The Maserati Quattroporte (Italian pronunciation:[ˌkwattroˈpɔrte]) is a four-door luxurysportssedan produced by Italian automobile manufacturer Maserati. The name translated from Italian means "fourdoors". The car is in its sixth generation, with the first generation introduced in 1963.
The original Maserati Quattroporte (Tipo AM107) was built between 1963 and 1969. It was a large saloon powered by V8 engines—both firsts for a series production Maserati automobile.
History
The task of styling the Quattroporte was given to Turinese coachbuilder Pietro Frua, who drew inspiration from a special 5000 GT (chassis number 103.060) which he had designed in 1962 for Prince Karim Aga Khan.[5] While the design was by Frua, body construction was carried out by Vignale.
Series I (1963–1966)
The Quattroporte was introduced at the October–November 1963 Turin Motor Show,[6] where a pre-production prototype was on the Maserati stand next to the Mistral coupé. Regular production began in 1964.
The Tipo 107 Quattroporte joined two other grand tourers, the Facel Vega and the Lagonda Rapide, capable of traveling at speeds of up to 200 km/h (124 mph) on the new motorways in Europe.
It was equipped with a 4.1-litre (4,136 cc or 252 cu in) V8 engine, rated at 260 PS DIN (191 kW; 256 hp) at 5,000 rpm, and equipped with either a five-speed ZFmanual transmission or a three-speed Borg Warner automatic on request. Maserati claimed a top speed of 230 km/h (143 mph).
The car was also exported to the United States, where federal regulations mandated twin round headlamps in place of the single rectangular ones found on European models.
Maserati manufactured 230 of its first generation Quattroportes Between 1963 and 1966.
Series II (1966–1969)
In 1966, Maserati revised the Tipo 107, adding the twin headlights already used on the U.S. model. A leaf-sprungsolid axle took the place of the previous De Dion tube. The interior was completely redesigned, including the dashboard which now had a full width wood-trimmed fascia.
In 1968 alongside the 4.1-litre a 4.7-litre version became also available (AM107/4700), developing 290 PS (213 kW; 286 hp) DIN. Top speed increased to a claimed 255 km/h (158 mph),[7] making the Quattroporte 4700 the fastest four-door sedan in the world at the time.[8]
Around 500 of the second series were made, for a total of 776 Tipo 107 Quattroportes. Production ended in 1969.[7]
Specifications
The first generation of the Quattroporte had a steel unibody structure, complemented by a front subframe.
Front suspension was independent, with coil springs and hydraulic dampers. Rear suspension used a coil sprung De Dion tube featuring inboard brakes on the first series, later changed to a more conventional Salisbury leaf sprung solid axle with a single trailing link on the second series. On both axles there were anti-roll bars. Brakes were solid Girling discs all around. A limited slip differential was optional.
Engines
The long lived quad cam, all-aluminium Maserati V8 engine made its début on the Quattroporte. It featured two chain-driven overhead camshafts per bank, 16 angled valves, hemispherical combustion chambers, inserted cast iron wet cylinder liners, and was fed through an aluminium, water-cooled inlet manifold by four downdraft twin-choke Weber carburetors—initially 38 DCNL 5 and 40 DCNL 5 on 4200 and 4700 cars respectively, later changed to 40 DCNF 5 and 42 DCNF 5 starting from December 1968.[4]
In 1971, Karim Aga Khan ordered another special one-off based on the Maserati Indy platform. Rory Brown was commissioned as the chief engineer of the project. The car received the 4.9-litre V8 engine (Tipo AM 107/49), rated at 300 PS (221 kW; 296 hp).[9]Carrozzeria Frua designed the car, the prototype of which was displayed in 1971 and 1972 in Paris and Geneva respectively.[10] The car was production ready, even receiving its own chassis code (AM 121), but new owner Citroën used their influence to have Maserati develop the SM-based Quattroporte II instead.[11] Only two vehicles were finished, chassis #004 was sold by Maserati to the Aga Khan in 1974, and the prototype #002 went to the King of Spain, who bought the car directly from Frua.[10]
Maserati had planned to equip Quattroporte II with a V8 engine, but the Tipo 107 V8 engine was too large for the Citroën SM based chassis on top of being too obsolete.[13] A prototype for a 4.0-litre V8 engine was built from two compact Citroën-Maserati V6 engines. Maserati cut through the rear cylinders in half on one block (2.5 cylinders per bank, discarding the rear) and the middle cylinders in half on another block (1.5 cylinders per bank, discarding the front) then welded the blocks together. The output was 190 kW (258 PS; 255 hp). The new V8 engine was fitted to the Citroën SM for durability testing which lasted for 17,000 km (10,563 miles). This was done to prove that the chassis was robust enough to handle the additional power of the larger engine.[14]Alejandro de Tomaso, the Italian entrepreneur who took over Maserati in 1975, cancelled the V8 engine programme.
A single running prototype of the Quattroporte II was built and tested in 1974.[15] The 1973 oil crisis and the collapse of Citroën's finances in 1974 prevented Maserati from gaining the EEC approval for the European market. The production did not commence until 1976, and each Quattroporte II was built to order and sold in the Middle East and Spain where the type approval was not needed.[9][16] Only twelve production cars were built from 1976 to 1978.
