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1971 DeTomaso Pantera

Ferrari was defeated by Henry Ford II in international GT-class racing with the Ford-powered Shelby Daytona Coupes capturing the World Manufacturer's Championship for 1965. The Ford GT40s swept the top three places at Le Mans in 1966 along with numerous other accolades in the years that followed. However, Ford did not have a street-legal, mid-engine supercar to sell to an eager public; a problem that was later resolved with the introduction of the Pantera.

1971 DeTomaso Pantera photo
Coupe
Alejandro de Tomaso was the son of an Argentinian government official. His passions and interests were more focused on motor racing than managing the fortune the family had accumulated, so he fled to Italy during the overthrow of the Péron government in 1955. During his racing career, he raced OSCA cars for the Maserati brothers, then formed his own company, DeTomaso Automobili SpA, in 1959. He built six Formula One cars in 1961, two with OSCA engines. His first road-going car was a mid-engine Ghia-bodied two-seater with Ford Cortina power, called the Vallelunga Coupe. Approximately fifty examples were built, along with a single spyder version, but its pressed-steel chassis proved problematic.

Alejandro married an American named Isabelle Haskell, heiress to an electrical components company in New Jersey. With plenty of financial resources, de Tomaso acquired Ghia. In 1969, he further developed the Vallelunga into the Mangusta (mongoose - an animal that can kill cobras, a nod to Mr. Carroll Shelby). It was essentially a racer for the street based on the Ford 70P racing car. The Mangusta had a Ford 302 cubic-inch V8 engine, ZF 5-speed transaxle, backbone chassis, Girling disc brakes, and a limited-slip differential. The mid-engine coupe wore a design by Giorgetto Giugiaro, then working at Ghia. The design was one that had been created for Renzo Rivolta's Iso marque but had been previously rejected. Between 1967 and 1970, approximately 300 examples were built with many being imported to the United States by Kjell Qvale of San Francisco.

During this time, de Tomaso had built a relationship with the Ford Motor Company, which proved instrumental in the next automotive venture, the Pantera. (Panther) For the Pantera, de Tomaso gave it a unitized body, and the larger 351 CID V8 developing 330 horsepower and giving it a 160 mph top speed.

1971 DeTomaso Pantera photo
Coupe
The Pantera was penned by Tom Tjaarda, son of Lincoln-Zephyr designer John Tjaarda, then working at Ghia. Vignale performed the construction, also a de Tomaso company. It had a low, wedge-shaped design with a pointed nose and disappearing headlamps. Luggage space was available in both the front and rear.

The resulting De Tomaso Pantera was constructed in Italy and sold largely through Lincoln-Mercury dealers in the United States with a full factory warranty. It combined American-style comforts - including air conditioning and power windows, a 351 Cleveland V8 engine, and European performance features as rack-and-pinion steering, power-assisted four-wheel disc brakes, and a ZF transaxle.

DeTomaso introduced the Pantera in a public debut in Modena during March 1970 and was presented to the American public at the 1970 New York Motor Show just a few weeks later.

1971 DeTomaso Pantera photo
Coupe
The first of several upgrades occurred in 1972 with the introduction of the 'L' model, which had 'impact resistant' bumpers and improved cooling and air conditioning systems. The GTS model of 1974 was distinguished by flared wheel arches, which in European trim came with a 350 horsepower engine, larger wheels and tires, and other performance upgrades. Around the same time, the GT/4 was introduced, a development of the Group 4 competition cars of 1972 and 1973. In 1980, the Pantera received its first major revision to its body style, with the introduction of the GT5 which, with its deep front air dam and delta-wing rear spoiler, was among the earliest examples to utilize these aerodynamic devices in a passenger car design. Introduced in 1985, the GTS5 had revised bodywork and significant upgrades to its interior. Bertone's Marcello Gandini, the stylist of Lamborghini's Miura and Countach, completely redesigned the Pantera in 1990.

In 1973, due to emissions regulations, the Pantera's power decreased. New bumpers required for U.S. DOT certification added nine inches and 50 pounds to the car. In 1974, U.S. imports were halted, but cars were available at retail well into 1975 as production continued in Italy. The Pantera later used engines from Australia, and it was briefly re-introduced to the United States in 1981, through an independent importer.

In 1973, Ford acquired Ghia from de Tomaso and two years later de Tomaso took over Maserati. Maserati was sold to Fiat in 1993, the year Alejandro de Tomaso suffered a stroke and retired from the business. He lived another decade, passing away in 2003.

1971 DeTomaso Pantera photo
Coupe
Production of the Pantera, the world's longest-running supercar, came to an end in 1993.


by Daniel Vaughan | Apr 2020

Related Reading : DeTomaso Pantera History

The Pantera was the result of an Argentinian racing driver (Alejandro De Tomaso), Italian engineering, and American muscle. The styling was handled by Tom Tjarda while Giampaolo Dallara was responsible for the structural design. Looking at the vehicle, it greatly resembles that of the Lamborghini offspring. The reasoning for this resemblance could be attributed to Giampaolo Dallara who was also aided....
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Related Reading : DeTomaso Pantera History

The Pantera is DeTomasos most significant production car to date and lived an overall production life of nearly 25 years. It is the model which most people identify with DeTomaso and completed the companys transition to a volume producer of high performance GTs. In describing the Panteras career, especially from a U.S. perspective, it is easiest to view it in three separate stages the Ford importation....
Continue Reading >>

1971 DeTomaso Pantera Vehicle Profiles

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Performance and Specification Comparison

Price Comparison

$1,395-$9,050
1971 Pantera
$9,050-$35,600
1971 DeTomaso Pantera Base Price : $9,050

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Pantera

Specification Comparison by Year

Year
Production
Wheelbase
Engine
Prices
99.00 in.
8 cyl., 351.86 CID., 300.00hp
$9,050 - $9,050
99.00 in.
8 cyl., 351.86 CID., 330.00hp
$10,300 - $10,300
99.00 in.
8 cyl., 280.71 CID., 266.00hp
$10,300 - $10,300

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