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Dtrsport70pa
De Tomaso Sport 5000
De Tomaso
aka Ghia-De Tomaso Sport 5000 / 70P
Production 1965
Class Race car
Body Style
Length
Width
Height
Wheelbase
Weight
Transmission
Engine 4.7 / 5.0 litre Ford V8
Power 475 hp @ 7300 rpm
Similar
Designer Peter Brock

The De Tomaso Sport 5000 was a racecar built by the Italian automobile manufacturer De Tomaso, in conjunction with the coachbuilding firm Carrozzeria Fantuzzi, and penned by Peter Brock. It was not a very well-known car but still a myth to anyone who has ever owned the classic "King Cobra" slot racer kit by Tamiya from the late 1960s.

Around the early 60's, in Italy, the small racing car company of Argentinean Alejandro de Tomaso was looking into entering sportscar racing. After constructing a few unsuccessful sportscars for hill climb-racing he had set his sights on the more important FIA Group 9 circuit racing class. A contact was made with Peter Brock, who supplied a design very similar to that of the Lang-Cooper. Somewhere along the line some suggestion had been raised that Caroll Shelby was interested in the project and intended to order a number of these cars, but this never happened and by 1965 Peter Brock had left the Shelby American outfit.

De Tomaso constructed a rigid backbone chassis with a tuned Ford 289 cid V8 engine placed in the middle, acting as a stressed member of the chassis. The striking Brock-designed aluminum body which was fitted on this chassis was made by Fantuzzi, a company famous for making bodies for the Maserati brothers, and featured a remarkable low-slung shape with large air-intakes behind the seats and an adjustable rear wing. In 1965 the resulting prototype racer was shown at the Turin Motor Show as the Ghia-De Tomaso Sport 5000. Apparently the Ghia name was added because this coach building company had supplied part of the funds for developing the car. The Sport 5000, internally known as model 70P, was named after its 5-litre engine with light alloy cylinder heads, pistons and connecting rods and claimed to produce up to 475 hp @ 7300 rpm.

This prototype attracted a lot of attention at the show and subsequently both De Tomaso and Peter Brock expected the car to do well. Brock established himself as the sole dealer for the US and set out to enter the car in the non-prototype GT class. To make this possible it was necessary to make it street legal and to produce 50 cars for homologation. Brock didn't consider this a problem and so the body was revised in 1966 to incorporate doors, lights, windscreen and other items needed to make it road worthy. The original sportscar body was retained however, without a chassis. Unfortunately nothing ever came of these production plans. The last of the Sport 5000 was heard in 1967, when one appeared on the entry list of the 1000km Monza race in Italy, but this car never showed up.

This would have been a lackluster end for the Sport 5000 if it weren't for two separate events. First, in Italy, the chassis design (including the Ford V8) of the Sport 5000 was used for what can be considered as De Tomaso's first real production car: the Mangusta, which established De Tomaso as an high performance car builder at 402 units manufactured. It was first shown in 1966 and named after the only animal which eats Cobras... Later, in Japan, Tamiya introduced a 1/24 kit of a racing car named King Cobra. It showed artwork of a blue colored Sport 5000 on the box and the model itself had a chromed license plate which read "Ghia-De Tomaso Sport 5000". It seems like the Japanese firm had somewhere confused a blue Shelby King Cobra with the slightly similar DeTomaso Sport 5000, which had only appeared in red paintwork. Later some story was fabricated that the Sport 5000 had been shipped to Japan and had raced in local sportscar races in a blue color scheme sponsored by Tamiya, but there is no truth in this. Never the less a lot of these kits were sold, and as a result many people still think that the Sport 5000 was a King Cobra. In reality, only one Sport 5000 chassis was ever made, which had been fitted with two different bodies. The original sportscar body from the 1965 Turin Motor Show is what you see above, which has been fitted on a different chassis. The GT-version still exists as well, fitted on the original chassis, and so there are two DeTomaso Sport 5000 cars in the world, adding to the confusion involving this wonderful car.

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