Nisha Rathode (Editor)

Carlo Abarth

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Name
  
Carlo Abarth

Role
  
Designer

Organizations founded
  
Abarth


Carlo Abarth Abarth History Abarthisti

Died
  
October 24, 1979, Vienna, Austria

People also search for
  
Armando Scagliarini, Luca Cordero di Montezemolo, Harald J. Wester

Carlo abarth behind the scorpion


Carlo Abarth (15 November 1908 – 24 October 1979), born Karl Albert Abarth, was an automobile designer. Abarth was born in Austria, but later was naturalized as an Italian citizen; and at this time his first name Karl was changed to its Italian equivalent of Carlo.

Contents

Carlo Abarth The tale of the scorpion Carlo Abarth39s tiny terrors

Tomaini Racconta: Carlo Abarth - Le Competizioni e i Record - Davide Cironi Drive Experience (SUBS)


Before World War II

Carlo Abarth Carlo Abarth A Passionate Visionary Influx

Abarth was born in Vienna, during the time of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. As a teenager, he worked for Castagna in Italy (1925–27), designing motorbike and bicycle chassis. Back in Austria, he worked for Motor Thun and Joseph Opawsky (1927–34), and raced motorbikes, winning his first race on a James Cycle in Salzburg on 29 July 1928. He would be European champion five times, along with continuing his engineering. After a serious accident in Linz he abandoned motorbike racing, and designed a sidecar (1933) with which he managed to beat the Orient Express railway on the 1,300-kilometre (810 mi) stretch from Vienna to Ostend (1934).

Carlo Abarth wwwbernimotoricomimagesKarl20Abarthjpg

He moved permanently to Italy in 1934, where he met Ferdinand Porsche's son-in-law Anton Piëch, and married his secretary. In 1938 Abarth was long hospitalized and had his racing career end, due to a racing accident in Ljubljana, Yugoslavia. He remained in that country (with some visits in Austria and Italy) until the war was over.

After World War II

Carlo Abarth Do You Know This Man The story of Carlo Abarth YouTube

Following this, he moved to Merano, where his ancestors originated from. Abarth got to know both Tazio Nuvolari and the family-friend Ferry Porsche, and, together with engineer Rudolf Hruska and Piero Dusio, he established the Compagnia Industriale Sportiva Italia (CIS Italia, later becoming Cisitalia), having the Italian Porsche Konstruktionen agency (1943–48). The first automobile outcome of this cooperation was the rather unsuccessful Tipo 360 F1 prototype (see also Porsche 360). The CIS Italia project ended when Dusio moved to Argentina (1949).

Carlo Abarth Carlo and his Apples and His HottedUp Cars The Chicane

Abarth then founded the Abarth & C. company with Cisitalia racing driver Guido Scagliarini in Bologna (31 March 1949), using his astrological sign, the scorpion, as the company logo. The same year, Abarth & Co moved to Turin. Financed by Scagliarini's father Armando Scagliarini, the company made racing cars, and became a major supplier of high-performance exhaust pipes, that still are in production as Abarth. On 20 October 1965 Abarth personally set various speed records at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza.

He sold the company on 31 July 1971 to Fiat, although he continued to manage it as a CEO for a period. Later he moved back to Vienna, Austria, where he died in 1979.

Private life

Carlo Abarth was married three times. His first wife was the secretary of Anton Piëch in Vienna. He married his second wife, Nadina Abarth-Zerjav, in 1949. They lived together until 1966, and divorced in 1979. The same year, about six weeks before his death, Abarth married his third wife, Anneliese Abarth; she continues to head the Carlo Abarth Foundation and wrote one of his biographies in 2010.

References

Carlo Abarth Wikipedia