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This is the current revision of this page, as edited by Sable232 (talk | contribs) at 23:21, 13 May 2024 (reassess). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this version.

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GTA vice city

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the "stinger" car in both "vice city" and "vice city stories" is very similar and is an apparent homage to the one used in the show "miami vice". i think it is worth mentioning.

Daytona on Miami Vice

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The Crockett's Daytona was a polemic theme of discussions, about hi-fi from original! The truth is, that was two Ferrari at same time. The first Ferrari is an original unit of black 365 Daytona Spider, with everything rights! The second Ferrari was builded to make stunts scenes and "blows over". An replicant's daytona was builded under a exemplary of Corvett, were they takes the body, remove and put over the replicants body of Daytona. Of corse, the interior was doned whit no much details, but the fiberglass body is praticly identical. Was during the episody of Miami vice it's cleary to listening the diferent engine songs of that "two versions" of Daytona. The original's song is same a motorcycle, very agude! So, the Corvett song is very "heavy", when it's bacame to up! Bytheway, this planjement shows what they producers of Miami Vice have to worried: preserv the incredible and expensive car!

Gabriel V. Reis

I doubt that theory. I have never seen the Miami Vice "Daytona" except as the replica; it always had the obvious Corvette bucket seats sticking up, a dead giveaway. Engine sounds? That's all done in the studio.Seth1066 22:15, 22 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Testarossa on Miami Vice

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About Crockett's Testarossa:

I'm sure no one changed the Ferrari flat-12 to Chrysler V8. I remember an article in Popular Mechanics: it said that there was a stunt-replica built from DeTomaso Panthera (you know, it has a V8).

Regards, Rico

Have added the {{fact}} tag regarding the changing the Ferrari flat-12 to V8 statement. It seems highly doubtful that the re-engineering involved such an engine swap, would save maintenance costs (given the low miles covered in filming), nor would Ferrari be likely to approve if they had supplied the Testarossa in the first place (even if it were true it should be on the Testarossa page - not here). --Xagent86 (Talk | contribs) 21:21, 6 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I have removed the reference to Chevy replacement engines for the show's Testarossa as well the reference to the error filled UK website where this information was sourced from. And the above contributor is exactly right, a V-8 installation would be a nightmare and doubtful it would fit where the low profile flat 12 sat. The premise of a detective driving a Testarossa full time, including parking at his police station, is ridiculous enough. I also put the 165 spider production back to 125, which I believe is the right number or at the very least, closer than 165. Seth1066 22:09, 22 March 2007 (UTC)[reply]


Notes about Ferrari 365GTB/4, 365GTS/4, 365GTC and others

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Per the Ferrari factory, none of the Daytonas on the "Miami Vice" program were real Ferraris. One of the 2 Testerosas was real, while the other was a DeTomaso Pantera with a body kit. Both of the Daytonas were Chevrolet Corvettes with fiberglass body kits. Which is why Ferrari was so upset.

A few notes on the article:

I do not believe that any Ferrari 365GTB/4 or GTS/4 models were ever delivered with Solex carbs. The two choices were Weber 40DCN20 or 40DCN21 which differ only by jetting and float level adjustment specs. What is the source for Daytonas with Solex carbs ?


The tipo 251 engine is derived from the Colombo line of engines. Not the Lampredi line. The 275GTB/4 3.3L engine was also a Colombo motor. Not a Lampredi, as stated in the article. Lampredi engines were used in the large displacement Super America and Superfast models, as well as the 250 Europa 340 America racers, among others.

The 365GTC/4 and 365GT4 2+2 are not properly "Model Variations" of the Daytona, even though the GTC/4 shares the same wheelbase. Other than that, they only share the same engine displacement. There really isn't a "model group" that covers:


365GTB/4
365GTS/4
365GTC/4
365GT4 2+2
365GT 2+2
365GTC
365GTS
365GT4/BB and
365 California Spyder


The article mentions 165 original 365GTS/4 convertibles. I believe the correct number is closer to 127.


