
Prova Mo
#1
Posted 05 June 2003 - 09:45
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#2
Posted 05 June 2003 - 10:08
#3
Posted 05 June 2003 - 10:09
#4
Posted 05 June 2003 - 10:44
Originally posted by bill moffat
look at any of those wonderful old pictures of Ferrari F1/sportscars and you will see the white stamp of the "Prova Mo" designation on the rear. Why did Enzo feel the need to make vehicle identification so public ?
It theoretically allowed them to be driven on the roads! - it means something like "Experimental (Modena)" - each "provincia" has its two letter code for registrations. I can only think of a few - VA for Varese, MI for Milan, RM for Rome, VE for Venice, BO for Bologna, TO for Turin...
PROVA MO numbers, brown overalls, lambrusco.... can we have "proper" Ferrari back please?
pete
#5
Posted 05 June 2003 - 11:12
PdeRL
#6
Posted 05 June 2003 - 12:31
Sports cars I can understand, but did the "prova mo'd" F1 cars ever test on the Modenese streets ?
#7
Posted 05 June 2003 - 13:26
Originally posted by bill moffat
..thanks guys. It makes perfect sense, particularly as various 50's Jaguars ran at Le Mans on UK trade plates.
... as demonstrated by two pictures in Classic Car Weekly this week of the Rolt/Hamilton winning car, one period, one contemporary. Unfortunately, the caption writer has managed to miss the fact that it was on trade plates - it reads something like "originally registered as 897FG but now ABC123" - of such cock-ups are legends born

