Other than new seals for the brakes and clutch, plus a replacement Becker radio – the original was missing – the rest of the car is wonderfully patinated.
The paint, leather, carpets, chrome and even the loom were all carefully conserved.
Such was the Odyssey restorers’ dedication that they even found a chemical process to lift water-slide transfers during cleaning so they could be replaced.
After a hectic schedule to get the car finished for Pebble Beach, the ATS arrived in Monterey with just 50km of testing under its belt.
“We were the only entrant in our class to do the road tour, and had a great run following an Alfa Romeo ‘Two-Nine’,” enthuses McGough.
“Now I love to drive it just for fun. We have some great local routes in northern Minnesota. Once opened up, it really feels like a race car and the handling is beautifully balanced.”
Prior to only its second showing at Amelia Island, we hooked up with Tom McGough and Rasmussen to see if the ATS lived up to Griff Borgeson’s glowing 1964 report in Road & Track.
‘Thanks to the absolute perfection of the car in every way,’ Borgeson marvelled, ‘I have never felt safer at high speed nor have I been more impressed... The car has the magic of truly great performance that comes from brilliant design and not brute strength.
‘I was haunted by the thought that what Bugatti was noted for in the past was here, brought fully up-to-date: a modern road-race thoroughbred, in the fullest sense, that anyone can buy.’
The ATS 2500GT’s replacement Becker radio is one of the few non-original parts
Borgeson’s excitement obviously infected editor Dean Batchelor, who selected a Targa Florio shot of the car for the cover, but the publicity was too late because ATS was already sinking.
So can the gorgeous grey metallic GT match up to its reputation? McGough generously hands over the keys for a spirited run around northern Florida’s back-roads.
Stooping down and climbing into this low-set GT must have felt novel in 1963.
Supportive seats, a full spread of gold-rimmed dials behind the raked Nardi three-spoke wheel and neatly grouped switches have a purposeful character, but this is no stripped-down road-racer.
Plush trimming, electric windows and an expensive Becker radio give it more Latin class than the first Lamborghini Miura.
The layout, too, is better conceived, confirming its racing aspirations. And the pedals are perfectly placed for nifty heel-and-toe gearchanges.
Prime the Webers, press the key and the engine fires boisterously close behind. Its deep bark feels and sounds Italian, not unlike a Lancia D50.
The gorgeous ATS 2500GT was the work of Franco Scaglione, who later styled the Alfa Romeo Tipo 33 Stradale for Carlo Chiti
The first challenge is the straight-cut ’box, but light traffic allows for fast, short changes – the only way to work the narrow, five-speed, Ferrari-style gate.
Stretch the motor and bang the short lever up and down the chrome slots to avoid embarrassing noises. The clutch is sharp, too, and demands a positive action.
The V8’s initial response feels sluggish, yet performance builds as the revs rise.
Don’t expect to be pinned to your seat from the green light, but it’s soon snarling up to our imposed limit of 6000rpm.
Quickly it’s clear that Chiti’s little motor loves to rev. Unlike most V8s, the ATS isn’t cammy and the power sweeps straight up through the full range.
On one open stretch we work briskly through the gears, and without any drama that pretty snout is punching the humid Florida air at 110mph.
The car begs to go quicker and feels superbly stable at speed. It would have been fascinating to find a disused airfield and really push the handling to see how this early mid-engined layout reacts at the limit, but on the road it feels sharp and race-bred.
With the panoramic view through the wide windscreen and slightly offset pedals, it feels like an early Lancia Stratos.
‘The car begs to go quicker and feels superbly stable at speed’
The superb rack-and-pinion steering is direct and positive, with ideal weight build-up as you turn in.
Around the mountain roads of the Targa Florio, where the two works ATSs failed early with ignition problems, this sleek, compact supercar must have felt brilliantly nimble against the unwieldy AC Cobras and Ford GT40s in 1964.
Only Porsche drivers experienced such balance and poise. The brakes are over-servoed and the lack of initial bite doesn’t inspire, but push deeper and the Dunlop discs start to work harder.
The lighter, sportier, alloy-bodied GTS would no doubt feel much sharper and faster.
With a relatively narrow footprint and high-profile rubber wrapping the gorgeous Borrani wires, the chassis feels a little twitchy into sharp bends, much like a Porsche 906, and when really pushed it would ultimately bite quickly.
But at fast road speeds it’s light-years ahead of a bullish GT40 or Miura.
Gordon Murray in particular would appreciate the compact form and focused layout of the 2500GT – the McLaren F1 is the closest in spirit to its brilliant and beautiful forerunner.
Like its understated elegance, this car is all about pure driving and not posing in Monte Carlo. You’d much rather be heading for the Col de Turini with that crisp V8 yowling behind.
If only Chiti had focused on this maiden supercar rather than stretching resources and talent with a disastrous Grand Prix programme.
Just imagine a Jolly Club-liveried ATS, festooned with spotlights, with Arnaldo Cavallari pushing it hard on the Monte or the Tour de Corse. The Stratos might never have happened.
Images: Mick Walsh
This was first in our July 2007 magazine; all information was correct at the date of original publication
Factfile
ATS 2500GT
- Sold/number built 1963-’64/eight
- Construction braced chrome-molybdenum tubular chassis, steel body (aluminium for the GTS) built by Allemano
- Engine all-alloy, sohc-per-bank 2467cc 90° V8, with two valves per cylinder, four twin-choke downdraught Weber carburettors or optional Lucas mechanical fuel injection
- Max power 220bhp @ 7500rpm (GTS 250bhp @ 7700rpm)
- Max torque 152lb ft @ 5800rpm
- Transmission ATS or ZF five-speed transaxle, RWD
- Suspension independent, at front by double wishbones, coil springs, anti-roll bar rear double wishbones, forward-facing torque arms, coil springs; telescopic dampers f/r
- Steering rack and pinion
- Brakes Dunlop discs, inboard at rear
- Length 14ft 5in (4394mm)
- Width 5ft 4in (1626mm)
- Height 3ft 9in (1143mm)
- Wheelbase 8ft 4in (2540mm)
- Weight 1800lb (816kg)/1666lb (755kg, GTS)
- 0-60mph 5 secs
- Top speed 150mph
- Mpg 25
- Price new $8500 (1963)/$9440 (GTS)
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Mick Walsh
Mick Walsh is Classic & Sports Car’s International Editor