My Car Quest

February 23, 2026

A Cast Aside Ferrari Concept Car Finds a True Believer…

by Wallace Wyss – 

The concept car is often what starts a new group of fans, waiting hungrily for the production model. Alas, sometimes the concept does not get the green light and it remains a one off.

In this case, the Dino 206GT was productionized but alas, most of the interesting features of one of the most interesting concepts built on its chassis were cast aside in the face of production realities — laws in various countries.

From 1966, the World Sportscar Championship was organized to conform  to the FIA’s new Appendix J regulations. The fastest cars were expected to come from the Group 6 Prototype class where there was no minimum production requirement or engine limit.

Running alongside the Prototypes in the World Sportscar Championship would be cars from the Group 4 Sports class. Group 4 cars were typically split into sub-divisions for over and under two-liters. To qualify, a minimum of 50 vehicles had to be built.

To contest the under two-liter Group 4 category, Ferrari created a new Dino-badged model: the 206S, a two liter V6. “Dino” was the nickname of Ferrari’s son Alfredino. who died while in his ‘20s, while working as an engineer at the factory.

The plan for the 206S was for it to be run by a works race team, and the rest sold to private racers. But alas, there were labor strikes then and they couldn’t get enough of them built to meet the minimum.

Only 18 were built, some sitting on the back lot to 1967. But the factory still had a continuing need to build concept cars. An un-used race car chassis would do,  so three of them were rolled to different factories for rebodying.

Chassis 020, 034 and 036 went to Ferrari’s then favorite coachbuilder, Pininfarina, for concept car styling. Chassis 034 became the Dino 206 S Pininfarina Competizione shown here. Unveiled at the Frankfurt Motor Show in September 1967, it later was renumbered 10523. Credited with the design was Paolo Martin.

Dino 206 S Pininfarina Competizione

Another of the three, 020, was named the 250P5 and unveiled at the Geneva Motor Show in March 1968. The last of the three was 036. named the Ferrari P6, making its debut at the Turin Motor Show in November 1968.

What made the yellow coupe  different was gullwinged doors, and a huge rear spoiler on stilts. And it had a short not full width front spoiler on the nose, and the headlights were lower and wider than the lights that eventually graced the production 206GT. Late in its show career it got the flamboyant rear spoiler.

Because it was a race car, the Tipo 231 B engine had been used at the Le Mans 24 Hour race in 1966. The all-alloy 65° V6s originally ran dry-sump lubrication, dual overhead camshafts, two valves per cylinder and single plug ignition with one coil. Displacement was 1986 cc. With the standard 10.8:1 compression ratio and a trio of Weber 40 DCN carburetors, peak output was 218 bhp at 9000 rpm. (another source says 175 bhp at 6500 rpm).

Though originally never intended to be run on the street, long after its show debut, it was lusted after by a persistent American collector who said he would not only buy the car but pay all costs for it to be converted for street use.

Dino 206 S Pininfarina Competizione

Pininfarina finally gave in, so in 2008, it was sold to film producer Jim Glickenhaus. It took a lot of work but it paid off and now that American drives a one-off Ferrari…a car that can be credited as the “daddy” of the production 206GT. It is rare for a concept car to have documented racing credentials but in this case if someone says “That engine sounds like a race car,” he can start out his answer with “As a matter of fact….”

Let us know what you think in the Comments.

 

Wallace Wyss

THE AUTHOR /ARTIST Wallace Wyss (rhymes with”Reese” ) specializes in portraying Ferraris on canvas. For availability of this work, write mendoart7@gmail.com

 

 

Ferrari Dino 206GT - Art by Wallace Wyss

Ferrari Dino 206GT – Art by Wallace Wyss

Photos from Supercars.net. Art by Wallace Wyss.
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A Cast Aside Ferrari Concept Car Finds a True Believer...
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A Cast Aside Ferrari Concept Car Finds a True Believer...
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A rare Ferrari Dino 206 S Pininfarina Competizione Concept.
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