2004 Maserati MC12 GT1
#007 / 15443
Maserati MC12 GT1 #007 Specifications
Sold: 2004
Number Built: 10
Construction: Carbonfibre and Nomex composite Monocoque
Engine: All-alloy, M144B/2, 5998cc V12, multi-point fuel injection, Magneti Marelli Marvel GT ECU (FIA 2010 spec)
Compression Ratio: 15:1
Power: 580bhp (2010 spec with two 31.2mm restrictors)
Suspension: Wishbones all round, pushrods, four-way adjustable Sachs coilover dampers
Steering: Rack and pinion
Brakes: Discs all round, Brembo six-piston calipers front and rear
Weight: 1258kg
Wheels: OZ forged magnesium
Tyres: Front: 18in x 12.5in with Michelin S9G 30/68-18 tyres. Rear: 18in x 13in with Michelin S9G 30/71-18 tyres.
Key Features:
- One of 10 MC12 GT1s Built - Consistently the fastest GT1 car ever
- One of only Two lifetime Works Cars
- Raced successfully for 6 Seasons (All as a Works owned and supported car)
- 5 Outright Race Victories
- 27 FIA International Podiums
- 5 time Spa 24 Hours entrant
- 2 Owners From New - including Maserati
- Totally restored in 2015/6
- Huge spares package
The GT1 Class & Maserati
Few manufacturers can boast a competition pedigree
in the middle of the decade by the McLaren F1 -
to rival that of Maserati. From the Targa Florio to
morphed into the FIA GT Championship for 1997. Its
Indianapolis, the Italian marque has won all over the
GT1 class allowed more extreme modifications than
world – and with some of the greatest drivers of all
the GT2 category, plus a smaller production run,
time. Juan Manuel Fangio claimed the last of his five
and was briefly exploited by the likes of Porsche and
Formula One World Championships at the wheel of the
Mercedes. The governing body was forced to step in
legendary 250F, while Stirling Moss and Dan Gurney
and alter the class structure in an attempt to stop
teamed up to win the Nürburgring 1000km in a Tipo
manufacturers building barely disguised racing cars
61 ‘Birdcage’.
and passing them off as GT models.
But that success seemed very distant at the dawn
It was nonetheless the ideal stage on which to
of the 21st century. For three decades, Maserati
confirm Maserati’s renaissance, and in 2002 work
had struggled under the stewardship of various
started on the spectacular MC12. The exclusive new
owners, until first Fiat and then Ferrari injected new
hypercar was based around the Ferrari Enzo’s carbon-
life into the Trident. Thoughts turned once more to
composite monocoque, mid-mounted 5998cc V12,
a motorsport programme with which to restore the
and six-speed semi-automatic gearbox. The body
prestige of this most charismatic of marques.
was styled by Frank Stephenson, who had strict
In many ways, the timing was perfect. Since the
instructions that form should follow function. After
implosion of prototype racing in the early 1990s, GT
all, the MC12 existed as a road car only so that it
machinery had formed the backbone of the sports
could be homologated for racing, and aerodynamic
car scene. The BPR Global GT Series – dominated
efficiency was far more important than a svelte shape.
An intensive period of testing followed for what had
been dubbed Project MCC, under the watchful eye
of renowned engineer Giorgio Ascanelli. Many of the
driving duties were assigned to Andrea Bertolini,
but on occasion he was joined by none other than
Michael Schumacher, who was en route to winning five
consecutive Formula One World Championships for
Ferrari.
The new Maserati broke cover – in both roadgoing and
competition form – in 2004. Fittingly, its sporting debut
came on home turf that September. The Imola 500km
was the first of three races in which the MC12 GT1 was
allowed to compete on a non-homologated basis. Even
before the car had reached that point, the FIA requested
that the rear wing was made smaller, and the governing
body was also free to alter the engine’s restrictors as
well as add more ballast.
In a statement, it said that: ‘Data from the car operating
in race conditions will be collected and assessed by the
FIA and the results will be presented to the FIA World
Motor Sport Council in October when the question of the
homologation of the car is decided.’ That decision went
Maserati’s way in time for the final race of the 2004
season, which the MC12 GT1 duly won, Mika Salo and Bertolini
claiming the honours at Zhuhai, with the sister car of Johnny
Herbert and Fabrizio de Simone coming second. (Pictured
right).