The engineering and development had cost Maserati about four billion lire by the time the production ended in 1978.[9]
The third generation of the Maserati Quattroporte (Tipo AM 330) was developed under the Alejandro de Tomaso-GEPI ownership. After the Citroën-era front-wheel drive Quattroporte II, the third generation returned to rear-wheel drive with an enlarged variation of the Maserati Tipo 107V8 engine. The exterior was designed by Giorgetto Giugiaro.
History
From 1974 to 1976, Giorgetto Giugiaro presented two Italdesign show cars on Maserati platforms, called the Medici I and Medici II. The latter had features that would make it into the production version of the third-generation of the Quattroporte.
A pre-production Quattroporte was introduced to the press by the then Maserati president Alejandro de Tomaso on 1 November 1976,[19] in advance of its début at the Turin Motor Show later that month. It was only three years later though, in 1979, that the production version of the car went on sale.[20][21] De Tomaso, who disliked Citroën, removed all of the influence of the French marque from the car. The quad-cam V8 engines built since 1963 were used in a stretched version of the Maserati Kyalami chassis. The SM V8 engine prototype under development in the Citroën ownership was also scrapped and the staff was replaced, the most notable being head engineer Giulio Alfieri who was replaced by Aurelio Bertocchi. The hydraulic system of the Quattroporte II was replaced by a conventional power steering setup and the suspension geometry was akin to the Jaguar XJ.[22]
Initially badging reading "4PORTE" was used, but this was changed in 1981 to ones spelling out "Quattroporte". Two versions of the V8 engine were available: a 4,930 cc (4.9 L) version generating a maximum power output of 280 PS (206 kW; 276 hp),[21] and a smaller built-to-order 4,136 cc (4.1 L) engine generating 255 PS (188 kW; 252 hp),[21][23] which was phased out in 1981. The interior was upholstered in leather and trimmed in briar wood. The climate controls came from the Mopar parts bin on early US-spec cars.[24] In 1984, the climate control system was upgraded to share parts with the mass produced Biturbo.[23]
The Quattroporte III marked the last of the hand-built Italian cars; all exterior joints and seams were filled to give a seamless appearance. From 1987 onwards, the Royale superseded the Quattroporte. The Quattroporte III was an instant success and 120 units were sold in Italy in 1980 alone.[17]
Maserati Royale
On 14 December 1986, at Maserati's 60th anniversary as a car manufacturer, De Tomaso presented the Maserati Royale in Modena, a built-to-order, ultra-luxury version of the Quattroporte.[25] It featured a higher compression 4.9-litre V8 engine, generating a maximum power output of 300 PS (221 kW; 296 bhp). Besides the usual leather upholstery and veneer trim, the car featured a revised dashboard with an analogue clock, four electrically adjustable seats, retractable veneered tables in the rear doors, and a mini-bar. Visually, the Royale was distinguished by new disc-shaped alloy wheels and silver-coloured side sills. A limited production run of 120 cars was announced,[25] but when production ceased in 1990 only 53 cars were completed.
In all, including the Royale, production of the Quattroporte III amounted to 2,155 units in total.[26]
Specifications
The Quattroporte III utilised an all-steel unibody structure. The chassis was related to that of the Kyalami, in turn derived from the De Tomaso Longchamp and therefore ultimately related to the De Tomaso Deauville luxury saloon.
Front suspension was of the double wishbone type, with single coaxial dampers and coil springs and an anti-roll bar.
The rear axle used a peculiar layout very similar to Jaguar independent rear suspension. Each cast aluminium hub carrier was linked to the chassis only by a single lower wishbone, the half shafts doubling as upper control arms, and was sprung by twin coaxial dampers and coil springs units. Rear brakes were mounted inboard, the callipers were bolted directly to the housing of the differential. The entire assembly was supported by a bushing-insulated crossbeam. Initially a Salisbury-type limited slip differential was used; in 1984 it was replaced by a more advanced Gleason-licensed Torsen—or "Sensitork" in Maserati parlance.[27]
The engine was an evolution of Maserati's own all-aluminium, quad overhead camV8, fed by four Weber carburetors.[24] The automatic transmission used was a three-speed Chrysler A727 "Torqueflite" gearbox.[17] The manual gearboxes are ZF S5 five speed units. When leaving the factory all the cars were originally fitted with Pirelli Cinturato 205VR15 tyres (CN72).
