Abarth 207A Spyder
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The Abarth 207A Boano Spyder is a competition car created by Abarth & C. with the aim of selling in the United States market. It succeeded the earlier Abarth 205A Berlinetta and continued to use the
Fiat 1100 The Fiat 1100 is a small family car produced from 1953 until 1969 by the Italian manufacturer Fiat. It was an all-new unibody replacement for the Fiat 1100 E, which descended from the pre-war, body-on-frame Fiat 508 C Balilla 1100. The 1100 was ...
's four-cylinder engine. It also continued to use the naming practice started with the Cisitalia 202 and 204, which continued with the Abarth 204A and 205A. Design work started in 1954 and the car was first presented at the 1955 Turin Motor Show. A street-oriented version of the Spyder called the 208A, fitted with a panoramic windshield, was shown in 1954, as well as a Coupé model with an airy glasshouse, called the 209A. Both of the street versions appear to have remained one-offs.


Design

The all-steel body was designed by
Felice Mario Boano Felice Mario Boano (Turin 1903 –– Turin 8 May 1989) was an Italian automobile designer and coachbuilder. He worked for Stabilimenti Farina in Turin before joining Pinin Farina in 1930. In 1944 (with Giorgio Alberti), Boano bought the Carrozz ...
and built in his workshop. Only an open-bodied, streamlined two-seater with a fin behind the driver's headrest was available. The design was asymmetric; disregarding from the fin the entire body was taller on the driver's (left) side. While the chassis was designed by Abarth, there was still some
Cisitalia Cisitalia was an Italian sports and racing car brand. The name "Cisitalia" derives from "Compagnia Industriale Sportiva Italia", a business conglomerate founded in Turin in 1946 and controlled by the wealthy industrialist and sportsman Piero Dusio ...
DNA in the design, as implied by Abarth continuing the Cisitalia numbering scheme. The chassis was a boxed platform design and used most of the Fiat 1100/103's suspension elements, replacing the Porsche torsion bar front suspension and the earlier Fiat 1100 E's rear suspension that had been installed on the preceding 204A/205A. One modification was that the 1100/103's leaf sprung live rear axle was coil sprung instead, and was modified to accept longer shock absorbers. Frank (1982), p. 106. The engine was tuned by the addition of twin Weber 36 DCO4 carburettors and new exhaust manifolds, delivering at 6,000 rpm. The stainless steel exhaust pipes protruded from the right side of the car. For the small headlights, flanking a single, central chrome bar, Abarth used two of the Fiat 1100 TV's central driving lights. In all, twelve examples of the 207A, 208A, and 209A were built. Most sources agree that ten were 207A (competition cars), while the two-tone, American-inspired 208A and 209A found no takers and remained one-offs. All of the 207As appear to have been delivered to the United States, where they competed sporadically. Frank (1982), p. 105. The ten 207As were all sold via Tony Pompeo in New York. File:Abarth 207 Boano dx.jpg, Rear view File:Abarth 207 Boano m.jpg, The Fiat 1100/103 engine in a 207A Spyder File:Den Haag Louwman Museum 122.jpg, The Boano-bodied 209A Coupé File:1955 Abarth 209A Coupe Boano photo8.JPG, The Coupé's distinct glasshouse The 208A and 209A were painted two-tone and equipped with panoramic windshields, creating a rather American look overall. Since the 207A was only fitted with two small driving lights mounted very low, the 208A and 209A were fitted with pop-up headlamps, a very early instance of this design. The exposed, double stainless steel exhaust on the passenger side remained. The 209A Coupé has a glasshouse reminiscent of
Franco Scaglione __NOTOC__ Franco Scaglione (26 September 1916 – 19 June 1993) was an Italian automobile coachwork designer. Biography Franco Scaglione was born in Florence to Vittorio Scaglione, a chief army doctor, and to Giovanna Fabbri, captain of the ...
's BAT cars.


Competition history

The 207A's first race was the
1955 12 Hours of Sebring The 1955 Florida International Twelve Hour Grand Prix of Endurance took place on 13 March, on the Sebring International Raceway (Florida, United States). It was the second round of the F.I.A. World Sports Car Championship. For the fifth running ...
, where it was disqualified (after having finished second in its class) due to what the marshals judged an irregular refueling. The car was not very successful in competitions due to its excessive weight and compromised suspension design. The design proved entirely outdated when up against the
Lotus Mark IX The Lotus Mark IX (1955) was an aluminium-bodied sports racing car manufactured by Lotus Engineering Ltd. About thirty of the Mark IX sports racing cars were made. It was closely related to the Lotus model Mark VIII (1954), of which only abo ...
and the upcoming
Lotus Eleven The Lotus Eleven is a sports racing car built in various versions by Lotus from 1956 until 1958. The later versions built in 1958 are sometimes referred to as Lotus 13, although this was not an official designation. In total, about 270 Elevens ...
.


References

{{reflist 207A Cars introduced in 1955 Sports racing cars