Lancia Stratos
1973 - 1978
Born from the ingenuity of Nuccio Bertone and the intuition of Cesare Fiorio, the Lancia Stratos was a radical, wedge-shaped rally car built with one purpose: to dominate motorsport. Its mid-mounted Ferrari Dino V6 engine roared, while its futuristic Bertone-designed body sliced through the air. The Stratos was a demanding beast, cramped and unforgiving, but its legendary performance and unique design secured its place as an automotive icon.
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The Lancia Stratos History, Racing & Ultimate Guide
The Stratos was developed for racing and was a prelude to the monstrous Group B cars.
By the late 1960s Lancia's successful Fulvia was still winning rallies but was getting a little aged. By 1969 the company had yet again run into financial difficulties and been taken over by Fiat, who felt that it was time for a replacement to be considered.
A similar thought was going through the mind of Giuseppe Bertone, the head of the Bertone styling house. Lancia had traditionally relied upon Pinninfarina for design work and Bertone wanted to replace them so he took a Fulvia which belonged to one of his friends, fitted a redesigned body to it and drove it to the Lancia factory gates where it passed easily under the barrier.
His proposal to cooperate with Lancia in building the ultimate sports/rally car with the help of his chief designer Marcello Gandini (who had worked on Lamborghini's Countach and Miura) was accepted.
This was a car designed from scratch for rallying, and designed to cope with the toughest conditions that could be thrown at it. It was completely uncompromising; cramped, noisy, stifling, uncomfortable and difficult to drive, particularly in inexperienced hands, it was nevertheless popular with racing crews and racing fans who love to see it in action.
It had a fibreglass wedge shaped shell and wraparound windows which resembled the visor of a crash helmet. Consequently it was once described as looking as though it had fallen from the stratosphere; hence it was given the name 'Stratos'. Vision to the front was superb; to the rear it was practically non-existent but then this was a car designed to stay in front of the pack.
By the time of it's public launch it was powered by a 2.5 litre Ferrari V-6 engine producing 280 brake horsepower; Enzio Ferrari was reluctant to provide this engine at first because he did not want to assist the possible rival to his own Dino V6 but he eventually agreed to provide the 500 engines for the 500 road going cars that Lancia had to manufacture in order to comply with race regulations.
These were detuned to produce 190 brake horsepower but the cars were not put together as well as they could have been and quite a few of them were wrecked by enthusiastic amateurs who thought that they were better drivers than they in fact were.
The Stratos was entered for the World Rally Championship and took first place three years running. In 1975 it won the Swedish Rally, skating over snow and ice; and then to show that it was not only a cold weather car it won the East African Safari Rally despite the dust and heat!
Production came to an end in 1978, by which time just under 500 Stratos had been built.
Lancia Stratos Basics
Manufacturer: Lancia
Production: 1973–1978
Produced: 492 units
Assembly: Italy: Turin
Designer: Marcello Gandini at Bertone
Body style: 2-door coupé
Layout: Transverse mid-engine, rear-wheel drive
Chassis: Steel space-frame structure with integral roll-cage. Fiberglass body
Engine: 2,418 cc (148 cu in) Dino V6
Power output: Stradale: 190 hp
Trans: 5-speed manual
Wheelbase: 2,180 mm (85.8 in)
Length: 3,710 mm (146.1 in)
Width: 1,750 mm (68.9 in)
Height: 1,110 mm (43.7 in)
Curb weight: Stradale: 980 kg (2,161 lb), Group 4: 880 kg (1,940 lb)
Predecessor: Lancia Fulvia HF
Successor: Lancia Rally 037
Achievements
The Lancia Stratos won almost 500 rallies with both official teams and private teams and helped Lancia win the Constructors' World Rally Championship from 1974 to 1976, with 17 victories in the WRC. Lancia won the San Remo Rally in 1974 (Sandro Munari), 1975 and 1976 (Björn Waldegård), 1978 (Markku Alén) and 1979 ("Tony" Fassina); the Tour of Corsica in 1974 (Jean-Claude Andruet), 1975, 1979 and 1981 (Bernard Darniche) and 1976 (Munari); and the Monte Carlo Rally from 1975 to 1977 (Munari) and 1979 (Darniche). This was followed by victories at the Rally Rideau Lakes in 1974 (Munari), the Rally Sweden in 1975 (Waldegård) and the Rally Portugal in 1976 (Munari). Its international record also included 50 victories in the European Rally Championship, with three championships won between 1976 and 1978.
