Rare Rides: The 1976 Maserati Kyalami, Obscure Italian Luxury

Corey Lewis
by Corey Lewis

Today’s Rare Ride is a very luxurious Maserati which flew in under the radar and was offered by the Italian firm for a short while. A four-seat coupe, it was named after a race track in Africa.

Let’s find out more about Kyalami.

Though Maserati had a history of coupes, its subset of dedicated four-seat vehicles were few and far between. Before Kyalami arrived for the 1976 model year, the brand had offered only two four-seat coupes in its history, the Mexico and Indy. All its other two-doors were either two-seat, or less practical 2+2s.

Maserati was in the midst of a new life when the Kyalami came along, and the model bore the special distinction of being the first developed by Alejandro de Tomaso, who’d helm the company from 1975 through 1992. De Tomaso took a look at the Maserati financials and saw some dire straits. The company needed a new flagship car to supplement the front-drive Quattroporte, the 2+2 Khamsin and Merak, and two-seat Bora. But how does one build an all-new car with the smallest possible cash outlay?

By using a car that’s already in existence, of course. De Tomaso borrowed the platform from the Longchamp, a coupe bearing his own brand that was on sale since 1973 (and selling very slowly). Longchamp itself was a derivative of the Deauville sedan platform of 1971. The Longchamp’s Tom Tjaarda design was passed over to Pietro Frua, who was tasked with a money-saving rework to turn the Longchamp pumpkin into a Kyalami squash. Frua generally softened the square jaw looks of the Longchamp and replaced its singular headlamps with more Italian looking quad beams. Kyalami ended up larger in all dimensions than Longchamp and sat lower to the ground. Inside, typical Maserati accouterments were used in place of the De Tomaso ones, borrowed from Maserati models already in production. The interior was very plush and featured Connolly leather trim to support the car’s grand touring mission.

The Ford V8 power of the Longchamp simply would not do for a Maserati, so those engines were cast aside in favor of a 4.2-liter Maserati V8 from the Quattroporte. Initial horsepower was 261, which increased to 276 in 1978 via an enlarged version (4.9L) of the same engine. Transmissions on offer were a five-speed manual from ZF or a three-speed auto from Borg Warner.

But it turned out that Maserati’s sporty customers didn’t want a big, expensive grand touring coupe with styling they’d seen on a De Tomaso years prior. Brand purists scoffed at its lack of originality and heavy, luxurious nature. Between 1976 and its cancellation in 1983, Maserati sold just 200 Kyalamis. Maserati attempted a four-seat luxury coupe once more in the late Eighties, with the BiTurbo-based 228. That one went well too!

Today’s Rare Ride was a very early example out of the company’s factory in Modena. Maserati decided to keep it, so it hung around town doing testing duties before it was eventually passed to Alejandro de Tomaso as a private vehicle. The special Kyalami last sold in Germany in spring 2019 for $65,000.

[Image: Maserati]

Corey Lewis
Corey Lewis

Interested in lots of cars and their various historical contexts. Started writing articles for TTAC in late 2016, when my first posts were QOTDs. From there I started a few new series like Rare Rides, Buy/Drive/Burn, Abandoned History, and most recently Rare Rides Icons. Operating from a home base in Cincinnati, Ohio, a relative auto journalist dead zone. Many of my articles are prompted by something I'll see on social media that sparks my interest and causes me to research. Finding articles and information from the early days of the internet and beyond that covers the little details lost to time: trim packages, color and wheel choices, interior fabrics. Beyond those, I'm fascinated by automotive industry experiments, both failures and successes. Lately I've taken an interest in AI, and generating "what if" type images for car models long dead. Reincarnating a modern Toyota Paseo, Lincoln Mark IX, or Isuzu Trooper through a text prompt is fun. Fun to post them on Twitter too, and watch people overreact. To that end, the social media I use most is Twitter, @CoreyLewis86. I also contribute pieces for Forbes Wheels and Forbes Home.

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  • Guy08 Guy08 on Jan 13, 2021

    Africa is not a "country".....

  • Johnnyz Johnnyz on Jan 13, 2021

    Would that be considered a shooting brake? Check out hoovies garage- he scored a really nice Countach. He shows the contortions he has to make to barley fit inside. Funny.

  • Groza George I don’t care about GM’s anything. They have not had anything of interest or of reasonable quality in a generation and now solely stay on business to provide UAW retirement while they slowly move production to Mexico.
  • Arthur Dailey We have a lease coming due in October and no intention of buying the vehicle when the lease is up.Trying to decide on a replacement vehicle our preferences are the Maverick, Subaru Forester and Mazda CX-5 or CX-30.Unfortunately both the Maverick and Subaru are thin on the ground. Would prefer a Maverick with the hybrid, but the wife has 2 'must haves' those being heated seats and blind spot monitoring. That requires a factory order on the Maverick bringing Canadian price in the mid $40k range, and a delivery time of TBD. For the Subaru it looks like we would have to go up 2 trim levels to get those and that also puts it into the mid $40k range.Therefore are contemplating take another 2 or 3 year lease. Hoping that vehicle supply and prices stabilize and purchasing a hybrid or electric when that lease expires. By then we will both be retired, so that vehicle could be a 'forever car'. Any recommendations would be welcomed.
  • Eric Wait! They're moving? Mexico??!!
  • GrumpyOldMan All modern road vehicles have tachometers in RPM X 1000. I've often wondered if that is a nanny-state regulation to prevent drivers from confusing it with the speedometer. If so, the Ford retro gauges would appear to be illegal.
  • Theflyersfan Matthew...read my mind. Those old Probe digital gauges were the best 80s digital gauges out there! (Maybe the first C4 Corvettes would match it...and then the strange Subaru XT ones - OK, the 80s had some interesting digital clusters!) I understand the "why simulate real gauges instead of installing real ones?" argument and it makes sense. On the other hand, with the total onslaught of driver's aid and information now, these screens make sense as all of that info isn't crammed into a small digital cluster between the speedo and tach. If only automakers found a way to get over the fallen over Monolith stuck on the dash design motif. Ultra low effort there guys. And I would have loved to have seen a retro-Mustang, especially Fox body, have an engine that could rev out to 8,000 rpms! You'd likely be picking out metal fragments from pretty much everywhere all weekend long.
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