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1935 Fiat «MILLE MIGLIA» 508 CS Balilla Aerodinamica
The item was sold for 204 000 €
Fees include commission and taxes.
1935 Fiat «MILLE MIGLIA» 508 CS Balilla Aerodinamica
Same owner for 48 years
First ‘teardrop' design
Fewer than 100 made|
only four on the road
Chassis N° 86203
Engine N° 00710
French registration
FIVA card 10132 (8 April 1997)
Exceptional in many ways, the car we are presenting here is - along with the Coppa d'Oro spider - the most desirable of the Balilla range. Prompted by an idea from the stylist Ghia, in 1933 a prototype was windtunnel-tested. This was the beginning of the application of aerodynamics to the motor car, with more fluid forms starting to be adopted. The resultant design innovated with the purity of its lines, and can be considered the industry's first ‘teardrop' body. Others would follow, some years later, beginning with Voisin, Darl'mat, Figoni and Castagna in 1936 and then - and above all - the Bugatti Atlantic in 1937, whose aerodynamics so marked the time that the design is considered the most beautiful in the world.
For Fiat the objective was simple and the design brief clear: what was needed was to build a closed competition model capable of doing well in the most important international events, not least that which was closest to the Italian heart, the Mille Miglia.
The 508 was an important car in Italy's motoring history. It was in effect the first modestly-sized Italian car and was a great commercial success, but above all it owed its enduring reputation to the fact that it was developed by some of the country's most respected engineers. Conceived in the workshops of Turin University and brought to production in Fiat's Lingotto factory (famous for its roof-top test track), the Mille Miglia was built on a 508 chassis by Fiat's own bodyshop. Made for only two years, production was limited, with fewer than a hundred built. Just four, including this example, remain in running order.
The Fiat soon made a name for itself in competition. This began with the 1936 Mille Miglia, in which one finished second in class and 14th ove
Same owner for 48 years
First ‘teardrop' design
Fewer than 100 made|
only four on the road
Chassis N° 86203
Engine N° 00710
French registration
FIVA card 10132 (8 April 1997)
Exceptional in many ways, the car we are presenting here is - along with the Coppa d'Oro spider - the most desirable of the Balilla range. Prompted by an idea from the stylist Ghia, in 1933 a prototype was windtunnel-tested. This was the beginning of the application of aerodynamics to the motor car, with more fluid forms starting to be adopted. The resultant design innovated with the purity of its lines, and can be considered the industry's first ‘teardrop' body. Others would follow, some years later, beginning with Voisin, Darl'mat, Figoni and Castagna in 1936 and then - and above all - the Bugatti Atlantic in 1937, whose aerodynamics so marked the time that the design is considered the most beautiful in the world.
For Fiat the objective was simple and the design brief clear: what was needed was to build a closed competition model capable of doing well in the most important international events, not least that which was closest to the Italian heart, the Mille Miglia.
The 508 was an important car in Italy's motoring history. It was in effect the first modestly-sized Italian car and was a great commercial success, but above all it owed its enduring reputation to the fact that it was developed by some of the country's most respected engineers. Conceived in the workshops of Turin University and brought to production in Fiat's Lingotto factory (famous for its roof-top test track), the Mille Miglia was built on a 508 chassis by Fiat's own bodyshop. Made for only two years, production was limited, with fewer than a hundred built. Just four, including this example, remain in running order.
The Fiat soon made a name for itself in competition. This began with the 1936 Mille Miglia, in which one finished second in class and 14th ove
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