Autocostruzioni SD of Turinese coachbuilder Salvatore Diomante also offered a 65 cm longer limousine version, fully equipped with white leather, "abundant burr walnut", mini-bar, video cassette player and many other necessities. The price of the Diomante limousine at its introduction in 1986 was 210 million lire.[26]
The fourth generation of the Quattroporte (Tipo AM337) was manufactured from 1994 to 2001 and was the first car to be produced under the Fiat ownership after Alejandro de Tomaso sold his entire holding to the Italian marque in 1993.[33] It was built on an evolved and stretched (by 5 cm) version of the Biturbo saloon's architecture, and used the twin-turbochargedV6 and later the new AM578 V8 engine from the Shamal flagship grand tourer. For this reason, the car retained very compact exterior dimensions, and is smaller than any of its predecessors and successors. As the designer's signature angular rear wheel arches gave away, the wedge-shaped aerodynamic (Cd=0.31) body was penned by Marcello Gandini.[34]
History
The world première of the fourth generation of the Quattroporte took place at the April 1994 Turin Motor Show[35] and the car went on sale towards the end of the year. Initially the Quattroporte was powered by the twin-turbocharged, 24-valve V6 engines from the Ghibli. For export markets there was a 2.8-litre unit, generating a maximum power output of 284 PS (209 kW; 280 hp) and allowing the car to attain a claimed top speed of 255 km/h (158 mph). As local taxation strongly penalised cars over two-litre in displacement, Italian buyers were offered a 2.0 L version, which developed a little more power (287 PS or 211 kW) but less torque than the 2.8-litre version; on the home market, the 2.8 was not offered until a year after its introduction.[36]
The cabin was fully upholstered in Connolly leather and trimmed in elm burl wood veneer. Weight was also reduced by at least 300 kg (661 lb) as compared to the Quattroporte III primarily due to the compact Biturbo underpinnings and by the use of a compact powerplant.[37]
After having been displayed in December 1995 at the Bologna Motor Show,[38] a 3.2-litre twin-turbocharged V8 Quattroporte was added to the range in 1996: the new AM578 engine, an evolution of the Shamal V8, generated a maximum power output of 335 PS (247 kW; 330 hp). The top speed was claimed to be 270 km/h (168 mph). At the same time, some minor updates were introduced on all models: new eight-spoke alloy wheels and aerodynamic wing mirrors, and seicilindri or ottocilindri (Italian for "six" and "eight-cylinders" respectively) badges on the front fenders, denoting which engine was under the bonnet.
In July 1997, Fiat's subsidiary Ferrari acquired a 50% controlling stake in Maserati S.p.A.. Ferrari immediately undertook a renewal of Maserati's dated production facilities, as well as made improvements to the manufacturing methods and quality control.
The steps taken by the new parent company resulted in the improved Quattroporte Evoluzione which was introduced at the March 1998 Geneva Motor Show.[39] It featured 400 all-new or modified parts out of a total 800 main components.[36] Powertrains and performance remained unvaried, save for the adoption of the same BTR transmission from the 3.2 V8 for the automatic 2.8 V6 model. The Evoluzione no longer had the oval Maserati clock on the dashboard and had redesigned wing mirrors. Ferrari management decided to drop the 2.0 L V6 from the Evoluzione lineup, when they were offered alongside the new 3200 GT, and so the new cars were distinguished from the earlier models by V6 evoluzione or V8 evoluzione badges on the front fenders. Production of the fourth generation of the Quattroporte ended in May 2001 and 2,400 units were made in total with 730 being the Evoluzione versions.[30][40]
Japanese importer Cornes & Co. ordered a special numbered edition of the Quattroporte for their customers. Cornes Serie Speciale were the last cars built and were limited to only 50 examples. Available in both V6 and V8 Evoluzione variants, all were equipped with the automatic transmission. This special edition is the only Quattroporte to have a Maserati badge inserted into the C-door-pillar. Even though other Evoluziones had the Lassale clock replaced with the Maserati trident, this edition retained the original timepiece.[41][42][43]
Specifications
The Quattroporte is a four-door, five-seater saloon with a steel unibody construction. The overall layout remained unchanged from the Biturbo from which the car descended: longitudinalfront engine, rear-wheel drive, all-independent suspension with MacPherson struts upfront and trailing arms at the rear. Despite these similarities, the suspension had been re-engineered: rear trailing arms had a tube framework structure like on the Shamal, together with the limited slip differential. These two components were attached to the body via a newly designed tubular subframe.[30]
The fifth generation of the Quattroporte (Tipo M139) debuted at the Frankfurt Motor Show on 9 September 2003[45] and made its U.S. première at the 2003 Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance; production started in 2003. Exterior and interior design was penned by Pininfarina's then chief designer Ken Okuyama. The last M139 Quattroporte was built on 20 December 2012.[46]
Built on an entirely new platform named the M139, it was 50 cm (19.7 in) longer than its predecessor and sat on a 40 cm (15.7 in) longer wheelbase. The same architecture would later underpin the GranTurismo and GranCabrio coupés and convertibles.
Initially, the Quattroporte was powered by an evolution of the naturally aspirated dry sump 4.2-litre V8 engine, as used in the Maserati Coupé, with an increased power output of 400 PS (294 kW; 395 hp) and new black plastic inlet manifold instead of an aluminium cast one.[47] Due to its greater weight compared to the Coupé and Spyder, the 0–100 km/h (0–62 mph) acceleration time for the Quattroporte is 5.2 seconds and the top speed is measured at 275 km/h (171 mph).[48]
The Maserati Quattroporte was initially offered in only one configuration, equipped with an automated manual transmission, marketed as DuoSelect. The base Quattroporte DuoSelect featured a chrome grille with horizontal slats, adaptive suspension, marketed as Skyhook and 330 mm brake disks with four piston calipers at each wheel. Maserati offered fifteen exterior paint colours, Poltrona Frau leather upholstery in ten colours, contrasting seat piping and stitching and three types of wood inserts.
