As you admire your surroundings, the broad wood-rimmed wheel dominates the cabin, your gaze inextricably drawn to the black-on-yellow cavallino rampante at its centre.
The slender rim is delicate to the touch, a tactile delight.
Behind it, the heavily cowled main instruments – an 8000rpm Veglia tacho to the left, redlined at a whisker over 6500rpm, a 180mph speedo to the right – flank secondary dials relaying the pressure and temperature of the oil.
Over to your left, a further set of gauges informs you whether your amps are ample and your water is warm, a fuel gauge and clock completing the comprehensive line-up.
Below those lies a row of mysteriously unidentified rocker switches, the various functions of which remain a mystery.
Turn then press the key to fire up the 3967cc Colombo V12, blipping the throttle until it settles into a gruff idle and the warming oil begins to dissipate the chill of a winter morning.
The Ferrari 330GT Nembo Spyder’s tail apes the 275GTB NART Spyder
There’s no indication of where reverse might be hiding, but once we find it the Ferrari trickles out of its garage with all the docility of a mass-market saloon.
Even better, there’s no sign of that recalcitrant second gear that enjoys such notoriety among pub bores; the Nembo slots cleanly through the ratios with an unexpected ease.
The last Ferrari that I drove was a quarter of a century younger than this one, but the Nembo has a far superior shift.
The soundtrack is none too shabby, either.
Subtle layers of sound – valvegear, transmission, fat Webers, exhaust – overlap to form a whole that fully justifies the endless column inches that Maranello’s V12s have generated over the decades.
The steering is beautifully communicative, the chassis benign and, as your speed builds, you itch for an unrestricted, traffic-free road on which to stretch this thoroughbred mongrel’s very long legs.
‘Even within the legal limit, it is willing and beguiling, a sophisticate goading you into acting like a hooligan’
Even within the realm of the legal limit it is a willing, beguiling and very enticing partner, a sophisticate goading you into acting like a hooligan.
Richard Allen was a keen racer and hillclimber in Ferrari circles and it’s easy to see how this magnificent car would have appealed to such a man.
Alas, he sadly passed away late in 2016, but not before resolving that he should leave a lasting legacy.
Having seen first hand the invaluable work performed by medical crews at motorsport events all over the country, Allen decreed that his Nembo Ferrari should be sold and the proceeds be donated to the East Anglia Air Ambulance.
Images: Tony Baker
Thanks to: H&H Auctions; Chateau Impney; Tony Willis at the Maranello Concessionaires Archive; Neil Corns; John Collins at Talacrest. Richard Allen’s Ferrari went under the hammer in March 2017. It sold for £596,250
This was first in our March 2017 magazine; all information was correct at the date of original publication
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Malcolm Thorne
Malcolm Thorne is a contributor to – and former Deputy Editor of – Classic & Sports Car