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Buying Maseratis in Italy with Tom Meade

I
knew Tom Meade over the course of four decades meeting him in Costa
Mesa when my friend John Andrews pretended he wanted me to look at a
Ferrari he found for sale and wanted my opinion as to what it might me.
When we arrived, the seller led me to the garage and pulled off the car
cover to reveal the Thomassima III (!!) and we all had a good laugh and
went out for dinner thus beginning a long friendship. I spent a lot of
time with Tom in Costa Mesa doing car things and eating lobster on
Balboa Island. I also accompanied him to Dan Gurney's AAR where Tom
tried to persuade Dan to sell him one of his Formula 1 Gurney-Weslake
V12 engines for use in a planned Thomassima creation.
When Tom
returned to Italy, I met up with him in Milan where I was buying some
cars and he arranged to have a couple of Maserati Mistrals brought to a
car dealership in Parma for me to consider. After a breakfast of strong
Italian coffee, the spiciest tomato juice you could imagine and some
croissants at a hotel bar, we headed off on the 80 mile trip to Parma in
a Fiat 238 van that seemed to appear from nowhere. We covered the
distance in record time as the engine tried to tell anyone who would
listen that it was on its last legs and about to blow up from
over-revving but we actually made it there and back to Milan without
incident.
When
we arrived, the dealership was closed for lunch and so our own
memorable three-hour lunch ensued where we were joined by the proprietor
of the hotel/restaurant who sat with us and served us a delicious Parma
ham along with other savory distractions and a lovely wine that kept
flowing--it wasn't every day you could have lunch with the creator of
the Thomassima cars and stories were traded back and forth
Finally,
we realized we should move it along and go look at the Maseratis before
the dealership closed for the day. I test drove them both and decided
they belonged in Los Angeles and that was that. The transporter put them
back onto the truck and off they went to the shipper's garage in Milan.
Tom and I returned for a dinner at Il Rigolo and an evening that the
Nepenthe.
When the Mistrals arrived in Los Angeles, one of them
looked just like the one in the picture here-dark blue. The other was a
silver/gray. Both had 4 liter engines with ZF 5-speed transmissions, the
DOHC six cylinders having fuel injection and twin plugs per cylinder. I
kept them both, along with a Maserati Quattroporte, until I returned
from Paris a few years later and the Mistrals were transformed into
resale red and I sold them.
When Tom returned to Los Angeles, we had other memorable times together but that lunch in Parma was one of the best...
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