In 2004, the American luxury department store Neiman Marcus offered a limited edition of the Quattroporte, only available for order through the retailer's 2004 Christmas Catalog at a price of 125,000 USD. Each of the 60 Neiman Marcus Quattroportes was finished in Bordeaux Pontevecchio (wine red) exterior colour and featured a chrome mesh-front grill along with side vents and 19-inch ball-polished wheels. The interior was upholstered in ivory Poltrona Frau leather accented with Bordeaux piping and mahogany wood trim.[50][51]
At the Frankfurt Motor Show in September 2005, Maserati introduced two different trim levels for the Quattroporte, the Executive GT and Sport GT.[52]
The Quattroporte Executive GT was a comfort and luxury-oriented specification; it came equipped with a wood-rimmed steering wheel, an Alcantara-suede interior roof lining; ventilated, adaptive, massaging rear seats, rear air conditioning controls, veneeredretractable rear tables, and curtain shades on the rear windows. The exterior was distinguished by 19 inch eight-spoke ball-polished alloy wheels and chrome mesh front and side grilles.
The Quattroporte Sport GT variant offered several performance upgrades: a re-configured transmission providing faster gearshifts and a firmer Skyhook suspension system; courtesy of new software calibrations, seven-spoke 20 inch wheels with low-profile tyres, cross-drilled brake rotors, and braided brake lines. Model-specific exterior trim included dark mesh front and side grilles and red accents to the Trident badges, as on vintage racing Maserati models. Inside, there were aluminium pedals, a sport steering wheel and carbon fibre in place of the standard wood inserts.
A new 6-speed ZF-supplied automatic transmission was presented at the Detroit Motor Show in January 2007, with the first cars delivered right after the launch, marketed as Maserati Quattroporte Automatica.[53] As all the three trim levels were offered in both DuoSelect and Automatica versions, the lineup grew to six models.
The Quattroporte Sport GT S was introduced at the Frankfurt Motor Show in September 2007. Taking further the Sport GT's focus on handling, this version employed Bilstein single-rate dampers in place of the Skyhook adaptive system. Other changes from the Sport GT were a lowered ride height and 10 mm wider 295/30 rear tyres, front Brembo iron/aluminium dual-cast brake rotors and red-painted six-piston callipers. The cabin was upholstered in mixed Alcantara and leather, with carbon fibre accents; on the exterior, the door handles were painted in body colour and the 20 inch wheels and the exhaust pipes were finished in a "dark chrome" shade.[54]
At the 2008 North American International Auto Show, Maserati launched the Quattroporte Collezione Cento, a special edition of the Quattroporte limited to 100 examples.[55]
Its unique specification featured an ivory paint colour with a waist coachline, matched to Cuoio tan tufted leather upholstery and Wengé trim inlaid with mother of pearl. Standard equipment comprised most of the available infotainment options.
2008–2012 facelift
The facelift Quattroporte débuted at the 2008 Geneva Motor Show. Overseen by Pininfarina, the facelift featured redesigned bumpers, side sills and wing mirrors (the latter carried over from the GranTurismo), a convex front grille with vertical bars instead of horizontal, new headlights and tail lights with directionalbi-xenon main beams and LEDturn signals. Inside there was a new navigation and entertainment system. All Quattroporte models now used the ZF automatic transmission, with the DuoSelect being discontinued.
The 4.2-litre Quattroporte featured single-rate damping comfort-tuned suspension and 18 inch wheels.
Debuting alongside was the Quattroporte S, powered by a wet-sump 4.7-litre V8 engine, the same engine utilised in the Maserati GranTurismo S, with a maximum power output of 430 PS (316 kW; 424 hp) and maximum torque of 490 N⋅m (361 lb⋅ft). In conjunction with the engine, the braking system was upgraded to cross-drilled discs on both axles and dual-cast 360 mm rotors with six piston callipers at the front. Skyhook active damping suspension and 19 inch V-spoke wheels were standard. Trim differences from the standard 4.2-litre cars were limited to a chrome instead of a titanium-coloured front grille.
Production of the facelift Quattroporte models started in June 2008.
The Quattroporte Sport GT S premièred at the North American International Auto Show in January 2009.[56] Its 4.7-litre V8 has a maximum power output of 440 PS (324 kW; 434 hp), ten more than the Quattroporte S, owing to a revised intake and a sport exhaust system with electronically actuated bypass valves. Other mechanical changes were made to the suspension system, where the Sport GT S single-rate dampers took place of the Skyhook system, ride height was further lowered and stiffer springs were adopted.
The exterior was distinguished by a specific front grille with concave vertical bars, black headlight bezels, red accents on the Trident badges, the absence of chrome window trim, body colour door handles and black double oval exhaust pipes instead of the quad round exhaust pipes found on other Quattroporte models. On the interior, the veneer trim was replaced by "Titan Tex" composite material and the cabin was upholstered in mixed Alcantara and leather.
The Quattroporte Centurion Edition was presented in March 2009 for the UK market. It was special version developed only for the holders of black American Express cards. The car was finished in black exterior colour and with the Centurion logo on the headrests and instrument panel. The engines available were the standard 4.2-litre and 4.7-litre V8.
