Nice article at the Ferrari Owners Site (www.owners.ferrari.com)... ==================================== 308 GTB 30th Anniversary It seems quite amazing that it is already 30 years since the 308 GTB made its public debut, as the Pininfarina designed body has stood the test of time well, still looking good and able to turn heads in the street, and even to people who werent born when it was introduced, it is instantly recognizable as a Ferrari. Up until the late sixties Ferrari production road cars had traditionally featured a V12 engine, but the introduction of the Dino series with V6 engines towards the end of the decade changed the situation. The new small Ferrari attracted a new blossoming market of youthful buyers, and was a great success in the five year production period, despite an oil crisis and increased speed control legislation worldwide. Although there was the sister Dino 308 GT4 2+2 model with a V8 engine, it was not until the introduction of the 308 GTB in 1975 that the Dino 246 GT had a true successor. However, perhaps a short resume of eight-cylinder Ferrari engines would not be out of order, as it is 65 years since the genesis of a Ferrari with an eight-cylinder engine, which preceded the birth of the company by seven years. In 1940 Enzo Ferrari produced the Auto Avio Costruzioni 815 model, which was powered by an in-line 1500cc eight-cylinder engine. This model would have carried a Ferrari badge, had it not been for the terms of his employment contract severance with Alfa Romeo the previous year, which forbade the construction of a car bearing his name for a period of four years. Thus it was not until after the end of the Second World War that he was able to build cars bearing his name carrying the now legendary "Cavallino Rampante" logo. For virtually the first decade of Ferraris existence there were four-, six- and twelve-cylinder engines of a wide variety of capacities produced. However, it was not until the inheritance of the works Lancia D50 Grand Prix cars midway through the 1955 season, that there was a V8 engine in the model line-up, albeit carrying a Lancia badge. In 1956 these cars were extensively modified, although they were visually very similar to their predecessor, apart from now wearing a Ferrari badge, and carried Juan-Manuel Fangio to his third consecutive World Drivers' Championship title. The V8 Lancia engine was further developed and used in the 801 F1 car of 1957, whilst there were V8-engined sports racing cars like the 248 SP and the 268 SP of 1962. In 1964 the company's armoury in F1 was the V8-engined 158 F1 model and the flat-12 engined 512 F1, basically the same car apart from the engine configuration. The 158 F1 took John Surtees to the Drivers Championship title, and a combination of the two models Ferrari to the Constructors Championship in Formula One that year. The V8 engine then disappeared from the Ferrari line-up for almost a decade, before the concept was resurrected on their first eight-cylinder road car, the 3-litre transverse-engined Dino 308 GT4, which appeared in 1973, and whose engine/transmission assembly was modelled on that used in the Dino 246 GT/GTS models. This brings us up to the 308 GTB, which shared the same 3-litre V8 engine/transmission layout, and which was presented to the public in October 1975 at the Paris Salon. Although the body style was a then in vogue wedge shape, there were shades of the Dino 246 in the Pininfarina design details, like the door scallops, buttressed vertical curved rear screen and twin paired tail light treatment. It was an instant hit both with the press and the public, and this model and the succeeding V8 models have now formed the backbone of Ferrari road car production for 30 years. The 308 GTB also marked a first in Ferrari road car production as it was constructed with a fibre-glass body, although this construction method was superseded by more traditional steel and aluminium panels in late 1976 for USA market cars, and mid-1977 for European cars. A targa-roofed version, called the 308 GTS, joined the GTB in late 1977, easily identifiable by the black vinyl covered removable roof panel, and black louvred panels over the rear quarter glass. Less obvious, but certainly more significant, was the fact that the GTB version (with the exception of the American 1978 model year) was equipped with the dry sump version of the engine, whereas the GTS was a straight carry over of the 308 GT4s wet sump power unit. In 1980, again due to emission legislation changes, particularly in the USA, a Bosch K-Jetronic fuel injection system replaced the quad twin-choke Weber carburettor assembly, and this led to a reduction in the power output, as it was still in relatively early stages of development for road car use, but by everyday standards of the time you were still talking about a quick car. The model names became 308 GTBi and 308 GTSi, with this badging appearing on the tail panel, whilst subtle changes to the interior trim, the most noticeable being the change of the instrument binnacle face from an aluminium to a satin black finish, coincided with the change of model name. For the Italian market a 2-litre version of the 308 series was produced from 1980, initially normally