It marked the beginning of a period of unprecedented
domination. For 2005, the GT1 and GT2 class structure was
reintroduced for the FIA GT Championship, and Maserati swept
all before it. It claimed the Manufacturers Cup with a points
total that was almost twice that of second-placed Ferrari, while
the Vitaphone Racing Team - which campaigned a pair of
MC12 GT1s – won the Teams Championship. Despite winning
four races, however, and having three crews in contention with
two rounds to go, Maserati did miss out on one title.
The car was hit with a 40kg weight penalty in an attempt
to level the playing field, and Ferrari ace Gabriele Gardel
snatched the Drivers Championship.
There was no such disappointment the following year. Bertolini
and Vitaphone Racing Team owner Michael Bartels opened
the season with victory in the Tourist Trophy at Silverstone
(pictured bottom right) and went on to share the Drivers
Championship. Vitaphone again won the Teams Championship,
but this time Aston Martin pipped Maserati to Manufacturer
honours courtesy of its DBR9.
As it turned out, though, the MC12 GT1 was only just
getting into its stride. It delivered three more Teams
Thomas Biagi - The 2007
FIA GT Drivers Champion
Championships for Vitaphone Racing in 2007, ’08 and ’09.
Thomas Biagi was crowned drivers’ champion in 2007, and
Bartels and Bertolini shared the honours in both 2008/09.
It was a remarkably sustained period of success for a
design that, by 2010, was entering its sixth full season
of racing. It even included three outright wins in the Spa
24 Hours, but victory in another endurance classic was
frustratingly denied by officialdom. While the FIA had
declared the MC12 GT1 to be legal at the end of 2004,
the Automobile Club de l’Ouest disagreed and throughout
this period refused to let it run at Le Mans – ostensibly on
account of its bodywork, which was deemed to be too long
and wide.
At the beginning of 2010, there were rumours that the
impasse could be broken. The FIA had split the GT1 and
GT2 classes into separate series, and the ACO would
be allowing cars that were eligible for the new FIA GT1
World Championship to run at La Sarthe – but sadly
the 24 Hours took place without any MC12 GT1s. Given
the car’s success elsewhere, it would surely have added
class victory at the world’s most famous race had it been
allowed to.
Once again Bertolini/Bartels (standing right) win
the FIA GT championship, whilst Pier Guidi/Bobbi
(standing left) win the race at Zolder 2009.
Maserati Dominates 2008 Spa 24 Hour Race
1. Bartels/Bertolini/Sarrazin/van de Poele Vitaphone Racing Maserati MC12 24hours 02mins 42.228secs 577 laps GT1
2. (Pictured below) Ramos/Negrao/Lemeret/Pierguidi Vitaphone Racing Maserati MC12 +2 laps GT1
3. Simonsen/Peter/Turner/Thompson Gigawave Motorsport Aston Martin DBR9 +7 laps GT1
4. Ferte/Aucott/Daoudi JMB Racing Maserati MC12 +16 laps GT1
5. Malucelli/Ruberti/Camathias/Rigon BMS Scuderia Italia Ferrari 430 +22 laps GT2
Chassis #007 / 15443
Only 10 MC12 GT1s were built, and chassis #007
is one of just two that were owned by Maserati SpA
throughout its competition career (the other was
009). In 2005, it was run by the all-conquering
Vitaphone Racing Team for Thomas Biagi and
Fabio Babini, who started the year with a string
of third-place finishes at Monza, Magny-Cours,
Silverstone and Imola. Victory at Oschersleben and
a second place at Istanbul put them in contention
F. Babini & T. Biagi
on the Podium at the
2005 Silverstone GT
for the Drivers Championship as the season moved
towards its conclusion, but a best finish of fourth in
the final three races meant that they were pipped
by Gardel’s Ferrari.
In 2006, #007 was again run by Vitaphone, this
time for Biagi and British driver Jamie Davies.
After finishing fifth and seventh in the opening two
races, they embarked on a strong run of form in
which they won twice. The first of those was at
Dijon, the 100th race for the FIA GT Championship,
and they came out on top despite having to serve
a drive-through penalty after Biagi made contact with
the Saleen of Jarek Janis as they disputed the lead.