A special edition of the Quattroporte GT S was introduced at the 2010 Geneva Motor Show: the Quattroporte Sport GT S Awards Edition, celebrating the 56 awards received by the fifth generation of the Quattroporte in just six years since its launch.[57]
Its unique specification consisted of "Nero pianoforte" or specially-developed pale gold "Quarzo fuso" pearlescent paint, satin grey wheels, polished brake callipers and all chrome trim in a dark finish.
The Quattroporte's body is a steel unibody, with an aluminium boot lid and engine bonnet; the coefficient of drag is Cd=0.35.[59] Front and rear aluminium subframes support the whole suspension and drivetrain.
A 47%/53% front/rear weight distribution[45] was achieved by setting the engine behind the front axle, inside the wheelbase (front-mid-engine layout) and the adoption of a transaxle layout. With the later automatic transmission - fitted in the conventional position en bloc with the engine - weight distribution changed to 49%/51% front/rear.
The suspension system consists of unequal length control arms with forged aluminium arms and hub carriers, coil springs and anti-roll bars on both axles.
Transmissions
The DuoSelect transmission available at the launch of the fifth generation of the Quattroporte was a development of the Cambiocorsa unit first used in the Maserati Coupé and built by Graziano Trasmissioni. It was a Ferrari-based automated manual transmission, mounted at the rear axle in the block with the differential in a transaxle layout, with the twin-plate dry clutch located in a bell housing attached to the rear of the engine. A torque tube joined rigidly together the two units.
Gear shifting was done via the standard paddle shifters behind the steering wheel; there was no gear lever on the centre tunnel, but rather a small T-shaped handle used to quickly engage first gear and reverse when maneuvering at slow speed.
The 6-speed torque converterautomatic transmission was a 6HP26 supplied by ZF Friedrichshafen. Unlike the DuoSelect, it was placed in the conventional position right behind the engine; to accommodate it and the new rear differential the front and rear subframes as well as part of the transmission tunnel had to be redesigned.
Manual shifting was possible by the centre-console mounted gear lever; in addition, Sport GT cars came equipped with paddle shifters as standard, while on other models they were an optional extra. All Quattroporte models were fitted with a limited slip differential.
* Including 126 Quattroporte Sport GT S Awards Edition
Coachbuilders
Bellagio Fastback Touring
In 2008, at the Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este, MilanesecoachbuilderCarrozzeria Touring Superleggera unveiled the Maserati Bellagio Fastback Touring, a 5-door hatchback built on the chassis of the fifth generation of the Quattroporte.[65]
In May 2013 a Bellagio Fastback was auctioned by RM Auctions at their Villa Erba event, in occasion of Concorso d'Eleganza Villa d'Este; the price was €117,600.[66] According to the auction house, four examples have been built by Carrozzeria Touring.[67]
A Maserati Quattroporte V has also been used as a hearse as seen on the funeral of the Polish president Lech Kaczynski in 2010.[68]
Motorsport
In 2009 Swiss Team announced the development of "Maserati Quattroporte EVO" International Superstars Series racing cars based on the 4.2-litre Quattroporte M139, to be piloted by Andrea Chiesa.[69] Swiss Team fielded the cars in the 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012 seasons; Italian racing driver Andrea Bertolini won the 2011 championship season at the wheel of a Swiss Team Quattroporte.[70]
The most recent and sixth-generation of the Quattroporte was introduced in early 2013. With a 3,171 mm (124.8 in) wheelbase it is a considerably larger vehicle than any of its predecessors, to set itself apart from the smaller Ghibli, which shares its underpinnings. Engine choice includes twin-turbochargedV6 and V8petrol engines, as well as a turbodiesel V6. Production ended in late 2023, with the last model year being 2024 and without successor.
History
Development
The new Quattroporte was designed at a special Maserati-only department within the Fiat Group Centro Stile design centre, under the guidance of ex-Pininfarina designer Lorenzo Ramaciotti.[71]
Drivetrains, platform, suspension, and body elements such as the front doors[73] are common to the Quattroporte and the smaller Ghibli saloon, which sits on a 173 mm (6.8 in) shorter wheelbase. The Quattroporte is manufactured at the Officine Maserati Grugliasco plant in Grugliasco, near Turin, dedicated to Giovanni Agnelli; this former Bertone plant was acquired by Fiat S.p.A. in 2009 and renovated for production of the two cars.[74]
Production
The current-generation of the
Quattroporte was unveiled at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit in January 2013. Production started in November 2012.[75] Initially the range included the twin-turbocharged V8 equipped, rear-wheel drive Quattroporte GTS and the entry level Quattroporte equipped with a twin-turbocharged V6 engine; available with Q4 four-wheel drive and rear-wheel drive depending on the market and the choice of the customer. The flagship GTS can be distinguished by its trapezoidal instead of round tail pipes. A V6 turbodiesel model for European markets was introduced in September 2013 at the Frankfurt Motor Show.[76]
In early September 2023, Maserati announced that production of the V8 engine used on the Ghibli (M157) and Quattroporte was to conclude at the end of 2023. Production of the Quattroporte ceased at the end of 2023.[77]
2015 Quattroporte Zegna Limited Edition
A total of 100 Quattroporte Zegna Limited editions were produced for worldwide markets in collaboration with Italian fashion house Ermenegildo Zegna.[78] This unique model based on the Quattroporte GTS features unique exterior and interior details including a custom platinum-metallic silk paint scheme with aluminium pigments the exterior of the car along with matching colour coordinated 20-inch wheels. On the interior, the seats, panels, roof lining and sunshades are made from specially-milled silk fibers, high performance leather and woolen herringbone fabrics.
