Argo JM19B Motori Moderni
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Vehicle category
Model line
Predecessor
Sucessor
About this submodel
This is it. This is the unicorn, the most exotic and wildly ambitious of all the Argo JM19 variants. The 1988 JM19B Motori Moderni was not just a car; it was a statement of unbound 1980s engineering lunacy, a Group C2 prototype powered by a heart with direct Formula 1 lineage.
The engine was the star, a tiny 2.0-liter V6 twin-turbo built by Motori Moderni. This was the firm founded by legendary Italian engineer Carlo Chiti, a man synonymous with Autodelta, Alfa Romeo, and F1. This was no production-based block; it was a bespoke, thoroughbred racing engine designed to scream and spool. In qualifying trim, this miniature V6 was rumored to be a ticking time bomb of incomprehensible power, allegedly capable of pushing 780 horsepower.
It was the ultimate expression of the turbo era’s “small displacement, massive boost” philosophy. The JM19B, already a lightweight and agile chassis, was transformed into an absolute missile. It was a volatile cocktail of Italian exotica and British pragmatism. While it was tragically fragile and often failed to see the finish line, the Motori Moderni-powered Argo was a staggering piece of engineering—a machine that prioritized ultimate, mind-bending performance above all else.
Brand
Produced from
Portal
Vehicle category
Model line
Predecessor
Sucessor
Brand
Produced from
Portal
Vehicle category
Model line
Model generation
Predecessor
Sucessor
About this submodel
This is it. This is the unicorn, the most exotic and wildly ambitious of all the Argo JM19 variants. The 1988 JM19B Motori Moderni was not just a car; it was a statement of unbound 1980s engineering lunacy, a Group C2 prototype powered by a heart with direct Formula 1 lineage.
The engine was the star, a tiny 2.0-liter V6 twin-turbo built by Motori Moderni. This was the firm founded by legendary Italian engineer Carlo Chiti, a man synonymous with Autodelta, Alfa Romeo, and F1. This was no production-based block; it was a bespoke, thoroughbred racing engine designed to scream and spool. In qualifying trim, this miniature V6 was rumored to be a ticking time bomb of incomprehensible power, allegedly capable of pushing 780 horsepower.
It was the ultimate expression of the turbo era’s “small displacement, massive boost” philosophy. The JM19B, already a lightweight and agile chassis, was transformed into an absolute missile. It was a volatile cocktail of Italian exotica and British pragmatism. While it was tragically fragile and often failed to see the finish line, the Motori Moderni-powered Argo was a staggering piece of engineering—a machine that prioritized ultimate, mind-bending performance above all else.
Tech Specs
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Tech Specs
