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The Ferrari 125 S (commonly 125 or 125 Sport) was a 1.5 litre sport car built in 1947 by automaker Ferrari in Modena, Italy. It was the company's first vehicle, which only two were made. It was the company's first vehicle, which only two were made.
The 125 F1 was Ferrari's first Formula One car. It shared its engine with the 125 S sports racer which preceded it by a year, but was developed at the same time by Enzo Ferrari, Valerio Colotti and designer, Gioacchino Colombo. Initially the racer was called 125 GPC for Gran Premio Città or Grand Prix Compressore before the Formula One era. [1 ...
Enzo Ferrari and his engine department work on the 125 S engine in 1947 The V12 engine used in the 125 F1 (early version) 125 S at the Museo Casa Enzo Ferrari. The first Ferrari-designed engine was the 1,496.77 cc (1.5 L; 91.3 cu in) V12 125, the work of Gioacchino Colombo and assistants Giuseppe Busso and Luigi Bazzi []. [1]
1947 Ferrari 125 S; 1948–1950 Ferrari 125 F1 This page was last edited on 22 May 2024, at 09:59 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
The 1950 Belgian Grand Prix, formally titled the Grand Prix Automobile de Belgique, [2] was a Formula One motor race held on 18 June 1950 at Spa-Francorchamps. It was race five of seven in the 1950 World Championship of Drivers. The 35-lap race was won by Alfa Romeo driver Juan Manuel Fangio after he started from second position.
The Ferrari 166 S was a sports car built by Ferrari between 1948 and 1953, as a evolution of its Colombo V12-powered 125 S racer. It was adapted into a sports car for the street in the form of the 166 Inter. Only 12 Ferrari 166 S were produced, nine of them with cycle-fenders as the Spyder Corsa.
The 1950 Formula One season was the fourth season of the FIA Formula One motor racing. ... 125: Ferrari 125 F1 1.5 V12 s: D P: Peter Whitehead: 2, 6–7 Scuderia Ferrari:
The Ferrari 125 C is an open-wheel single-seater racing car, designed, developed, and produced by Ferrari in 1947 as a single example. It competed primarily in Formula Libre contests and events. [ 1 ]