The 246GT was delivered new in December 1971 with a Nero leather interior plus optional radio, nose bar and electric windows.
In 1991, when still stabled with its first owner, it was treated to a major overhaul including an engine rebuild and paint refresh. That combination of rare colour, originality and provenance then led to it being selected as the ‘Definitive Dino’ by the Haynes National Motor Museum, and exhibited there in 2010, five years after it had been sold to only its second custodian.
A few years after that, in November 2012, it featured as the cover star of Classic & Sports Car magazine – alongside a Ferrari Dino 308GT4 – and it was also once described by Autocar as “one of the one hundred most beautiful cars in pictures”.
The November 2012 cover of Classic & Sports Car magazine
With another £10,000 worth of work carried out on it last year – including an overhaul of its suspension and brakes, plus new seats, carpets, and a dashboard and interior re-trim – and with a mere 51,786 miles under its belt, it goes to auction in fantastic condition. All of which helps to explain its rather hefty £240-280,000 estimate…