712 Canam #1010 on display at Retromobile 2019. Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
it says: has always been a works car, also that the full ownership is known strange this writing when it always have been a works car, then F still is the owner?
I recall it on offer from Obrists collection at Christies Monaco in 1990 and from the McCaw collection at Christies Tarrytown in 2000, both times it failed to wow due to its status as a complete outlier in Ferrari's fabulous back catalogue. I understand the best 512S/Ms are selling for around this mark and the 712 is based on a 512 chassis BUT this car was unsuccessful as both a 512S/M and a 712 Can Am.
I wrote the 712's Tarrytown Christie's catalog text and I believe that was 1998 not 2000? As a 512M it won the Kyalami 9 hours which Forghieri told me proved the point that it had reached competitiveness (even though the 917 opposition that weekend was not massive) the car -when just converted into 512M- also took pole and stormed off ahead of the 917 competition, present in full force, at Zeltweg before it retired. See my comprehensive 712 cover article with period driver interviews in Cavallino #102, twenty two years ago (!). Trying to do the photoshoot when it was at Symbolic in La Jolla took three locations and moving that thing around with a flatbed truck is no easy task! Bill Noon who I saw Friday at retromobile had just sent me out with a flatbed truck and its driver: "Go where you want for your static photoshoot" and, after some tribulations, we got it done in the end I also ran into John and Alicia Barnes of Cavallino at Retromobile Friday, great to see them. I hope it finds a new home as owner PK is turning entirely away from cars apparently and that we see it soon in Can Am events: it would be great to see it storming around Elkhart lake again
Marc it was Tarrytown, April 2000 and it was not a strong sale. The 712 was dying on the block at around $800,000, then after some heated back stage discussion it sold for $1.45 million to a telephone bidder (Carlos Monteverde). Christies ended-up with three No Sale lots consigned by Symbolic in their inventory-- a 365 GTB/4, a Miura SV and possibly a 246 GTS.
Hello Romano, the photos (slides actually) are with my belongings in the UK and I am in France but they will be seen again don't worry Anyway the anecdote about the photoshoot which took some effort; first we went to a cliff top in a park near la Jolla and as we began to take the car down to shoot it there a guard arrived, a little agitated and said we could not put a racing car, unregistered, on the ground there so we had to find another place. Then a couple of miles further after lots of inadequate terrain there was a beautiful brand new concrete pier, impeccably stain free, dramatically jutting into the Pacific as piers do attached to a handsome building. I thought this would be striking very slick so I walked inside introduced myself, stated this facility, (some kind of marine lab) could be thanked in the article and the answer was...we would be delighted to let you shoot....for a $500 fee.... I had no budget planned for such frankly unnecessary expenses so I had to decline...so we were on the road again...then I thought about a park off the highway just north of San Diego which is by the bay and the flatbed driver thought that was a good idea too. So we get there, unload the beast, refit whatever bodywork piece we had to remove to load and unload it, I get my camera and tripod ready...and the police arrives! I thought oh no here we go, they will kick us out and maybe even give us a fine... I just smiled and waved at them...and...they waved back, looked at the car admiringly, saw we were clearly just shooting, not about to do doughnuts with it on public land and drove off! What a relief! finally I could get to work! We also did some shots at another location which was problem free thankfully
1010 was on the stand of Mario Linke/Cologne and Franco Meiners/Monaco during last week's Retromobile. The owner himself, P.K., was also present. Marcel Massini