"[The Stratos] is a purpose-built rally car and makes no concessions to comfort or ease of driving."
Motor Trend
Did You Know?
The Stratos was purpose-built for rally dominance and had little concern for everyday usability.
The Stratos employed a mid-mounted Ferrari Dino V6 engine, adding both a performance and aural thrill.
Getting into a Stratos required contortionist skills due to its low roofline, helmet storage cutouts on the doors, and cramped interior.
The Stratos HF Stradale, created for homologation, was surprisingly more civilized than its racing counterpart, offering some creature comforts.
The Stratos captured three consecutive World Rally Constructors' Championships from 1974-1976, cementing its place in motorsport history.
The Full Story
The Lancia Stratos was launched in 1973 to follow in the footsteps of the Fulvia 1600 HF in rally racing. In the decade that followed, this ultra-modern car remained virtually invincible and caused unprecedented upheaval in the discipline, thanks to drivers such as Sandro Munari and Bernard Darniche. Sadly, this fabulous vehicle arrived in the midst of the global oil crisis, and despite its exceptional track record, it failed to achieve the commercial success it deserved.
Visitors to the 1970 Turin Motor Show needed a great deal of imagination in order to catch a glimpse of the Stratos concept car presented on the stand of coachbuilder Bertone, the car that was to dominate international rallies for the next ten years. Yet the pure lines of what was then just a design study immediately appealed to Cesare Fiorio, the head of Lancia Squadra Corsa, the Milanese manufacturer's competition department.
Fiorio saw it as the future replacement for the courageous Fulvia HF and, at his instigation, the Stratos soon moved from the cosy carpets of living rooms to successfully face the mud and snow of the Monte Carlo Rally and the dusty tracks of the Acropolis Rally.
A Replacement for the Fulvia HF
At the following Turin Motor Show, in November 1971, the new Stratos presented by Bertone had little in common with the prototype now known as "Zero", apart from the general layout of the mechanics. The acronym HF was added to the name, indicating Lancia's official involvement in production following the agreement signed in February 1971.
Initially, 400 examples were to be built in the year following its presentation in order to be homologated by the FIA in Group 4 (Special Grand Touring Cars), the top category in international rallying at the time. This was achieved on 1 October 1974, and explains why the Stratos's first victory, in the 1973 Tour de France Auto (Sandro Munari), was in the Prototype category.
Between 1974 and 1976, 491 units of the Stratos were officially produced, of which, according to factory records, 147 were built at Bertone's Grugliasco plant. Information about the rest of the production run remains unclear, since many of the cars were assembled, often individually and on an ad hoc basis, at the Lancia plant in Chivasso or at the Service Course workshop in Via Caraglio, Turin.
The Lancia Stratos was replaced by the Fiat 131 in December 1978, as the group's spearhead in the World Rally Championship.
A Hugely Efficient Machine
For this extraordinary machine, everything was sacrificed in favour of performance. In fact, it was a radical, innovative car that was regarded as the driving force in the introduction of Group B racing cars in the early 1980s.
The Stratos was designed primarily for racing, and particularly for rallying. It was extremely compact (3.71 m long!), with front and rear cantilevers reduced to a strict minimum. The chassis consisted of a self-supporting monocoque central cell made from pressed, folded and boxed sheet steel. I
t was extended by spars at the front to support the suspension and a tubular cradle at the rear to house the Ferrari-supplied engine and gearbox unit. The bodywork featured two large front and rear covers, integrating the wings and fully tipping over to allow maximum access to the powertrain.
