Fiat Mephistopheles Explained

Mephistopheles
Manufacturer:Fiat
Production:1923
Class:Racing car
Engine:21.7L Fiat A.12
Transmission:4-speed manual
Weight:2 tons
Related:Fiat SB4
Sp:uk

The Fiat Mephistopheles (known in Italian as Mefistofele) is a one-off racing car created by Ernest A.D. Eldridge in 1923 by combining a Fiat racing car chassis and Fiat aeroplane engine. The name is from the demon of the same name. The name alluded to the infernal noise emitted from the unmuffled engine, and it was "baptised" by the Frenchmen.

Eldridge broke the World Land Speed Record on 12 July 1924 with the Mephistopheles,[1] by driving at 234.981NaN1 in Arpajon, France. The last car to set a land speed record on a public road.

The Mephistopheles was created by combining the chassis of the 1908 Fiat SB4 with a 6-cylinder, 21.7 litre (21706 cc) Fiat A.12 aeroplane engine producing 3200NaN0.[2]

Mephistopheles was restored over 5 years, with another example of the same engine, and returned in 2011 with a display at the Goodwood Festival of Speed.

External links

45.0456°N 7.6797°W

Notes and References

  1. Web site: the CAR FIAT MEFISTOFELE 1923. Crooke. Jon. Bigscalemodels.com. 2009-09-20. https://web.archive.org/web/20080719175010/http://www.bigscalemodels.com/cars/fiat_mefistofele/mephistopheles.html. 19 July 2008. dead.
  2. Web site: FIAT MEFISTOFELE. Fiat. 13 August 2013. 4 March 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160304222837/http://www.fiat.com/fiatpedia/heritage/fiat-mefistofele. dead.