Victory for the Davies-Biagi Maserati MC12, Dijon, 3rd September 2006
Six weeks later, they won again at Adria, this time
having to fight their way through the field after
qualifying only seventh. At times, Biagi was up to one
second per lap quicker than Bertolini and Bartels –
and that was despite carrying 65kg of success ballast,
10kg more than their Vitaphone team-mates. They
added a second place at Oschersleben, plus a third
at both Paul Ricard and Mugello, as Vitaphone again
dominated the standings.
Scuderia Playteam Sarafee had enjoyed considerable
success running an MC12 GT1 in the 2006 Italian
GT Championship, and was therefore entrusted with
running #007 during the following year’s FIA GT
Championship. The car was driven throughout the
season by reigning champion Bertolini and Andrea
Piccini, who took it to a superb victory in the third
round of the series – the Bucharest 2 Hours.
Conditions were treacherous around the 1.93-mile
street circuit, but both drivers were flawless. Piccini
initially ran second to the Aston Martin DBR9 of Karl
Wendlinger, but when he came in to hand over to
Victory in 2007 at the Bucharest 2 Hours
The Playteam Masaratis leading the pack at the 2007 FIA GT Bucharest
Ryan Sharp, the Maserati moved into the lead and stayed there. As the Autosport report put it, “the MC12 was the best
car. Scuderia Playteam made all the right tactical calls, and Pirellis were the tyres to have”. There were also second-place
finishes at Adria & Oschersleben, and thanks to such strong results the equipe finished as runner-up in the team standings.
Miguel Ramos / Alexandre Negrao Leading at Nogaro 2008
For 2008 and ’09, chassis #007 returned to the
Vitaphone Racing Team. The first of those seasons
included victory at Nogaro courtesy of Miguel Ramos
and Alexandre Negrao, plus a second-place finish at the
Spa 24 Hours, where the regular drivers were joined by
Stephane Lemeret and Alessandro Pier Guidi. Proving
that it was still very much a force to be reckoned with,
#007 then registered podium finishes in 2009 at Adria,
Oschersleben, Portimao and Paul Ricard.
The MC12 GT1 continued its domination in 2010, the
Victory at Nogaro courtesy of Miguel Ramos and Alexandre Negrao
first year of the revised FIA GT1 World Championship. As
Vitaphone picked up yet another Teams Championship
– and Bartels and Bertolini claimed their fourth Drivers
Championship together – #007 was in the hands of
Triple H Team Hegersport. Altfrid Heger and Alexandros
Margaritis finished third at Paul Ricard, while Heger and
Alex Müller were second at Spa.
That same driver pairing gave #007 its last competitive
outing in the final round of the championship, at San Luis
in Argentina, where they finished ninth.
After six years at the very top level of GT racing, #007
returned to the Maserati Corse racing department so
#007 at the Circuito de Navarra, Spain 23rd-24th October 2010
that it could be fully prepared for the 2011 season but, at the last moment, the
company instead decided to withdraw from the GT1 World Championship. Over
the next couple of years, the FIA shifted the emphasis of the series to GT3-spec
cars, and in 2014 it morphed into the Blancpain Sprint Series.
As for #007, it remained with Maserati until being acquired direct from the
factory in 2016 by Dutch company Raceart. There it was thoroughly overhauled
in preparation for a return to circuit use. All of the oil, water and fuel lines were
renewed, the brake system was overhauled, and the fuel cell, pumps and filters
were replaced. A new seat and safety harness were fitted, the fire equipment
was serviced and all of the oil seals in the engine and gearbox were replaced.
Still presented in the specification in which it completed the 2010 season, it’s
fitted with engine number 113, which produces 580bhp running on two 31.2mm
restrictors. It also features a spare engine, number 28, which is of an earlier
specification.
With the MC12 GT1 picking up 14 titles in the FIA GT series, and 19 overall race
wins, it fully deserves its place in Maserati’s illustrious competition history –
and did exactly what it was intended to do in terms of restoring the company’s
sporting reputation. It vanquished the likes of Ferrari, Chevrolet and Aston
Martin, and #007 was central to that dominance, scoring five victories in its own
right and being part of the standard-setting Vitaphone Racing Team for most
of its life. Add to that its status as one of only two MC12 GT1s that belonged to
Maserati, and you have a great racing car of impeccable provenance.