2015
At the November 2014 Los Angeles Auto Show Maserati introduced the 2015 model year range.[79] The Quattroporte GTS received mild cosmetic updates, such as new multi-spoke forged alloy wheels, colour-matched lower bodywork, and red-accented Maserati logos, while all models were given upgraded standard equipment and ampler trim choice.[79]
2019
In 2019, the Maserati Quattroporte GTS was awarded "Best Luxury Vehicle" by the Washington Automotive Press Association (WAPA), in Washington DC.[80] The sixth generation Quattroporte is considered as one of the fastest relatively depreciating production cars.[81]
The Quattroporte uses a mixed steel and aluminium unibody chassis. The front and rear crash structures, the shock towers, the front wings, all four doors, the bonnet and the boot lid are made of aluminium and the car has a drag coefficient of Cd=0.28.[82]
The front suspension uses unequal length wishbones with a forged aluminium upright/hub carrier, and an anti-roll bar; the rear suspension consists of a 5-link setup, with four aluminium links and a larger, steel fifth lower arm that also serves as a spring seat.
A front aluminium subframe supports the engine by two mounting points; the steering rack and the lower suspension arms. A rear subframe, made of steel, houses the differential and supports all of the five suspension links. Unlike its predecessors, the new Quattroporte has frameless doors.
Engines and performance
The Quattroporte was offered with range of two petrol engines. The Quattroporte GTS features a variant of the F154 engine platform shared with the Ferrari 488, the Portofino and other Ferrari models. The engine is a 3.8-litre 90° twin-turbocharged V8, generating a maximum power output of 530 PS (390 kW; 523 hp). The base engine used throughout the trim levels is a 3.0-litre 60° twin-turbocharged V6 generating a maximum power output of 410 PS (302 kW; 404 hp). The same engine is shared with the mid-size Ghibli.[83][84] Both engines are designed and assembled by Ferrari.
The V8 engine used by Maserati differs from the other members of the Ferrari F154 family, in that the Maserati version has a crossplane crankshaft and wet sump lubrication and the turbine housings and exhaust manifolds are integrated in a single piece. The engine also has an overboost function which raises the maximum torque from 650 N⋅m (480 lbf⋅ft) between 2,000 and 4,000 rpm to 710 N⋅m (520 lbf⋅ft) between 2,250 and 3,500 rpm.
The V6 engine blocks were cast and machined to Ferrari's specifications respectively in Chrysler's Kokomo, Indiana and Trenton Engine Plant from where they were then shipped to the Ferrari factory in Modena, Italy for assembly.[85]
Apart from the gasoline engines, a diesel engine is also available in the Quattroporte lineage, a 275 PS (202 kW; 271 hp) 3.0-litre V6 with a single variable geometry turbocharger, designed and assembled by FCA's subsidiary VM Motori.
As of the 2018 model year, the Quattroporte S Q4 was upgraded to raise the maximum power to 430 PS (316 kW; 424 hp) from its twin-turbocharged V6 engine. The GTS also received a power upgrade and now generates a maximum power output of 568 PS (418 kW; 560 hp) from its twin-turbocharged V8 engine.[86]
The Quattroporte GTS can accelerate from 0–97 km/h (0–60 mph) in 4.2 seconds and can complete the quarter-mile in 12.7 seconds as evident in Car and Driver's December 2014 road test.[87]
All engines are mated to a ZF-supplied 8HP70 8-speed automatic gearbox,[88] with four-wheel drive available on the V6 in left-hand drive markets only.
The V6 four-wheel drive Q4 drivetrain is the same as that in the Ghibli.[89] Attached to the end of the 8-speed transmission is a transfer case, containing an electronically controlled multi-plate wet clutch, which sends power through a drive shaft to an open differential bolted to the oil pan.
During normal operation the car is rear-wheel drive only; when needed the system can divert up of 50% of engine torque to the front wheels.[90]
Tabucchi, Maurizio (2003). Maserati: The Grand Prix, Sports and GT cars model by model, 1926–2003. Milano: Giorgio Nada Editore S.r.l. ISBN88-7911-260-0.
^https://www.autozine.org/Archive/Maserati/new/Quattroporte_VI.html "Thanks to the addition of Ghibli, now it can be made larger and aim more squarely at F-segment rivals like Audi A8/S8, Mercedes S600/S63, BMW 750/760 and Jaguar XJ Supersport/XJR." "In fact, such a charming character let the old car to overcome its deficit in performance and consistently topped our F-segment performance car chart during the past 9 years!"
^ abc"Designer". ajovalo.net. Retrieved 8 February 2012.
^Cardew, Basil (1966). Daily Express Review of the 1966 Motor Show. London.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
^Romano, Antonio (2013). Tutte le auto dei Presidenti [All of the Presidents' cars] (in Italian). Rome: Gangemi Editore. p. 176. ISBN978-88-492-2626-3.
^Newton, Richard (19 August 2005). "Maserati Quattroporte GT". automobilemag.com. Archived from the original on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 23 November 2014.
