Ferrari 250 GT SWB

Osprey AutoHistory

LanguageEnglish language icon English
AuthorKen Gross
EditorTim Parker
PublishingOprey Publishing Limited, London, ISBN 0-85045-622-3, 1985
Dimensions135 pages, 193 x 220 mm

Ferrari 250 GT SWB; the definitive road-race car
To place the "SWB" (short wheel base) in contect one has to look at the cars before and after it. The Ferraris of the late 1940s and 50s were either factory racing cars or road cars which needed modification to race; the latter never really that successfully. If you didn't have a factory car you usually didn't win. The cars were developing and even the immediately preceding 250 GT TDF (Tour de France, actually long wheelbase) were nopt especially well-balanced, fast or easy to drive.

The cars that came after the SWB were different. Simply they were for either racing or road use. For racing came the 250 GTO, for road a series of 250s, 275s and 330s - getting bigger all the time. None except the GTO were successful race cars, and the GTO needed 'cooling' to use on the road, although some people did, and do. The SWB was the last Ferrari which was supreme on road and track, without, perhaps, anything more than pumping the tyres up. It was a weekday commuter car and a weekend race winner. Supreme at Le Mans or Sebring, superb on Fifth Avenue. And it was so goodlooking to boot.

Its delicately balanced technical specification - 3-litre, V12 engine with near 300 horsepower, four-wheel disc brakes, lightweight, 2400mm wheelbase - coupled with that stunning Pininfarina designed, Scaglietti built bodywork, will never be surpassed.

As part of the extensive series of Oprey AutoHistory books, there are 8 known issues highlighting particular Ferraris from the sixties, seventies and early eighties. Models covered include 12- and 8-cylinders Ferraris and the 6-cylinder Dinos.

Cover of Ferrari 250 GT SWB, Osprey AutoHistory

Table of Contents

PageSectionDescription
6Introduction
10Chapter 1Background
19Chapter 2The LWB interim berlinettas
25Chapter 3Design and development
45Chapter 4SWB engines
56Chapter 5Coachwork
82Chapter 6Special Carrozzerie
96Chapter 7Racing highlights
107Chapter 8What's it like to drive?
119Chapter 9SWB successors
124Specifications
125Production record
129Competition
132Special-bodied SWBs
133Acknowledgements
134Index