Maserati 3500 GT

Maserati 3500 GT
Overview
Manufacturer Maserati
Production 19571964
Designer Carrozzeria Touring (coupé)
Giovanni Michelotti at Vignale (spyder)
Body and chassis
Class Grand tourer
Body style 2+2 coupé
2-seat spyder
Layout Front-engine, rear-wheel-drive
Related Maserati Sebring
Powertrain
Engine 3.5 L Tipo 101 I6
Transmission 4-speed ZF manual
5-speed ZF manual
Dimensions
Wheelbase 2,600 mm (102.4 in) (coupé)
2,500 mm (98.4 in) (spyder)
Length 4,780 mm (188.2 in) (coupé)
4,450 mm (175.2 in) (spyder)
Width 1,760 mm (69.3 in) (coupé)
1,635 mm (64.4 in) (spyder)
Kerb weight 1,440 kg (3,175 lb)
Chronology
Predecessor Maserati A6
Successor Maserati Sebring

The Maserati 3500 GT (Tipo 101) and the Maserati 3500 GT Convertibile (Tipo 101/C) is a 2-door coupé and convertible grand tourers made by Italian car manufacturer Maserati between 1957 and 1964. It is a seminal vehicle for Maserati, as the company's first successful attempt at the Gran Turismo market and series production.

History

Maserati's chief engineer Giulio Alfieri developed the two 2+2 prototype 3500GT, revealed at the Salon International de l'Auto in Geneva, March 1957. Both had a 2,600 mm (102.4 in) wheelbase and aluminum bodywork; one a superleggera body by Carrozzeria Touring of Milan, the other by Carrozzeria Allemano. The design incorporated

Minor design changes were undertaken before production of the 1,420 kg (3,131 lb) Touring-based body started late 1957. Front disc brakes and limited slip differential became optional in 1959, standardized in 1960; rear discs became standard in 1962. Borrani knock-out wire wheels complemented the standard steel wheels, as well as wider 185x16" radial tyres. All cars had leather interior and Jaeger-LeCoultre instruments. Power windows was added as standard.

In 1959, the Maserati 5000 GT was introduced using the chassis of the 3500GT. Two steel-bodied convertible prototypes by Carrozzeria Vignale and Michelotti were developed in 1959 and shown at the Salon de l'Auto in Paris 1959.

The 3500 GT Spyder by Carrozzeria Vignale (245 made).

A convertible made by Carrozzeria Vignale went into production in 1960, as the 3500 GT Convertible or just 3500 GT Spyder, and had a shortened 2,500 mm (98.4 in) chassis weighing 1,380 kg (3,042 lb).

The 3500 GTi was introduced in 1961 as the first fuel-injected Italian production car. It had a Lucas fuel injection (235 bhp). A 5-speed ZF S5-17 gearbox was now standard (3.02:1, 1.85:1, 1.29:1, 1:1, 0.85:1), as well as disc brakes all round. The body had a lowered roofline and became somewhat longer; minor outward changes appeared as well (new grille, rear lights, vent windows). The rather similar Maserati Sebring (3500 GTiS) also a 2+2 coupe entered production in 1962.

The first year (1958) sold 119 cars, 1961 was the best-selling year totalling 500. All together, 245 Vignale convertibles and nearly 2000 coupes were manufactured, of these, 1981 being Touring coupes, the rest were bodied by other coachbuilders, Carrozzeria Allemano (four coupes, including the 1957 prototype), Zagato (one coupe, 1957), Carrozzeria Boneschi (two cars; 1962, 1963 Salone dell'automobile di Torino, 1962); Salon International de l'Auto in Geneva, 1963), Pietro Frua (two or three coupes, one spider) and Bertone (one coupe). The last was a coupe by Moretti (Salon International de l'Auto in Geneva, 1966).

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