Stunning Fully Functional 1:3 Scale Ferrari 312PB

  • Thread starter Thread starter kranzx
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Thats insane. How awesome would it be to have that sitting in your living room? Definitely a conversation starter. Now to find a 1/3 scale person that could fit in the thing. :lol:
 
Sweet. If only he would have strayed from the design far enough to include actuators for remote-controlled operation...
 
No words, just this...

jawdrop.gif
 
I saw this video many years ago on TV, I always wanted to see it again, thanks for posting.
 
My gosh! That was amazing. I bet George Shrinks, the cartoon character would be perfect for this! :dopey:
 
WOW...

i have always dreamed of a scaled down model, that actually works, and this guy has done it! MY GOD, i love him! And the car sounds good too! :drool:
 
I saw this video many years ago on TV, I always wanted to see it again, thanks for posting.
It's also been around the 'net a couple of times - first time I saw it was about 1998. Funny how things spread in recurring waves, just like an epidemic. This happens to be the bug currently spreading around the automitive boards.

It is cool, though, without doubt.

[EDIT]

D'oh! On watching it once again, I just realized that's Clarkson doing the interview! Nice 'fro, Jeremy!
 
It's stunning 👍

How on earth did he ever develop those skills to, I mean, just look how he designed the whole engine, that's just so impressive, I've got nothing else to say then :eek:👍
 
So, some guy has no money at all and in twelve years builds a working replica of a race car by himself. And he just happens to have a large area he can use for machining custom parts and whatnot...I think I would have spent twelve years doing something a bit more worthwhile and then pay to have that designed in about a year.

I'm not dissing it or anything, I'd love to have one.
 
I used to dream of one day, I'd take a very, very long time building one unbelievably detailed model...... This guy took it one step further. :bowdown:
 
Although it's been posted before, that scale model is definitely a project that blows the mind. It's so intricate and well-designed, that I just couldn't fathom it's detail, that is... until I heard how long it took to make.
 
Holy! O_O

now all he needs to do is make a 1/3 scale humanoid robot to drive it and make THAT remote controll. haha!
 
I saw this as well on that show, extreme machines i think it was. Absolutely quality car..makes you wanna pick up some tools and make one yourself.

Would be great to see someone do an F1 car like that.
 
I remember seeing this on Discovery. It must take so much skill and patience to build something like that. Are there any specs on this? Top Speed, BHP etc. I couldn't hear the audio because I'm at work so if it was mentioned in there, apologies.

Just found this aswell.

There are few if any models in the world to rival the Ferrari 312PB built by Pierre Scerri of Avignon, France. This 1:3 scale marvel is the real thing in every sense, from its operating 12-cylinder engine to the exact scale operating Ferrari gauges which are calibrated precisely to indicate rpm, oil pressure, water temperature and oil temperature.

It took Pierre 15 years and more than 20,000 hours to build this car. He learned to make glass so he could make the exact pattern lens for the operating headlights. He learned to make rubber so he could mold his own tires. His computer mainframe design background with the French telecommunications system allowed him to duplicate the Ferrari electronics system in exact miniature. It also provided him with the understanding needed to make a 1/3 scale operating fuel injection system identical to that in the full-size Ferrari.

Perhaps the toughest aspect of the car was the gearbox, for which Ferrari supplied drawings. While Pierre had an understanding of the object to be built, he lacked the very expensive specialized equipment required to build high-tolerance gears and synchros. Colleti, the builder of the full-size car’s gearbox ended up building the model’s gearbox.

There is no sign of deviation from the real car in terms of replication. The spark plugs are miniatures, the radiators were hand-built to the exact same core design as the real ones. Even the water reservoir fill cap is a Fiat radiator cap made exactly the same way as the real one and pressure tested. The suspension is exact and the hydraulically controlled brakes from the brake pedal have quick-change brake pads just as on the real car.

If you were 1:3 scale, you would open the door of the car, get in, fasten your seat belt as on the full-size car, take you Ferrari key (engraved identically to the real key) and put it into the ignition.
You would flip the toggle switch for the fuel pumps, and with this you would hear the fuel-injection system come to life, powered by a real scale battery built by Pierre. A crew member would stick the hand-held scale starter into the rear transaxle housing and as the engine turned over you would flip the ignition toggle switch and the 12-cylinder engine would come to life with a sound you’d never forget.

This 12-cylinder engine just isn’t any 12-cylinder engine, it is a 1:3 scale Ferrari 12-cylinder engine with the same beautiful sound. It took Pierre six months of running the engine on his own dynamometer to tune the header pipes so they would give off the same sound value as he had recorded from the engine of the real car. Once Pierre had the engine bolted together for the first time, it started on the very first try and, since then, has logged more than fifty hours of running time with no failures or refusals to start (It’s probably more reliable than the real engine).

In short, this model car is so incredible that one has a very difficult time focusing on the fact that it is a model and not a full-size car. Pierre has begun work on a 1:3 scale Ferrari P4. We’ll keep you updated.
 
8O

Uhm....wow.

That makes the miniature steam engines I see at tractor shows pale in comparison. Hope he makes that GT40.
 
Holy cow!! This is one hell of model car
if he make a 1:2 scale model, that would fit a child in it
1:3 may fit an infant but I don't see an infant can drive like an adult :lol:
 
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