The Ferrari 250 LM was born of controversy. This book looks at the
genesis of the car, its technical details and specification, and the
racing career of 6313.
The Ferrari 250 LM was born of controversy. Enzo Ferrari wanted this
compact mid-engined coupe to qualify as a GT car for world championship
racing. The FIA, motor sport’s rule-makers, disagreed and this new
model, of which just 32 were made, was forced to run as a
sports-prototype in 1964 and 1965. To everyone’s surprise, the LM was to
dominate the Le Mans 24 Hour race in 1965. 6313, entered by Ecurie
Francorchamps, led for much of the race and finished second after a tyre
failure in the closing stages. It was the high-spot of a busy season for
a car that, 54 years later, is well-known as a successful contender in
historic car racing.
Author James Page covers the genesis of the 250 LM and its development,
its technical details and specification, and the ongoing row about its
homologation as a GT car. 6313 was driven at Le Mans in 1965 by Pierre
Dumay and Gustave Gosselin, and led the race through Saturday night and
Sunday morning, only to suffer a tyre blow-out with less than three
hours to the finish, allowing the NART 250 LM of Jochen Rindt and Masten
Gregory to take victory. For many years the identity of 6313 was
confused with its team-mate 6023. Detective work by Ferrari specialist
Keith Bluemel, consultant on this book, clarified the situation.
This book unravels the mystery. The book is profusely illustrated with
period photographs and documents, and a gallery of studio photographs of
the car as it is today.
Author: PAGE
Author Bio: NA
ISBN: 9781907085734
Publisher: Porter Press
Binding Type: Hardcover
Illustrations: 120+ color & b/w photos
Language: NA
Pages: 128
Printing Status: In Print
Edition: NA
Country Made: NA