The Cizeta V16T a forgotten supercar.

A supremely exotic car which just happened to debut at a colossally bad time.

September 12 ,2018

Back in 1991, cars don’t get much more exotic than this. The Cizeta had many of the same advantages that would later make Pagani a success but that which makes a good car does not always make good money. On paper, the Cizeta V16T seems as though it would have been a huge success and simply didn’t have what it took to compete with better established exotic carmakers. This happens to be the facts despite it being built by a group of people who were well versed in the world of super exotic cars.

Cizeta Automobili was first known as Cizeta Moroder which was a joint venture between Claudio Zampolli and Giorgio Moroder. The "Cizeta" part of the name is how Zampolli’s initials (C.Z.) are pronounced in Italian. Zampolli was involved in supercars through his dealership, where he sold and serviced the high-priced machines. Moroder is a record producer, famous for having made any number of disco hits as well as the entire soundtrack for the film "Scarface". The pair met when Moroder brought his Lamborghini into Zampolli’s shop to be serviced. But the partnership wouldn’t end up lasting all that long, and when delivered, the cars were badged simply as Cizeta.

The car takes designing lessons from the Lamborghini Diablo in the design of the V16T. The good part about this is that it was actually the original design for Lambo, penned by Marcello Gandini just before the Chrysler takeover of Lamborghini in 1987. Gandini had designed both the Miura and the Countach, both hugely important cars in the history of Lamborghini. But the new bosses at Chrysler thought his design for the Diablo was too outrageous, and would tone it down before the car’s debut in 1990. Gandini, an obviously talented designer, was infuriated by this tinkering with his vision and in the end handed over his original design to to Cizeta.

The car housed in a 6.0-liter engine produced 540 horsepower, and was said to be faster than a Diablo, although this was never officially confirmed. The sixteen-cylinder was made of two flat-plane V8s joined together with a common crankcase. With its eight camshafts, the engine is different not only from the W16 found in the Bugatti Veyron, but also from just about every other automotive engine ever produced. The Modena-based company would begin actually selling the car in 1991, and by this point it was in direct competition with its spiritual offspring, the Diablo. The "T" in the name does not stand for "turbocharged" but rather "transverse". That the massive engine is transversely-mounted and is the reason why the car is so incredibly wide, but the alternative would have been one that was absurdly long. The V16T had several advantages over the Lambo, but price was certainly not one of them.

At a price of $300,000 in 1991 the V16T was about double the price of the Diablo, but without being double the car. The name Cizeta also didn’t carry the same weight as Lamborghini, and in the end, just eight cars were produced before production shut down in 1995.

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