Maserati Mistral Explained

Maserati Mistral
Manufacturer:Maserati
Production:1963–1970
953 produced
Aka:Maserati 2 Posti
Maserati 4000 GT
Designer:Pietro Frua
Class:Grand tourer
Layout:Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive
Body Style:2-door, 2-seat coupé
2-door, 2-seat spyder
Engine:3.5 L I6 (petrol)
3.7 L I6 (petrol)
4.0 L I6 (petrol)
Transmission:5-speed ZF manual
Wheelbase:24001NaN1
Length:45001NaN1
Width:16751NaN1
Height:13001NaN1
Weight:14300NaN0 (dry)
Predecessor:Maserati 3500 GT
Successor:Maserati Ghibli
Sp:uk

The Maserati Mistral (Tipo AM109) is a 2-seat gran turismo produced by Italian car manufacturer Maserati between 1963 and 1970. The successor to the 3500 GT, it was styled by Frua[1] and bodied by Maggiora of Turin.[2] A total of 828 coupés and 125 Spyders were built.

Named after a cold northerly wind of southern France, it was also the first in a series of classic Maseratis to be given the name of a wind. The Mistral was succeeded by the Ghibli gran turismo, which overlapped production from 1967 on.[3]

History

The Mistral is the last model from the Casa del Tridente (“House of the Trident”) to have the company's renowned twin-spark, double overhead cam straight six engine.[4] Fitted to the Maserati 250F Grand Prix cars, this engine won eight Grand Prix between 1954 and 1960 and the F1 World Championship in 1957 driven by Juan Manuel Fangio. The engine featured hemispherical combustion chambers fed by a Lucas indirect fuel injection system, a new development for Italian car manufacturers. Maserati subsequently moved on to V8 engines for their later production cars to keep up with the demand for ever more powerful machines.

Three engine were fitted to the Mistral, displacing 3500, 3700 and 4000 cc and developing 2350NaN0 at 5500 rpm, 2450NaN0 at 5500 rpm and 2650NaN0 at 5200 rpm, respectively.[5] Only the earliest of the Mistrals were equipped with the 3500 cc, the most sought after derivative is the 4000 cc model. Unusually, the body was offered in both aluminium and, from 1967, in steel, but no one is quite sure how many of each were built. The automobile was equipped with a standard five-speed ZF transmission and four-wheel solid disc brakes. Per Maserati practice, the front suspension was independent and the rear solid axle. Acceleration from 0-60 mph (97 km/h) for both the 3.7- and 4.0-liter engines was around or just under 7 seconds, and top speed approximately 1400NaN0 to 1450NaN0. When leaving the factory the car was originally fitted with Pirelli Cinturato 185VR16 CA67, then later 205VR15 tyres (CN72) on Borrani wire wheels. Only the Spyder received the 3500 engine; just 12 were made, along with 76 3.7 L and 37 4.0 L Spyders. 20 of the spyders built were right hand drive.

The body was designed by Pietro Frua and first shown in a preview at the Salone Internazionale dell'Automobile di Torino in November 1963. It is also often confused with the very similar looking but larger and more powerful Frua designed AC Frua.

References

Notes and References

  1. News: Maserati Sports Cars. 2007-05-20. HowStuffWorks. en. 2019-04-12.
  2. Web site: 1966 Maserati Mistral Spyder. kidston.com. 2 July 2019.
  3. Web site: Mistral. maserati.com. 2 July 2019.
  4. Web site: 1967 Maserati Mistral car specifications, auto technical data - performance, fuel economy, emissions, dimensions 35541. www.carfolio.com. 2019-04-27.
  5. Web site: Mistral Spyder. maserati.com. 2 July 2019.