Background
The Italian language can always be relied upon to produce automotive vocabulary that sounds truly exotic when, in reality, it is rather mundane. So is the case with the Maserati Quattroporte or - if you prefer - the “four door”. Revealed in 1963, it was the first production Maserati with more than two doors and also the first to be powered by a V8 engine. The Pietro Frua designed, full-sized sports saloon kicked off an almost unbroken run of this luxury car which has now undergone its sixth regeneration.
Following Frua, the QP II (1974-1978) was designed by Bertone’s Marcello Gandini and, due largely to Citroen’s influence, it was fitted with a 3-litre V6 powering the front wheels. The model wasn’t a success and nor ultimately was Maserati’s relationship with Citroen - only 12 customer cars were produced between 1976 and 1978 before the company was bought by Alejandro de Tomaso.
The QP III (1979-1990) - now back to V8 power and rear-wheel-drive - was styled by Giorgetto Giugiuaro of Italdesign - widely considered the greatest living car designer. Although often troubled elsewhere, Maserati could never be accused of skimping on body styling budgets.
Another generation, another owner for Maserati - this time the Fiat Group - sees Gandini being given another chance to style a winner in the QP IV (1994-2001). Powered at first by a twin-turbo V6 it was later upgraded to a biturbo V8.
The fifth generation Quattroporte (2003-2012) - styled by Pininfarina - is considered one of the best-looking four-door saloons ever and was the most successful QP evolution to date with over 25,000 produced. The QP V - like we have presented for sale here - was based on the same underlying platform as the popular GranTurismo and GranCabrio models and, like them, was powered by V8 units from sister company Ferrari. Initially, all variants were fitted with a 395bhp 4.2-litre V8 but from 2008, the Quattroporte S and Sport GT S had the larger 4.7-litre engine with power increasing from 424bhp to 434bhp and topping out at 444bhp.
From 2013 to the present, the QP VI continues the lineage but now offers diesel power as an option to the V6 and V8 petrol engines. The rather homogenised external styling, like for much of the Fiat group, is now courtesy of “Centro Stilo” or - if you prefer - the “Design Department”. What was I saying about the Italian language?







