| Rod Bean wrote:
>DeTomaso Mangusta = predecessor to the DeTomaso Pantera.  The Mangusta 
>shares something with the Lotus 30/40, a backbone chassis which wasn't 
>rigid enough and made the cars vile handling.  
It shares something else as well, a Windsor family Ford small block V8; 
probably almost the same one, except that in the 30 it was bored out to 
5 litres (right?) and equipped with those elegant downdraft Webers.
I believe the US market Mangustas came with a Boss 302, which is another
proposition altogether.  Boss 302 engines are a rarity, and are highly 
sought after by Ford-heads today.
>I drove a "Mongoose" once on the street... no
>problem at normal speeds.  Beeeoootiful bodywork.
Yeah, I agree.  Drop dead gorgeous!  I've always kinda thought of the 
Mangusta as a poor man's Miura.
While on the subject of Lotus / DeTomaso similarities, how about the
DeTomaso Vallelunga?  I kid you not...  This was a very elegant 1600lb. 
mid engine coupe using a backbone chassis, Ghia glassfibre bodywork,
Ford Kent power (presumably 116E sideflow, but not verified) and a 
Hewland Mark series transaxle.  All of this in 1965, well before the 
Europa first appeared.  Unfortunately, only about 50 of these 
interesting little road cars were ever produced.  Imagine a Vallelunga 
with a healthy twink installed.
Dunno about headroom in a Vallelunga, tho....  ;-)
Anyone here ever driven one?
Regards,
Erik Berg
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