Great series of images of a previously discussed 288 GTO by Arnaud Bailly deserves to be shared there I think. Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
Compared today the original exhaust to the Megaphone exhaust. Megaphone: 8kg Original: 13kg Our car will be 5 kg heavier today. Just to try, if it smoothen the ride a bit, like cleaning the BOVs and the Wastegate did.
The opposit. Much more low and mid range torque. Runs much much smoother. But I´m missing the sound and the design... Now the car can be driven in higher gears through town.
Hi, I just cleaned the BOVs and the Wastegate for the GTO a few days ago. I noticed, that the parts book is wrong. The piston (55) is interchanged with the spring guide (56). So, on the side of the vacuum pipe, not the piston, but the spring guide has to be. Cleaning gave good improvement. Now, together with the original exhaust, the car totaly transformed and is very smooth and soo easy to drive. Drove today and had the feeling, the turbos spool up faster. Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
i have both the stock and megaphones. i had occasion to try both again when i did classiche as i had to switch back to stock. i find megaphone better in all respects - town and otherwise
Our tradition of supplying award-winning cars continues as 288 GTO 54805 won not only an FCA Platinum award but also the FCA "Best V8" at Concorso Italiano for our client Henry B.
This may be a pedestrian question: are there "bad" cars out there? Do folks actually neglect and defer maintenance on 288's?
i only quickly scanned the 300+ pages here so hope not a repost ...article from C&D september 1984 Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
Excellent job scanning! Martyn Goddard actually later sold copyright to those images to me. He tells me the story of shooting Dario Benuzzi in the GTO on Fiorano from in front of the guard rail to get those 'drifting' shots . Brave!
cool stuff, i only scan these for here and enjoyment and further the most excellent thread! i suppose at the time the 288 was just a new Ferrari to them, and meant to tear around the track
Thanks for posting! The last paragraph is very profound I think, I have a saying when it comes to Ferrari "To understand the present one needs to understand the past"