aspirated, called the 208 GTB/S, it mirrored its 3-litre peers in appearance apart from the tail badges and satin black instead of body-colour louvres behind the headlight pods. This was superseded by a turbocharged version in 1982, which was Ferrari's first turbocharged road car, initially only available in closed form, it was designated the 208 GTB Turbo. In 1983 a targa roof 208 GTS Turbo variant became available. The problem of strangled power was addressed in 1982 with the introduction of the quattrovalvole (four valves per cylinder) models, which redressed the balance of power in Ferraris favour whilst still satisfying emission legislation. There were some small external cosmetic changes to the 308 series, the most noticeable being a revised front grille layout with uncovered driving lights in the extremities, the addition of a slim louvre panel across the front lid and the 308 quattrovalvole tail badge on both GTB and GTS. In the interior there were subtle changes to the seat stitch pattern, which now featured cloth centres as standard, although full leather was still available upon request, and the steering wheel was of a new three spoke design. The concurrent 208 Turbo models also featured the new front lid louvre, but on these models it was painted satin black to match those behind the headlight pods. This model also featured a satin black spoiler at the trailing edge of the roof as standard, which was also available as an option on the 308 Quattrovalvole. The 308 series also spawned some competition development using the model as a base. A brutal 308 based twin-turbo model was developed by Carlo Facetti to contest the 1980 World Endurance Championship. He called it the Carma FF 308, and while blindingly fast, it suffered from reliability problems, and the project was soon abandoned. More successfully, in the early eighties a series of 308 GTB models were modified by Michelotto of Padova, who have done a large amount of small-series competition development work for Ferrari over the years, to become rally cars. These were raced with considerable success in Italian national rallies, and also by the French importer Charles Pozzi, whose cars included back-to-back wins in the Tour de France Auto amongst their successes. Whilst on the development front, perhaps mention should also be made of another Michelotto creation, the 308 GT/M, of which just three cars were built in 1984. In appearance it was like a scaled-down 512 BB LM, and featured a longitudinally mounted naturally-aspirated V8 engine mated to a Hewland gearbox, whilst the body was manufactured from composite materials. Its basic shape was to be found later in the GTO Evoluzione, which led into the F40 in 1987. At the 1984 Geneva Salon Ferrari stunned the motoring world when it presented the limited production GTO, with its twin turbo longitudinally mounted 2.8 litre V8 engine producing a claimed 400 bhp. A healthy dose of steroids gave the basically 308 shaped body a muscular stance, with bulging fenders covering split rim wheels, plus deep chin and tail spoilers. There were exhaust air slots in the rear wings, striking an analogy with the front wing slots on the legendary 250 GTO of 1962. The intent of the production run had been to produce the 200 examples required to homologate the car in the group "B" competition category, but then the governing body changed the rules, leaving Ferrari with a car that had nowhere to race. They didn't have to worry, as the model captured their clients imagination, and the production numbers stretched from the originally proposed 200 to 272 examples. It would be fair to call this the original supercar, as its success spawned a plethora of limited series models from other high profile manufacturers. The 308 series production run came to an end 20 years ago, a decade after its introduction, in 1985, when the 328 derivatives were announced at the Frankfurt Salon. A year later the 208s were superseded by the intercooler versions - dropping the 208 moniker to become simply the GTB Turbo and GTS Turbo - which adopted similar bodywork modifications to the 328s, production then ending in 1989. The 308 GTB was an important model in the history of Ferrari, as it opened up Ferrari ownership to a much wider range of clients, pushing production figures to levels never previously achieved and, as previously noted, it and its successors have been the mainstay of Ferrari production for three decades. Production Figures Model Production Period No. Built Chassis # Range 308 GTB (Fibre-glass) 1975 1977 808 18677 21289 308 GTB (Steel) 1977 1980 2185 20805 34329 308 GTS 1977 1980 3219 22619 34501 208 GTB 1980 1982 160 31219 41329 208 GTS 1980 1982 140 31249 41265 308 GTBi 1980 1982 494 31327 43059 308 GTSi 1980 1983 1743 31309 43079 308 GTB QV 1982 1985 748 42809 59071 308 GTS QV 1982 1985 3042 41701 59265 208 GTB Turbo 1981 1985 437 41357 59277 208 GTS Turbo 1982 1985 250 42863 59279 308 GTB Michelotto* 1978 1985 15 08380 31559 * This series were constructed by Michelotto of Padova on chassis from within the production series listed above, except the first which was built on a modified 308 GT4 chassis. Therefore they should not be included in the count of overall numbers built.
