It’s a mighty good-looking car, this issue’s 1971 De Tomaso Pantera. It’s Italian, of course (“pantera” is Italian for “panther”), designed by the company Carrozzeria Ghia. Me & My Car: East Bay owner ...
With Italian styling, an American heart, and German engineering, the 1971 DeTomaso Pantera may go down in history as the world’s greatest hybrid. The stunner you see here however, is special, as it ...
The DeTomaso Pantera ticked every box in the sports car world back in the 1970s. It had the looks, it had the power, it had the exclusivity. One of those marvelous cars, which has had a single owner ...
Back when it wasn’t so easy for a visionary gent to build his own supercar (but the results were just as mixed as today), Alejandro DeTomaso managed to maintain production of the DeTomaso Pantera for ...
The model attracted more headlines in 1984, when Mötley Crüe frontman Vince Neil crashed his Pantera on the way home from a beer run, killing Hanoi Rocks drummer Razzle, forever cementing the Pantera ...
Something loud and legendary is about to hit the block again. A 1972 De Tomaso Pantera built by the Ringbrothers is heading to auction through SBX Cars. This isn’t your average restomod; it’s a 600-hp ...
The not-so-blank canvas for this automotive expression is an example of the original Pantera, the collaborative vision of Alejandro de Tomaso, an expatriate of Argentina residing in Italy at the time, ...
In the history of luxury performance car manufacturing, De Tomaso is a bit of an underdog. The company was started in the 1960s by Alejandro De Tomaso, an Argentinian rancher who had a fascination ...