^Ciferri, Luca (25 July 2024). "Maserati under scrutiny after disappointing 1st half". Automotive News. Archived from the original on 6 August 2024. At the end of last year, Maserati ceased production of the Ghibli midsize sedan and Quattroporte large sedan, and at the end of March it stopped the Levante large SUV.
Chiune Sugihara Chiune (Sempo) Sugihara (Japans: 杉原 千畝 , Sugihara Chiune) (Mino, Prefectuur Gifu, 1 januari 1900 – Fujisawa, 31 juli 1986) was een Japanse diplomaat en consul. Als consul in Litouwen in 1940 hielp Chiune Sugihara, tegen de orders van zijn regering in, vele Joodse vluchtelingen aan een doorreisvisum voor Japan. Hij verliet Kaunas als laatste buitenlandse diplomaat en stempelde zelfs hangend uit het raampje van de vertrekkende trein nog enkele visa af. Hij wordt wel de...
2003 studio album by Vijay IyerBlood SutraStudio album by Vijay IyerReleasedOctober 21, 2003RecordedFebruary 21, 2003StudioSorcerer Sound, New YorkGenreJazzLength58:10LabelArtists House AH 9ProducerVijay IyerVijay Iyer chronology In What Language?(2003) Blood Sutra(2003) Simulated Progress(2004) Blood Sutra is an album by pianist Vijay Iyer recorded in 2003 and originally released on the Artists House label before being reissued on Pi Recordings in 2006.[1][2] Receptio...
У этого термина существуют и другие значения, см. Наумов. ХуторНаумов 48°02′37″ с. ш. 40°52′15″ в. д.HGЯO Страна Россия Субъект Федерации Ростовская область Муниципальный район Белокалитвинский Сельское поселение Краснодонецкое История и география Часовой пояс ...
Pakistani television series IshqiyaOfficial title cardعشقيہGenreFamily DramaRomantic dramaCreated byARYWritten byMohsin Ali ShahDirected byBadar MehmoodStarring Feroze Khan Hania Aamir Ramsha Khan Gohar Rasheed Theme music composerOST:Asim AzharBackground Score:Salman KhanDeniss TanveerSk StudioOpening themeIshqiya by Asim AzharCountry of originPakistanOriginal languageUrduNo. of seasons1No. of episodes28ProductionProducersFahad MustafaDr. Ali KazmiCamera setupMulti-camera setupRunning t...
Cultural period RenaissanceThe School of Athens (1509–11) by Raphael Aspects Architecture Dance Fine arts Greek scholars Humanism Literature Magic Music Philosophy Science Technology Warfare Regions England France Germany Italy Poland Portugal Spain Scotland Northern Europe Low Countries History and study Age of Discovery Continuity thesis High Renaissance vte The Renaissance in the Low Countries was a cultural period in the Northern Renaissance that took place in around the 16th century in...
منكس ريسبرو الإحداثيات 51°44′04″N 0°49′47″W / 51.7345°N 0.829831°W / 51.7345; -0.829831 تقسيم إداري البلد المملكة المتحدة[1] معلومات أخرى HP27 رمز الهاتف 01844 رمز جيونيمز 2642326 تعديل مصدري - تعديل منكس ريسبرو (بالإنجليزية: Monks Risborough) هي قرية تقع في المملكة ...
Song by Tin Machine You Belong in Rock n' RollSingle by Tin Machinefrom the album Tin Machine II B-sideAmpalura (Indonesian version)ReleasedAugust 1991RecordedSydney September – October 1989; April 1990; September – October 1990; Los Angeles, March 1991GenreRockLength3:33LabelLondon LON 305Songwriter(s)Bowie, GabrelsProducer(s)Tin Machine, Tim PalmerTin Machine singles chronology Prisoner of Love (1989) You Belong in Rock n' Roll (1991) Baby Universal (1991) You ...
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Marlow Rowing Club – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2016) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Marlow Rowing ClubLocationMarlow, BuckinghamshireCoordinates51°34′0.5″N 0°46′24″W / 51.566806°N 0.77333°...
Cannavaro beralih ke halaman ini. Untuk adiknya, lihat Paolo Cannavaro. Fabio Cannavaro Fabio Cannavaro saat menjadi pelatih Guangzhou pada 2019Informasi pribadiNama lengkap Fabio Cannavaro[1]Tanggal lahir 13 September 1973 (umur 50)Tempat lahir Napoli, ItaliaTinggi 176 cm (5 ft 9 in)[2]Posisi bermain Bek tengahInformasi klubKlub saat ini Benevento (manajer)Karier junior1988–1992 NapoliKarier senior*Tahun Tim Tampil (Gol)1991–1995 Napoli 58 (1)1995–20...
People German New ZealandersDeutsch-NeuseeländerThe German settlers of Puhoi, 1863. They came from Stod (Staab) in Bohemia, in the modern-day Czech Republic.Total populationGerman16,818 Immigrants (2018)[1]plus an estimated 200,000 of German descentRegions with significant populationsAuckland, Manawatū-Whanganui, Tasman District, Bay of Plenty, Greater Wellington, Te Tai PoutiniLanguagesNew Zealand English, GermanReligionPredominantly Lutheranism and Roman CatholicismRelated ethnic ...