If you go to that site, click on the article, and then click the "Multimedia/Photos" link, there are some really nice pictures with details inside and out of the 308 series over a number of years.
It is one of the most beautiful cars ever made.....the optical dynamics are stunning from every angle. I don't think I will ever sell my red/black 1977 GTB. The car turns more heads than the 348 and the 355 I drove beforehand...........
Thank you, Mike. I originally tried to open that article a week and a half ago, but there were problems on the Owner's site precluding that. Thanks for reminding me. You've also reminded me that my #19399 is now over 29 years old. Now, to the pictures! Barry
Nice slide show! I'd like to post some other pictures of the prototype. Happy Birthday 308 GTB!!! Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
I had the same problem but tried again a week later and was able to read the article. Thanks, Mike, for reposting here on Ferrarichat. It is a very interesting and informative article.
The 308 is one of just a few cars built from 76-85 that are worth owning today. You can make a strong argument that the stunning Pininfarina design actually saved Ferrari as a car maker. Happy 30th! DAve
thnx for posting Mike I wasn't aware of the article and I hadn't been to the owner's site in quite a while.
*20805* was not the first steel 308GTB. there were a few in the 19xxx range. i think mine is like #24 or something *20433*. would rather have a glass one..... cool article though, thanks for sharing.
The 308 is certainly one of the most top beautyful of the modern Ferrari era... very proud to own one.
Bump. I'm looking for more colour pictures of the 1975 Paris Salon car that was on the Pininfarina stand (lightblue, see post #6). Does anyone know the colour code? 106A32? As an aside the Kyosho model seems to be the wrong colour (too much green instead of lightblue) and has the wrong chassis number! Although it's nice they went so far to make a chassis number plate at all. Best, Peter
It looks very close to the Azzuro Metallica on my #22641, which is actually an old Dino blue.....HTH. I have the paint code of mine somewhere, if you need it......I'll be using it soon!
I guess its the 40th anniversary of the 308 GTB coming up in March this Year, just reading this artical from a thread in 2005 ..... where did that decade go??!! Interestingly CN#34329 (which i own) , is cited as the last of the carb 308 gtbs , which i am fairly certain is not the case as you can see from the delivery sheet from the classiche dept attached .... anyone know why Ferrari themselves insist that this is the last one ? ...... last carb engine , perhaps??? BR, Jez Image Unavailable, Please Login
Why not just contact the Ferrari Classiche dept, Tommy ? ..... Not sure about the US, but in the UK, they relieve you of around £250 , and provide you with all the correspondence, history, build sheets for your car , anything infact that they have on record . I also did this with my Dino 246 also, and what i got back was absolutely fascinating! BR, Jez
His sheet woudnt be worth much, to many cross outs/mistakes. Sheet needs to go to Classic to get properly restored and certified....