mondial not a Mondial? When it's just about everything else. An interesting follow up to our Mondial story Robert A. Phillips In our last issue, we presented a detailed history of all the known Series II Ferrari 500 Mondials, we thought you might be interested in the other side of the coin - all those cars which at one time or another had been identified as Series II Ferrari 500 Mondials, but which in reality were not. |
21 | Feature | Reunited after Thirty Five Years Two Ferrari 250 MMs, s/n 0256MM and s/n 0332MM Allen Bishop, David Smith Mark Burnside At the time these photographs were taken, both of these exquisite Ferrari 250 MMs were owned by the same gentleman, David B. Smith of Bellevue, Washington. Coincidentally, it is believed that these same two cars raced against one another in 1953 at the Targa Florio and the Mille Miglia. |
29 | Feature | The Story of Peter Monteverdi - a Swiss Ferrari Enthusiast Ferraris in the Life of One Gentleman Marcel Massini Marcel Massini Collection Peter Monteverdi comes to mind to most of us when we think of exotic sports cars built in the 1960-70s, and he also recently received some press for this involvement in a Formula One venture, but his life in Switzerland has been always very much involved with Ferraris, even to the extent that he was the Ferrari importer for Switzerland for many years. |
34 | Servizio | Keeping your Ferrari well suspended Hooking it up... make your Ferrari perform as it should... Michael Sheehan Julius Weitman Whether you are a top Formula One driver or a Ferrari club member at a Ferrari club track event, the only parts of your car which connect it to the ground and allow "everything to happen" are the contact patches of your four tires as they touch the road surface. |
38 | Corse | Personalities are prominent as winter testing continues... It has been an interesting time at Ferrari, and a busy one, too. The old days of the winter "lull" are gone, and Grand Prix racing is now a 365 day business. It's a hard job, but someone must do the work, and you hear few if any complaints from the men in the racing department at Maranello. |
42 | Corse | A close look at the new 1991 Ferrari 642 642 cutaway drawing Giorgio Piola |
43 | Galleria | Galleria Special services for the Ferrari enthusiast |