2005
Monza (ITA)
P3
Babini / Biagi
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Magny Cours (FRA)
P3
Babini / Biagi
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Silverstone (UK)
P3
Babini / Biagi
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Imola (ITA)
P3
Babini / Biagi
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Brno (CR)
NC
Babini / Biagi
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Spa 24h (BLQ)
NC
Babini / Biagi
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Oschersleben (GER)
P1
Babini / Biagi
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Istanbul (TUR)
P2
Babini / Biagi
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Zhuhai (CH)
P4
Babini / Biagi
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Dubai (UAE)
P5
Babini / Biagi
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Bahrain (BAH)
P8
Babini / Biagi
Spa Francorchamps 24h GT 2005
F Babini / T Biagi - FIA GT Winners at Oschersleben, 28 August 2005
P3 at Imola 2005
2006
Silverstone (UK)
P5
Biagi / Davies
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Brno (CR)
P6
Biagi / Davies
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Oschersleben (GER)
P2
Biagi / Davies
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Spa 24h (BLQ)
NC
Biagi / Vosse / Davies
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Paul Ricard (FRA)
P3
Biagi / Davies
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Digione (FRA)
P1
Biagi / Davies
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Mugello (ITA)
P3
Biagi / Davies
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Budapest (UNG)
P7
Biagi / Davies
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Adria (ITA)
P1
Biagi / Davies
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Dubai (UAE)
P3
Biagi / Davies
En-route to victory at Dijion
P3 at the final race of the season at Dubai
Pit Stop & driver swap at Brno, Czech Republic
2007
Zhuhai (CH)
NC
Bertolini / Piccini
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Silverstone (UK)
P5
Bertolini / Piccini
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Bucharest (ROM)
P1
Bertolini / Piccini
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Monza (ITA)
P8
Bertolini / Piccini
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Oschersleben (GER)
P4
Bertolini / Piccini
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Spa 24h (BLQ)
NC
Bertolini / Piccini
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Adria (ITA)
P2
Bertolini / Piccini
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Brno (CR)
P4
Bertolini / Piccini
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Nogaro (FRA)
P6
Bertolini / Piccini
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Zolder (BLQ)
P8
Bertolini / Piccini
Bertolini crossing the line to win at Bucharest
2008
Silverstone (UK)
P7
Ramos / Negrao
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Monza (ITA)
P2
Ramos / Negrao
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Adria (ITA)
P20
Ramos / Negrao
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Oschersleben (GER)
P4
Ramos / Negrao
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Spa 24h (BLQ)
P2
Ramos / Negrao / Lemeret / Pier Guidi
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Bucharest (ROM)
P2
Ramos / Negrao
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Brno (CR)
P7
Ramos / Negrao
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Nogaro (FRA)
P1
Ramos / Negrao
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Zolder (BLQ)
P6
Ramos / Negrao
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------San Luis (ARG)
NC
Ramos / Negrao
2nd Place at Monza in the wet
Leading at Nogaro, France
Miguel Ramos with #007
2009
Silverstone (UK)
NC
Ramos / Müller
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Adria (ITA)
P3
Ramos / Müller
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Oschersleben (GER)
P3
Ramos / Müller
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Spa 24h (BLQ)
P6
Ramos / Müller / Lemy / Poele
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Hungaroring (HUN)
NC
Ramos / Müller
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Algarve (POR)
P3
Ramos / Müller
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Paul Ricard (FRA)
P2
Ramos / Müller
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Zolder (BLQ)
P7
Ramos / Müller
Alex Müller starting from Pole at the Hungaroring
#007 leading the pack into Les Combes at Spa 24h 2009
#007 qualifyed on Pole (2:18.030) at the Spa 24h race
Ramos / Müller secured 2nd place at Paul Ricard
2010
Yas Marina (UAE)
P9
Margaritis / Heger
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Silverstone (UK)
P6
Margaritis / Heger
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Brno (CR)
P21
Margaritis / Heger
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Paul Ricard (FRA)
P3
Margaritis / Heger
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Spa 24h (BLQ)
P2
Müller / Heger
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Nurburgring (GER)
P20
Müller / Heger
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Algarve (POR)
P9
Müller / Heger
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Navarra (SPA)
NC
Müller / Longin
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Interlagos (BRA)
P10
Müller / Heger
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------San Luis (ARG)
P9
Müller / Heger
Yas Marina, Abu Dhabi 2010 - No.33 (#007) driven by Heger/Margaritis
Raining at Silverstone
P3 at Paul Ricard
Triple H Team Hegersport - Mueller and Heger, 2nd at Spa Francorchamps, 31 July 2010
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