The windshield rake angle on 365GTB/4 and 365GTS/4 models is the same on all examples I have measured, including my own. The difference in the rake between the models idea seems to be an urban legend. Possible due to someone comparing a real Ferrari with a Corvette based replica. The part numbers for both the windshield glass and the triangular "wind wing" windows are the same for the Coupe and the Convertible models ( per Ferrari parts books )


The original GTS/4 convertibles can usually be identified by such items as factory welded frame supports, ventilation controls, and a different sun visor arrangement. Some of the converted GTB/4s ( called "cut spyders" ) are detailed to such a degree that they can only be distinguished from original GTS/4s by referring to their serial number.


Most fake "Daytonas" ( usually based on Chevrolet Corvette or Jaguar frames ) can easily be distinguished by their lack of the triangular "wind wing" windows on the driver's and passenger's side doors. There are some differences in the lines of the replica cars dictated by points on the Corvette frame and doors.


Dr.mike 06:50, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Article Name

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Surely this article should be named using the actual model designation (365 GTB4) rather than an unofficial nickname? Jellyfish dave (talk) 20:29, 22 July 2008 (UTC)[reply]

I'd say the first thing to settle is what this article is about. I don't know if the GTC/4, GT4 2+2 were ever called Daytonas, officially or otherwise. I can see two options:
  • keep article content as it is, rename to "Ferrari 365 GT" to cover GTB/4, GTS/4, GTC/ and GT4 2+2. Subsection for Daytona.
  • split article: one for Ferrari 365 GTC, one for Ferrari 365 GT4 2+2 and one for the Daytona models GTB/4 and GTS/4. Whether you call the latter article by the more common name Ferrari Daytona or the official 365 GTB/4 and 365 GTS/4 would be debatable.
What do people think? Personally I'd rather split the article.Spute (talk) 20:58, 16 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Please - if someone has the time and Ferrari background knowledge to do it properly - do split it. Right now it looks like a concatenation of several articles. Possibly that made sense at the start because there was, perhaps, very little content. But now that it has grown a little, I'd say it looks ripe for splitting. Regards Charles01 (talk) 21:07, 16 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
What the hell, I'll be bold and do it. Spute (talk) 21:08, 16 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]
Split complete. See Ferrari 365 GTC/4 and Ferrari 365 GT4 2+2.Spute (talk) 21:52, 16 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Now, should we keep this article name as Ferrari Daytona, or change to the official names of "365 GTB/4 and 365 GTS/4". Spute (talk) 12:58, 17 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Competition Daytona

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The racing version is probably worth a mention - they took the first five places in the GT class at Le Mans in 1972.Mr Larrington (talk) 15:47, 19 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Well I've made a start.Tubefurnace (talk) 21:24, 21 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Cannonball Baker trophy

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I've removed a lot of detail from this part, there was just too much for an encyclopedia entry covering the Daytona 365 GTB/4 in general. Here's what I took out:

In 1971, the Daytona gained notoriety when a Sunoco Blue example was driven by racing legend Dan Gurney and former Car and Driver editor Brock Yates from New York to L.A. in 35 hours 54 minutes (2,876 miles (4,628 km)) at an average speed of 80.1 miles per hour (129 km/h) to win the inaugural Cannonball Baker Sea-To-Shining-Sea Memorial Trophy Dash. The two claim to have driven the car to 172 miles per hour (277 km/h) on the back roads of Arizona.
This 1971 Ferrari 365 GTB/4, serial number 14271, belonged to exotic car dealer Kirk F. White, who loaned it to Yates and Gurney for the race. White afterwards offered to sell the car to Gurney at a bargain price of $15,000, but Gurney regrettably could not afford it at the time. It is currently a prized vintage piece in the collection of Bruce McCaw, restored to its historic racing livery: midnight blue with yellow pin striping."

It's maybe worth preserving on this talk page, in case anyone wants to use it elsewhere, e.g on a page about Ferrari 365 GTB/4, serial number 14271? Tubefurnace (talk) 21:33, 21 February 2010 (UTC)[reply]

Supposed similarity between Ferrari Daytona and 2014 Corvette

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Deleted irrelevant section regarding supposed similarity between Ferrari Daytona and 2014 Corvette

gumball rally

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i suppose since you have a legacy section the 71 in the gumball rally deserves a mention. I don't personally know enough about it to go adding the text though. Gjxj (talk) 02:43, 17 July 2021 (UTC)[reply]