What if you could have all that exotic Italian style but powered by a simple, powerful and reliable Mustang V8? Well, you could! Ford’s failure to buy Ferrari famously gave us the GT40 and Le Mans success but it also gave us the De Tomaso Pantera. Exotic style, straightforward V8 muscle and a car intended to offer American buyers a Ferrari-rivalling supercar you could service at the local Ford dealership.
Such was the dream. The reality being that early Panteras, sold through Lincoln and Mercury dealers, were in fact the worst of both worlds, with shoddy build quality and lazily tuned engines dumbed down to cope with American smog rules. Things improved, Ford getting a grip of quality control while the huge aftermarket support for tuning Mustangs and Cobras offered owners easy access to serious power, many Panteras ‘hot-rodded’ to some extent or other.
After just four years and around 5,000 sales in the US Ford decided to exit the programme, leaving De Tomaso to limp on and the Pantera to gain weight, flares and wings in an attempt to keep pace with the Countach, Testarossa and similar. They were still being built into the early 90s and now ex-Lotus boss Danny Bahar is seeking to revive the car as a re-bodied Lamborghini Huracan under his new Ares bespoke luxury brand.
Inevitably though, the Pantera was at its best in its early, unadorned state. And that was what I thought I wanted and had found in the shape of this rather nice and original looking 1974 example. Lovely, and about the tenth the price of a Countach or 512BB.