Voce principale: Nuoto artistico ai Campionati europei di nuoto 2020. Nuoto artistico agli Europei di Budapest 2020 Singolo Tecnico Libero Duo Tecnico Libero Duo misto Tecnico Libero Squadre Tecnico Libero Combinato Highlights La competizione di duo misto programma libero di nuoto artistico ai Campionati europei di nuoto 2020 si è svolta il 14 maggio 2021 presso la Duna Aréna di Budapest in Ungheria. In totale si sono contese il podio 4 coppie miste...
Part of a series onEconomic, applied, and development anthropology Basic concepts Commodification Barter Debt Finance Embeddedness Reciprocity Redistribution Value Wealth Gift economy Limited good Inalienable possessions Singularization (commodity pathway) Spheres of exchange Social capital Cultural capital Provisioning systems Hunting-gathering Pastoralism Nomadic pastoralism Shifting cultivation Moral economy Peasant economics Case studies Prestations Kula ring Moka exchange Potlatch Giftin...
Title in the Peerage of Scotland Earldom of Kintore Blazon Arms: Quarterly: 1st and 4th Argent on a Chief Gules three Pallets Or (Keith); 2nd, Azure a Falcon displayed between three Mullets one and two Argent on his breast a Man's Heart Gules (Falconer of Halkerton); 3rd, Per pale engrailed Gules and Or a Boar passant counterchanged (Baird of Ury); over all on an Escutcheon Gules a Sceptre and Sword in saltire with an Imperial Crown between the upper corners all proper within an Orle of eight...
Sophie Elisabeth Christiansdatter Född20 september 1619[1]Skanderborg, DanmarkDöd29 april 1657[1] (37 år)Medborgare iDanmarkMakeChristian von PentzBarnArmgaard Agnes von Pentz[2]FöräldrarKristian IV av DanmarkKirsten MunkSläktingarKristian, den utvalde prinsen (syskon)Fredrik III av Danmark (syskon)Hans Ulrik Gyldenløve (syskon)Anne Cathrine Christiansdatter (syskon)Leonora Christina Ulfeldt (syskon)Valdemar Christian av Schleswig-Holstein (syskon)Elisabeth Augusta Chris...
Paghimo ni bot Lsjbot. 47°35′52″N 11°11′21″E / 47.59784°N 11.18914°E / 47.59784; 11.18914 Eschen-Laine Suba Nasod Alemanya Estado pederal Bavaria Gitas-on 639 m (2,096 ft) Tiganos 47°35′52″N 11°11′21″E / 47.59784°N 11.18914°E / 47.59784; 11.18914 Timezone CET (UTC+1) - summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2) GeoNames 2929041 Suba ang Eschen-Laine sa Alemanya.[1] Nahimutang ni sa estado pederal sa Bavari...
Forner torratFurnarius torridus DadesPes52 g (pes adult) Nombre de cries4 Estat de conservacióRisc mínimUICN22702140 TaxonomiaSuper-regneHolozoaRegneAnimaliaFílumChordataClasseAvesOrdrePasseriformesFamíliaFurnariidaeGènereFurnariusEspècieFurnarius torridus P.L. Sclater i Salvin, 1866 Distribució El forner torrat[1] (Furnarius torridus) és una espècie d'ocell de la família dels furnàrids (Furnariidae) que viu en boscos de ribera i matolls de les terres baixes, del nod-est de...
System of state administration on a local level in Wales This article is part of a series within thePolitics of the United Kingdom on thePolitics of Wales The CrownThe Monarch Charles III Heir Apparent William, Prince of Wales Prerogative Royal family Succession Privy Council King-in-Parliament Lord-lieutenant Llwynywermod England and Wales Laws in Wales Acts 1535 and 1542 Principality of Wales Welsh republicanism GovernmentWelsh GovernmentGething government (list) First Minister (list) Rt Ho...
Paghimo ni bot Lsjbot. Lepanthes stalactites Siyentipikinhong Pagklasipikar Kaginharian: Plantae Kabahig: Tracheophyta Kahutong: Liliopsida Kahanay: Asparagales Kabanay: Orchidaceae Kahenera: 'Lepanthes' Espesye: ''Lepanthes stalactites'' Siyentipikinhong Ngalan Lepanthes stalactitesLuer & Hirtz Kaliwatan sa tanom nga asparagos ang Lepanthes stalactites.[1] Una ning gihulagway ni Carlyle August Luer ug Alexander Charles Hirtz.[2] Ang Lepanthes stalactites sakop sa kahenera...
Paghimo ni bot Lsjbot. Micromus perelegans Siyentipikinhong Pagklasipikar Kaginharian: Animalia Ka-ulo: Arthropoda Kasipak-ulo: Hexapoda Kahutong: Insecta Kahanay: Neuroptera Kabanay: Hemerobiidae Kahenera: Micromus Espesye: Micromus perelegans Siyentipikinhong Ngalan Micromus perelegansTjeder, 1936 Kaliwatan sa insekto ang Micromus perelegans.[1] Una ning gihulagway ni Bo Tjeder ni adtong 1936.[2] Ang Micromus perelegans sakop sa kahenera nga Micromus, ug kabanay nga Hemerobi...