De Tomaso De Tomaso Automobili P900


De Tomaso is an Italian marque founded 1959. Revived 2014, it builds bespoke analog hypercars like the P72. Official: De Tomaso

Jonathan19

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The all-new De Tomaso Automobili P900 is coming this year!

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Rumors :

- Will have a all-new NA V12 that rev up to 12K RPM
- Weighs approximately 900kg
- Limited to 18 units
- More that 900hp

- Track Only

 
The all-new De Tomaso Automobili P900 is coming this year!
Rumors :

- Will have a all-new NA V12 that rev up to 12K RPM
- Weighs approximately 900kg
- Limited to 10 units
- More that 900hp

- Track Only
I was thinking that the engine was developed by Cosworth, Italtecnica, Hartley or Mahle.
But is is developed by Capricorn GmbH (same manufacturer behind Capricorn 01 Zagato)
 
A vision so bold it was said to be impossible. Sculpted for the eye, engineered for the ears
P900 12-1 exhaust now realised
Designed by De Tomaso. Thoughtfully crafted by
@italtecnica.engineering

A vision so bold it was said to be impossible. Sculpted for the eye, engineered for the earsP...webp
A vision so bold it was said to be impossible. Sculpted for the eye, engineered for the earsP...webp
A vision so bold it was said to be impossible. Sculpted for the eye, engineered for the earsP...webp
A vision so bold it was said to be impossible. Sculpted for the eye, engineered for the earsP...webp
A vision so bold it was said to be impossible. Sculpted for the eye, engineered for the earsP...webp


 
Wait ... exhaust is crafted by Italtecnica and the engine by Capricorn? Or is engine also developed by Italtecnica?
 
A vision so bold it was said to be impossible. Sculpted for the eye, engineered for the ears
P900 12-1 exhaust now realised

a 12 into 1 exhaust is not impossible has already been done way back in 2020, but a South African on his V12 MX-5 conversion.

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and a german dude did it about 3 years ago.

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There must be a significant difference in craftsmanship between the work of art seen on this De Tomaso and what someone amateurishly soldered in the dust on a converted old Miata.
 
There must be a significant difference in craftsmanship between the work of art seen on this De Tomaso and what someone amateurishly soldered in the dust on a converted old Miata.

The welds on that piece of art look awful, the welds on the MX5 look a lot better, in fact you can't even see the welding, his pipe bending skills are off the chart.
 
You asked to hear it.
This is the voice of the P900 taking shape
One moment in an evolving journey
Our official engine announcement follows soon, alongside the final specifications
All signs point to Italy


 
I was thinking that the engine was developed by Cosworth, Italtecnica, Hartley or Mahle.
But is is developed by Capricorn GmbH (same manufacturer behind Capricorn 01 Zagato)
After some research and verification, I think it's the Orion 65° V12 engine by Italtecnica Engineering with a displacement of 6.8 liters, equipped with a dry sump lubrication system with an 8-stage pump and it can make 950hp and +800nm at 10,200rpm.
The engine is said to have over 70% of the maximum torque (800 Nm) available at 3,500 rpm.
The engine, complete with intake and exhaust, weighs less than 200 kg.
Also, the engine is homologated according to Euro 6 standards maximum power of about 850hp at 8500rpm, with the limiter placed at 9200rpm.
The announcement will be made soon, so we'll know shortly, but I think this engine is the right one.
 
I read about that engine couple of months ago. Wasn't that engine meant for Vittori?
I came upon that engine (link) when i was reading about other engines from Italtecnica (Link)

 
I read about that engine couple of months ago. Wasn't that engine meant for Vittori?
The engine will have multiple use and clients sont i guess Vittori will use the Road version.

Edit : Just have a talk with the De Tomaso Team and they will give all détails plus more pics of the engine in the next two weeks.
 
De Tomaso Automobili Confirms Final P900 V12 Specification and Announces Collaboration with ItalTecnica

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De Tomaso Automobili today confirms the final engine specification for the highly anticipated P900 and announces a strategic technical collaboration with Italian powertrain specialists ItalTecnica.

At the P900’s core will sit a 7.0-litre naturally aspirated V12, developed by ItalTecnica and configured exclusively for track use. This defines the final direction for the P900 programme, one shaped by Italian heritage and emotional resonance.

The Return Of The Twelve

The all-new V12 is a 65-degree naturally aspirated architecture conceived in defiance of convention. No electrification. No forced induction.

Track Specification:

Configuration:65° naturally aspirated V12
Displacement:7.0 litres
Peak Power:900 hp at approximately 9,500 rpm
Redline:10,200 rpm
Lubrication:Eight-stage dry sump system
Valvetrain:Dual overhead camshafts per bank, four titanium valves per cylinder
Distribution:Full gear-driven cascade
Construction:Billet aluminum with extensive titanium and carbon components
Engine Weight:Sub-200 kg complete unit

Under ItalTecnica’s direction, ensuring this level of performance within compact dimensions demanded selective material choices.

The crankcase is machined from solid billet aluminium for rigidity and weight control. The carbon intake system, supported by billet structures, is engineered as much for sound character as airflow efficiency. Forged connecting rods, ultra-light pistons, high compression ratios and immediate throttle response.

The objective was not purely concentrated on power, but response, absolute immediacy on command. An engine not built for a brochure, but for the driver.

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10,200 RPM. Gear-Driven. Formula 1 Inspired.

The distribution system is a full cascade of gears, a complex architecture historically associated with Formula 1 V12 engines. This solution ensures absolute timing precision even at extreme rotational speeds.

