Concept Cars Home
17th Annual Amelia Island concours d'Elegance
Cars of Vic Elford
Ferrari 250 GTO
Horseless Carriage (1895 - 1915)
Horseless carraige (40+ horsepower)
Vintage (1915-1923)
Amercian Production
American Classic Closed (1925-1948)
American Classic Open (pre-1933)
American Classic Open (1933-1937)
American Classic Open (1938-1948)
European Custom Coachwork French
European Classic Pre-War (1930-1935)
European Classic Pre-War (1936-1938)
Custom Coachwork Caddilac (1930-1941)
Custom Coachwork Cadillac (1942-1959)
Sports Cars (Pre-War)
Sports and GT Cars (Post-War-1955)
Sports and GT Cars (1956 - 1962)
Sports and GT Cars (1963-1972)
Race Cars (Pre-War)
Race Cars (Post-War - 1963)
Race Cars (1964-1982)
50th Anniversary of Daytona 24
60th Annv. of Sebring 12 Hours
Cover Cars of Road & Track
Art Deco
Landaulet
Special Display (Non-Judged)
Stying Studio Corvettes
Shelby Cobras
Sports Car MG
Sebring MG
Duesenberg
Ferrari
Mercedes-Benz
Bentley
Rolls-Royce
Rolls-Royce Silver Ghost
Ferrari 250 GTO Vehicles
1961 Ferrari 250 GT SWB Sperimentale
1962 Ferrari 250 GTO
1962 Ferrari 330 GTO
1963 Ferrari 250 GTO
1963 Ferrari 330 LeMans
 
  • Information on the 1962 Ferrari 330 GTO
  • More photographs of the 1962 Ferrari 330 GTO
  • 1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO
    1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO
    1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO
    1962 Ferrari 330 GTO
    1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO1962 Ferrari 330 GTO

    1962 Ferrari 330 GTOThis 330GTO, chassis number 3765A, is one of three 330 GTOs and features a modified 400 SA chassis and a 400 Superamerica engine, along with the GTO body style. In 1962 it finished second overall at Nurburgring driven by Willy Mairesse and Mike parks and then raced at Le Mans. Later, fitted with an earlier 3-liter GTO engine, the car ran various events, including the Targa Florio. Assigned to Ferrari Engineer and racer Mike Parkes factory F1 and sports car ace Lorenzo Bandini, Mr. Jaeger's 4-liter GTO appears as it did on June 23rd of 1962, when gridded seventh at the 24 Hours of Le Mans. It never made the finish at Le Mans that year because after 56 laps it retired with overheating due to an accident and did not race again until 1965. By then, the new owner had installed a three-liter V-12 engine scavenged from a Ferrari prototype. This swap allowed '3765' to compete as a GTO in Italian GT races.

    On June 13, 1965 new owner, Ferdinando Latteri, scored five straight class wins in Italian hillclimbs after retiring from the Targa Florio in May. He ended the car's competition history with a class victory in the Coppa Gallenga Hillclimb in March, 1966.

    In 1967 '3765' came to America. Jim Jaeger took possession of this prototype GTO in 1985 and began a historically fastidious restoration. Once he had obtained the car's original 4-liter V-12 engine block, Jaeger returned the car to its original 1962 Le Mans livery. Today '3765' wears the number seven, just as it did 50 years ago at Le Mans on Saturday afternoon, June 23, 1962.

    Also photographed at :
  • 61st Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance >> Ferrari 250 GTO