
De Tomaso Pantera - how successful was it really?
#1
Posted 28 August 2007 - 09:45
"The Gr3 cars were developed on demands from the European Racers. ....and the Pantera won literally hundreds of races in Europe."
"Hundreds".....??? Sounds most unlikely to me...
Great looking (and sounding) car but I always thought of it as very much an underdog compared to the massed ranks of Porsche 911s . How many races did the DeTomaso actually win? Any ideas?
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#2
Posted 28 August 2007 - 10:05
#3
Posted 28 August 2007 - 10:13
Just have a look here :
http://forums.motorl...ead.php?t=27692
and here :
http://www.forum-aut...sujet378170.htm
Mr "Pantera Gr4" can maybe answer to you !
#4
Posted 28 August 2007 - 10:15
1972 EUGT Trophy , 9 races : Jacquemin/Claude Dubois 2,2-Herbert Muller for himself 1 win and a string of ret. 3 others with lesser or no placing.
1973 EU FIA GTCup,9 races : 2 wins for the works in 3 starts by Parkes and Regazzoni. 2 3rds and a 5th by 3 private entries + a string of mostly retirements for 7-9 others private ones.
1974 EUGT, 7 races : No sign.app. by any Tomasos , private very few and retiring.
1975 EUGT, 7 races : More this year , 1 5th , minor placings and rets.
1976EUGT , 7 races : Again only privates , 3 in all , no results.
Please note that none ever did a full season !
IMO Tomaso also never did any impact in long distance racing. The hundreds of wins must have been on a Scalextric track !
By the way there is one "standard" Pantera here in town hidden in a garage ! Taken out once a year , what a sound!!!!!!
#5
Posted 28 August 2007 - 11:03
#6
Posted 28 August 2007 - 11:39
The interesting thing about Bizzers though is that they seem quite hard to sell for decent money whereas cars that were quick in period (like Cobra's) seem to fly out the showroom, I wonder if the same will be true of Pantera's....
#8
Posted 28 August 2007 - 13:30
#9
Posted 28 August 2007 - 13:45
#10
Posted 28 August 2007 - 14:06
#11
Posted 28 August 2007 - 16:40
#13
Posted 28 August 2007 - 17:36
Just 1 mans opinion, but it does seem to coorelate to other published accounts.
Best,
Ross
#14
Posted 28 August 2007 - 17:57
#16
Posted 28 August 2007 - 20:29
#17
Posted 29 August 2007 - 08:44
#18
Posted 29 August 2007 - 15:43
#19
Posted 29 August 2007 - 17:58
I saw a old documentary a while back which showed Jackie Stewart driving a yellow Pantera that was his personal street car. Must have had something to do with his relationship with Ford.
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#20
Posted 29 August 2007 - 20:41

On the basis of that picture's appearance on flickr.com I was invited to post all my Pantera images to a group:
http://www.flickr.co...ups/436135@N25/
111 images there, now, including the one of mine.
--
Frank S
(second try; hoping it works, this time)
#21
Posted 02 September 2007 - 19:51
Was it in season?Originally posted by Darren Galpin
One did race with some success in the British GT championship in the early 1990s driven by Andy Wallace. I was marshalling at Thruxton when he was dicing for the lead and hit a pheasant at speed out the back. Made a nice mess of the windscreen, and he finished 2nd I believe. He was asked to come to race control later to pick up the pheasant.
#22
Posted 02 September 2007 - 21:40
Justin
#23
Posted 02 September 2007 - 21:55
Originally posted by flat-16
Although of a different variety in terms of powerplant, I wonder if there's a parallel to be had between the Pantera and the Esprit? Both wonderful and desirable road cars, but with the exception of a few class wins, the Esprit didn't set the track world alight, did it?
Justin
It eventually became a very good class car in IMSA Supercar (or whatever it was called back then), but that was a long time into its history!
#24
Posted 02 September 2007 - 22:15

The aforementioned Mr Meek, in colour
#25
Posted 02 September 2007 - 22:19
Originally posted by petefenelon
It eventually became a very good class car in IMSA Supercar (or whatever it was called back then), but that was a long time into its history!
But how much of a relation to the road car did the 'Supercar' have? Original chassis, or full space-frame? Whereas the Esprit was praised as a road car, yet didn't achieve a massive amount on the circuit, you usually see the opposite occur; cars that amounted to little in road-going form, but did pretty well on the circuit, usually as a mere silhouette of their former selves...
If sales were pretty good, Lotus wouldn't have been forced to resort to an all-out track assault. They did have an F1 team at the time...

Justin
#26
Posted 03 September 2007 - 07:14
I´m searching for fotos of Herbert Müller driving a Pantera on Norisring in 1972.
Can anybody help?
Grüße
Jürgen
#27
Posted 03 September 2007 - 12:14
Originally posted by flat-16
But how much of a relation to the road car did the 'Supercar' have? Original chassis, or full space-frame? Whereas the Esprit was praised as a road car, yet didn't achieve a massive amount on the circuit, you usually see the opposite occur; cars that amounted to little in road-going form, but did pretty well on the circuit, usually as a mere silhouette of their former selves...
If sales were pretty good, Lotus wouldn't have been forced to resort to an all-out track assault. They did have an F1 team at the time...
Justin
Was David Mercer's Group 5 Esprit a real Lotus or a body on a racing chassis? (I know there have been "Esprits" around the British scene that were little more than old sports racers with the appropriate plastic draped over them, in the style of Tony Sugden's marvellous 'Skoda';)
I think the X180R programme was set up by the US importers pretty much at the point that the Lotus F1 team was dying ('92 or so? Doc Bundy behind the wheel?). They were based on proper Lotus chassis...
Sadly, subsequent attempts to turn the Elise into an international GT racer failed dismally whether with the Lotus twin-turbo V8, the Chevy unit later adopted, or the frankly terrifying (and terrifyingly slow) Bitter GT with a Viper engine squeezed into the 'ole that normally admitted a four-cylinder Rover ;)
#28
Posted 03 September 2007 - 13:03
Originally posted by petefenelon
I know there have been "Esprits" around the British scene that were little more than old sports racers with the appropriate plastic draped over them, in the style of Tony Sugden's marvellous 'Skoda'
I think more than one of these might not even have been a sports racer but an F2 March with plastic body. I think Jim McGaughy (apologies if I spelt that wrong) had a "Lancia Montecarlo" that was actually a Toleman TG250 in the early 80s. There was also a "BMW M1" that had the ex Purley Chevron B30 F5000 chassis tucked away underneath.
#30
Posted 16 February 2008 - 18:44
Chris had a road going version, white, reg # 175 MPH.
The opposition was mainly MGB, and such in that class, stock with no mods allowed. Richardson blueprinted our engine, Chris drove around the big understeer problem in that car. We won many races, 1972. Car was owned by the importer.
Brian
#31
Posted 18 February 2008 - 10:28
#32
Posted 18 February 2008 - 11:56
#33
Posted 18 February 2008 - 11:59

Above Paul Pycroft in his Pantera at Prescott hillclimb in 1976 - it was a bit of a cumbersome beast for such narrow confines.
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