Maserati Pininfarina Birdcage Concept - Goodwood
Price |
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Production |
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Engine |
6 liter V12 |
Weight |
approx 3306 lbs | ||
Aspiration |
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Torque |
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HP |
over 700 hp |
HP/Weight |
4.7 lbs per hp | ||
HP/Liter |
116.7 hp |
1/4 mile |
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0-62 mph |
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Top Speed |
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(from Maserati Press
Release) The Maserati Birdcage 75th, a Pininfarina
designed concept car based on the Maserati MC12 and built in
collaboration with Motorola has made its official driving debut at
the Goodwood Festival of Speed.
The gorgeous car, which received the "Best Concept" award at this
year’s Geneva Motorshow and features in the "Ten coolest concept
cars" classification by Forbes, took part in the Supercar hillclimb
at the prestigious Goodwood Festival of Speed, in West Sussex,
England, in front of 150,000 people.
Maserati’s CEO Karl-Heinz Kalbfell, 5th Gear TV presenter Tom Ford
and Pink Floyd’s drummer Nick Mason took it in turn behind the
wheel. Nick, who also owns a Maserati Birdcage Tipo 61, took a break
from the rehearsals for the Live 8 concert due to take place in
London and other cities next weekend to be at the Goodwood Festival
of Speed. Interviewed by Italian television RAI, he commented: "It’s
a real honour to drive this amazing concept car which draws
inspiration from a golden era for Maserati. The original Birdcage,
the Tipo 61, was a perfectly balanced car, so ahead of its time. I
can see the same spirit in the design and execution of the Birdcage
75th."
Designed to celebrate Pininfarina’s 75th anniversary, the Maserati
Birdcage 75th returns to the tradition of extreme sports prototypes,
which highlighted the Italian renaissance of car design, started in
the Fifties and through the Sixties and early Seventies. The
Birdcage 75th is a concept car where everything – style,
performance, use and conception of the car – is extreme so as to get
the maximum impact on the collective imagination. The car is a
futuristic extension of the Maserati brand, and at the same time it
serves to reinforce the Trident’s strong design heritage, and
continues its grand tradition of advanced technology enveloped in
sporting elegance.
Featuring Motorola Seamless Mobility technology, this car takes
Internet connection and use one step further. The technologies
integrated in this concept car fulfil a vision of seamless mobility
and feature an iPen and a mobile router, using projection screens
for man-machine communication.
Several classic Maserati were also present at the Goodwood Festival
of Speed. Among them were a 1948 Maserati 4CLT and a 1956 250F
competing in the Classic Grand Prix Cars Category, a 1953 Maserati
A6GCS in the Elegant Endurance Aerodynes Category and a 1974
Maserati Quattroporte II in the Cartier Style et Luxe Concours.
Chassis:
load-bearing frame in carbon fibre and Nomex honeycomb with front
and rear structure in aluminium. Bodywork in carbon fibre.
Front and Rear Suspensions: articulated quadrilateral with
push-rod layout; single-calibrated shock absorbers and co-axial coil
springs.
Brakes: Brembo system with four ventilated and drilled discs.
Front 380 mm x 34 mm, Rear 335 mm x 32 mm; callipers in light alloy
with six front and four rear pistons.
Drivetrain: Longitudinal rear-mounted gearbox with rigid
connection to the engine. Mechanical drivetrain with 6 sequential
gears.
Engine: 12 cylinder in a 65° V, total displacement 5998 cc.
Power output: over 700HP.