Ferrari 250 LM #31 Nino Vaccarella Winner "Monza Intereuropa" Limited Ed to 1500 pieces 1/18 Model Car by CMC (1964)
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Buy Ferrari 250 LM #31 Nino Vaccarella Winner "Monza Intereuropa" Limited Ed to 1500 pieces 1/18 Model Car by CMC (1964)
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Ferrari 250 LM #31 Nino Vaccarella Winner "Monza Intereuropa" (1964) Limited Ed to 1500 pieces 1/18 Model Car by CMC | $748.99 | ![]() | |||
Brand new 1/18 scale diecast car model of Ferrari 250 LM #31 Nino Vaccarella Winner "Monza Intereuropa" (1964) Limited Edition to 1500 pieces Worldwide die cast model car by CMC. Limited edition. Brand new box. Real rubber tires. True-to-scale detail. Has steerable wheels. Officially licensed product. Has opening hood, doors and trunk. Authentic and true to scale shaped body. Manufacturer's original unopened packaging. Made of diecast metal with some plastic parts. Detailed interior, exterior, engine compartment. Dimensions approximately L-9.5, W-4, H-2.75 inches. Well-integrated dashboard with a full array of instruments and controls. The car was delivered to Scuderia Filipinetti in Switzerland in 1964 along with another 250 LM. Georges Filipinetti was a racing-crazy entrepreneur and Ferrari general importer for Switzerland. Chassis 5899 was able to win the premiere race for Scuderia Filipinetti. Ludovico Scarfiotti downright outclassed the competition at the Sierra Montagna hill climb on August 30, 1964. Jochen Rindt, who occasionally raced in this vehicle, complained at the time about the Ferrari’s steering wheel being far too large in his opinion and said that it would fit much better in a truck than in a racing car. After a serious accident in 1965, the vehicle was rebuilt – but with a Porsche 906 body instead of the original. The vehicle was then used in this way by several changing Swiss and Austrian owners. After repeated accidents and reconstructions, the car was only properly restored at the end of the 1990s and subsequently certified by Ferrari Classiche in 2005. Nino Vacarella won the Coppa Intereuropa in Monza with this vehicle on September 6, 1964.
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