Each bank carries dual overhead camshafts operating titanium valves to reduce inertia and maintain stability beyond 10,000 rpm. As seen in contemporary racing practice, an eight-stage oil system ensures lubrication under the sustained loads expected in dedicated circuit use. Every component of the design exists to serve one metric, mechanical consistency at maximum attack.

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“If It Must End, Let It Sing”

Development of the P900, conceptually unveiled in late 2022, has been through a series of changes. Over time, the vehicle has unfolded against the backdrop of a rapidly changing automotive landscape, one that sees the approaching " silent future " weighing heavily on the minds of automotive enthusiasts.

Rather than chasing peak numbers or electrification, the teams at De Tomaso and ItalTecnica stepped back and asked a harder question. “If this were to be one of the last naturally aspirated V12s developed in this era, what should it stand for?” A number on a chart, or a memory that lingers?

The final objective became clear, to define a powertrain with a true identity, one that prioritised response and amplified acoustics as much as measurable power output.

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A V12 that felt defiant and alive.

Both organisations shared the same conviction. Performance is truly measured through immediacy and heard through the chambers of combustion. Our platform does not chase silence. It is designed to celebrate sound. An engine for those who remember the era of Formula 1 V12' s defining Sundays, when noise was not a by-product, but the defining signature of a marque.

Innovation Shaped By Heritage
In 1970, Alejandro de Tomaso began exploring the development of a proprietary V12. Several concepts were commissioned and preliminary engineering undertaken, yet the programme was never fully realised. Circumstance intervened.

As custodians of the marque today, Norman Choi and his team view the ItalTecnica x De Tomaso V12 as the continuation of that ambition, not as revival for its own sake, but as the completion of an unfinished chapter.

Since the marque’s return in 2019, the message from our community has been consistent: bring back the twelve.

This is the answer.

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Architecture Of Influence

The decision to partner with an Italian engineering house was not strategic alone.

ItalTecnica carries the legacy of another Italian icon, Claudio Lombardi, one of the country’s great engine architects. His career spanned Formula 1’s naturally aspirated V12 era and winning programmes in the World Rally Championship.

Beyond titles and achievements, Lombardi believed something fundamental: an engine must have integrity. It must respond without hesitation. It must sound honest.

In the later years of his life, Carlo Cavagnero — now leading ItalTecnica — stood beside him, not simply as a colleague, but as an apprentice. Listening. Learning. Absorbing not just data, but philosophy. When Claudio sadly passed away in 2025, that knowledge did not disappear. It had already been entrusted to the next generation.

Today, Carlo carries those teachings with quiet pride and deep responsibility. For him, this V12 is more than an engine programme. It is a heartfelt tribute. Perhaps the greatest honour of his career.

It is the continuation of a philosophy shaped across Formula 1 grids and rally stages, now expressed in twelve cylinders.

At 10,200 rpm, Lombardi’s influence is not simply remembered. It is heard.

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Track Focused, For Now...

The P900 is configured exclusively for track use at this time. Every element of the engine and vehicle design has been optimised for circuit performance, an experience influenced and moulded by the yesteryears of motorsport, tuned for emotion over moderation.

While the platform is presently dedicated to track application, the broader potential of this architecture remains open. The question of a road-going evolution remains one of timing.

Further visual and aerodynamic updates will be revealed later in 2026 as the P900 advances toward first customer builds.
 
How new 10,200rpm De Tomaso V12 makes 888bhp

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Good things come to those who wait, the saying goes, and De Tomaso seems to have proved the point with its new 888bhp (900 metric horsepower) V12 engine.

Announced in 2022 and originally expected in 2024, the final specification for the bespoke 7.0-litre V12 engine designed to power the forthcoming P900 was recently revealed by the Italian supercar firm.

The V12 is a collaboration between De Tomaso and Italian powertrain specialist Italtecnica, a company that focuses on designing and producing extreme specification engines for use in road cars and motorsport.

The engine is developed exclusively for track use and does without turbocharging or hybrid electric assistance.

The final specification is spectacular, with a no-expense-spared approach to the nuts and bolts. First of all, the performance. In 2022, talk was of an engine that would rev to 12,300rpm but the final design has a redline of 10,200rpm and develops maximum power at 9500rpm. The difference matters little in that the engine still achieves the maximum horsepower planned at the outset.

The cylinder banks are set at 65deg, rather than the traditional 60deg, matching that of later Ferrari V12s and the Murray T50, for example. It has an eight-stage drysump lubrication system to ensure a perfect supply of oil throughout the engine when undergoing extreme acceleration, braking and cornering forces.

There are quad cams, with double overhead camshafts operating the valves in each cylinder head. Rather than belts or chains, the engine designers have opted for a "full gear-driven cascade" - a gear train taking the drive from the camshaft to each of the four cams, ensuring extremely precise valve timing at the highest engine speeds.

Construction is described as billet aluminium with extensive use of titanium and carbonfibre for components. In practice, that equates to a crankcase machined from a solid billet (chunk) of aluminium alloy for lightness and rigidity, as are supporting components for the carbonfibre intake system.

The intake system is designed as much to produce an epic sound as give the most efficient airflow. A fairly traditional approach is taken to major internal components, with forged connecting rods and lightweight pistons helping reduce reciprocating masses, and there are titanium valves to reduce inertia as they open and close at massive speed.

The compression ratio is described as "high" to maximise power and efficiency but the figure is undisclosed at this stage.

De Tomaso says more P900 details will be revealed this year as the car gets closer to the first customer builds, but it's perhaps the sound of the V12 that will be most eagerly awaited.

 

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