These elements, like the doors, were made from polyester resin and fibreglass to save weight.
A Ferrari Engine
Development of the Stratos was supervised by Giovanni Tonti, Technical Director of the Racing Department, assisted by a team led by Sergio Camuffo and composed of engineers Francesco De Virgilio, Francesco Faleo and Nicola Materazzi. Gianpaolo Dallara, the brilliant chassis designer of the Lamborghini Miura and De Tomaso Pantera, was responsible for the rear central layout of the Ferrari V6 engine and transmission.
At the same time, drivers Claudio Maglioli and Michael Parkes were responsible for testing. Right from the start of the project, Lancia Managing Director Pierrugo Gobbato, with the help of Enzo Ferrari, battled with Fiat management in order to obtain the engine of the Dino 246 GT. In December 1972, Fiat gave the go-ahead for 500 units to be produced. The V6 engine was flexible, easy to use and extremely robust, to the extent that it could easily cope with the 380 bhp of the turbocharged version used in Group 5.
The Stradale version produced 190 bhp with maximum torque of 23 mkg at 4,000 rpm, while the racing version delivered between 230 and 280 bhp depending on the configuration.
The Production Road Car
Built from scratch to contest World Rally, the Stratos was the first of its kind. It practically changed the sport, and started a new era in rally when manufacturers created thinly disguised race cars to homologate as production cars.
Roughly based on a dramatic concept car released by Bertone at the 1971 Turin Motor Show, the production version was seen a year later and had everyone looking twice. Aside from its short, wide and wedge-shaped body by Bertone, the Stratos had all the hallmarks of a winning race car.
Every Stratos used a mid-mounted Ferrari V6, but in varying states of tune. For instance, 280 bhp turbocharged versions were permitted to race in the Group 5 class, while the 400 road cars used a standard spec 190 bhp engine.
In 1973, the Stratos was produced in sufficient numbers to homologate it in Group 4 and it won the 1974, 1975 and 1976 championships in the capable hands of Sandro Munari.
Stratos Timeline
1970
Nearly November of 1970 at the Turin motor-show, coachbuilder Bertone presents the Stratos (then called Zero) with the engine of the Lancia Fulvia mounted in a rear-central position.
1971
November of 1971, Turin motor-show, the Lancia Stratos HF is presented on Bertone’s stand. Born in collaboration with the sports division of Lancia, it was presented with the centrally mounted engine of the Ferrari Dino. The official press release stated that the final version would be with a different engine.
1972
On the 2nd of February 1972 Enzo Ferrari calls Pierugo Gobbato to congratulate him on the victory of the Lancia Fulvia in the Monte Carlo rally and to say that he was willing to provide 500 246 Dino engines for the Stratos.
Early March 1972, we begin to encounter some difficulties with Ferrari regarding the production of the Dino engines. By the end of May 1972, Ferrari provides 10 engines to the racing division of Lancia to evaluate its mounting on the Stratos prototypes.
End of August 1972, the racing division of Lancia announces 240hp for the first Stratos engine. Beginning of November 1972, first and early participation at the Tour of Corsica as Lancia were still uncertain regarding the supply of 500 engines from Ferrari.
14th of December 1972, Fiat finally drops its' resistance and Ferrari is able to supply the 500 engines.
1973
8th of April 1973 the Stratos gets its first victory at the Firestone Rally. The 15th of May it finishes 2nd at the Targa Florio and on the 23rd of September the Stratos wins the Tour de France Auto – Its first major victory. In 1973 the racing division of Lancia builds the first Stratos engine with 4 valves per cylinder along with the Stratos turbocharged engine.
1974
1st of October 1974 the Stratos is homologated by the FIA in Group 4 division.
"Driving a Stratos is an unforgettable experience. It's raw, visceral, and incredibly demanding."
Sports Car Digest