#8
Posted 05 June 2003 - 13:41
Incidentally, even the Ferraris in Grand Prix Legends have the Bandini 'number plate' from Monaco 68 on them. Nice touch. Noticed it in replaying one of my frequent crashes (GPL ranking is equivalent to Volonterio, I'm afraid. Did once finish 9th tho').
#9
Posted 05 June 2003 - 15:39
#10
Posted 05 June 2003 - 16:08
place today. Every new Ferrari is taken for a road test in the hills around
Maranello as well as the test track. In the old days, Mike Parkes in particular, like to take car out for "spins" on the Autostrada at top
speed, pull over make some notes, and head back to the factory. Oh! What I would have given to be in Modena/Maranello in those days. I believe PROVA means test vehicle in Italian or something close to that.
#11
Posted 06 June 2003 - 01:50
#12
Posted 06 June 2003 - 07:28
Originally posted by ensign14
.............Incidentally, even the Ferraris in Grand Prix Legends have the Bandini 'number plate' from Monaco 68 on them. ......
Definitely not Bandini's in '68, unfortunately.
Yorgos
#13
Posted 06 June 2003 - 12:48
I know, but it is that number - Prova MO 53...(as a trade plate the number would have been re-used so is plausibke for 67).Originally posted by Yorgos
Definitely not Bandini's in '68, unfortunately.
Yorgos
#14
Posted 22 June 2003 - 18:31
As already correctly stated in this thread, every Italian "Provincia", i.e. county, used to have its own two letter short-word on the licence plates of each vehicle. The same two letters are still used together with the Zip Code in Italian mail addresses.
Since 1994, all licence plates have two letters-three digits-two letters, irrespective of the Provincia in which the owner of the vehicle lives. That helps when selling a car out of the Provincia: in the old times, each car had to receive a new licence plate when ownership moved to a new Provincia.
"Prova" licence plates are still used by car vendors and service centers to test client's cars on the public road. The reason behind such an use is the insurance coverage when the car is driven by someone else than the registered owner.
In the old times, "Prova" license plates were also used for "experimental" vehicles, i.e. not fully complying with the rules of the so called "Street Car Code", so they could be, theoretically, driven even on public road. Its key meaning was for a sure identification of the car for insurance purposes, provided that chassis number on racing car has always been something quite confusing and unreliable, furthermore not certified by any public agency. When insurance rules changed in the Seventies/Eighties, there was no longer the need of a "Prova" licence plate on GP and racing cars.
Ferrari, like anybody else, had some "Prova" licence plates and they swapped them freely among cars, both single-seaters and sports. Some of the most used numbers were 36, 38, 53. There are thousands of photos showing racing Ferrari sporting these numbers.
#15
Posted 31 July 2013 - 12:46
No mistery behind the licence plate "Prova MO .." and the two digits after MO, which is the short-word for Modena.
Ferrari, like anybody else, had some "Prova" licence plates and they swapped them freely among cars, both single-seaters and sports. Some of the most used numbers were 36, 38, 53. There are thousands of photos showing racing Ferrari sporting these numbers.
Hello,
does anybody know which number used Chris Amon on his Ferrari 312/69 (0017) during the Spanish GP 1969?
Thanks for your help.
John-w
#16
Posted 31 July 2013 - 14:26
Hello,
does anybody know which number used Chris Amon on his Ferrari 312/69 (0017) during the Spanish GP 1969?
Thanks for your help.
John-w
15 (fünfzehn !)
see this link
http://driverphoto.f...-y-la-formula-1
Edited by Slurp1955, 31 July 2013 - 14:39.
#17
Posted 31 July 2013 - 14:45
15 (fünfzehn !)
see this link
http://driverphoto.f...-y-la-formula-1
Thanks for this link, but I am searching for the "Prova Mo" number (031, 036, 038 or 053) and not the start number.
John-w
#18
Posted 01 August 2013 - 22:09
#19
Posted 02 August 2013 - 09:39
Hello,
does anybody know which number used Chris Amon on his Ferrari 312/69 (0017) during the Spanish GP 1969?
Thanks for your help.
John-w
Would there be any need for a "Prova" number (plate) on a Ferrari at the Spanish GP? As temporary numbers, were they for use only in Italy?
Did they exist as actual "plates"? I have seen 1950's Ferrari pictures with "MO 49" etc painted fairly roughly on the rear, and later ones with "Prova MO..." etc stencilled on. I don't recall any actual plates .
Stu
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#20
Posted 02 August 2013 - 12:33
Hello,
does anybody know which number used Chris Amon on his Ferrari 312/69 (0017) during the Spanish GP 1969?
Thanks for your help.
John-w
I have looked at several photo books, Motor Sport magazine for 1969, and at photos on Aerogi's page from several races in 1968 and 1969. I can find no evidence that Ferrari continued to use 'prova mo' markings on the F1 cars after the end of 1967.
Paul M
#21
Posted 02 August 2013 - 12:42
here is a photo from the decals

or is this a other sponsor in front of the fuel pump?
John-w
#22
Posted 02 August 2013 - 13:07
I have looked at several photo books, Motor Sport magazine for 1969, and at photos on Aerogi's page from several races in 1968 and 1969. I can find no evidence that Ferrari continued to use 'prova mo' markings on the F1 cars after the end of 1967.
Paul M
Hello,
in this photo from the Ferrari 312B you can see my model and the original car in Canada 1970,
so I think Ferrari used this "prova mo" markings also in 1970.

John-w
#23
Posted 02 August 2013 - 14:40
Did the F1 cars have to be pushed on public roads to get from the factory to the test track? That may explain the need for 'PROVA MO' to be stencilled on. Even lawn mowers used by the Council have number plates on them.
Incidentally, even the Ferraris in Grand Prix Legends have the Bandini 'number plate' from Monaco 68 on them. Nice touch. Noticed it in replaying one of my frequent crashes (GPL ranking is equivalent to Volonterio, I'm afraid. Did once finish 9th tho').
Eric, the GPL '67 Porsche 910s also have their correct license tag numbers which apparently made them legal to drive on public streets.

#24
Posted 02 August 2013 - 18:44
None of my books and magazines show the small sticker well enough to read the number. At Clermont-Ferrand in 1970 it was 'Mo 53', but that is all I could find for certain, but I think at Monaco 1969 it was also 'Mo 53'.
Paul M