Chassis and engine changes made to the experimental 4CLs eventually coalesced into the 4CLT, the appended
T denoting its
tubular chassis. The improvements in torsional rigidity that the tubular construction brought were required to counteract the increases in torque and power resulting from the twin-supercharger upgrade of the elderly inline-4 engine. Power was up to approximately , from the 4CL's 220. Other changes included the use of
roller bearings for the
crankshaft, forged (rather than cast) rear suspension components, and the chassis was designed to run with
hydraulic dampers from the outset.
4CLT/48 Sanremo The first variant of the 4CLT earned its "Sanremo" nickname from the first race for which it was entered: the
1948 San Remo Grand Prix. The name stuck, as
Alberto Ascari took his 4CLT to victory in its maiden race appearance. A portent of things to come, Villoresi and
Reg Parnell won five of the 1948 season's remaining races. In the first year of the Formula One World Championship, a Sanremo scored what was to be the Maserati's best Championship finish, when
Louis Chiron took third place at his home Grand Prix: the
1950 Monaco Grand Prix. The last 4CLT variant to compete in the World Championship was a 4CLT/48 modified by the
Arzani-Volpini team, that failed to even qualify for the
1955 Italian Grand Prix.
1949 For 1949, minor modifications to the brake drums, switching from vanes to slits for cooling, along with small changes to the cockpit control layout and a repositioned oil header-tank resulted in a car sometimes referred to as the 4CLT/49. It was never known as such by the factory. The Ascari/Villoresi/Parnell trio, joined by
Juan Manuel Fangio and
Toulo de Graffenried, took up where they had left off the previous season, winning nine of the first fifteen races of 1949, including de Graffenried's victory in the
British Grand Prix. However, the second half of the season only saw three further wins, as increasingly competitive
Ferrari and
Talbot cars squeezed out the Maseratis in most major races.
1950–1951 1950 saw the introduction of the
FIA World Championship of Drivers. In response to improvements to the Alfa 158 and the already competitive Ferrari and Talbot, Maserati again upgraded the 4CLT's engine. A multi-part crankshaft, lightened and balanced rods, a more powerful pair of superchargers and changes to the ignition timing took engine output up to a claimed . Coupled to shedding from the car's weight, this brought the Maserati up to near-Alfa levels of performance. Although moderately competitive in short runs, the final upgrades proved to be too much for the decade-old powerplant's design and the 4CLT's Grand Prix performance was hindered by engine failures. The season's only Formula One wins came in non-Championship events. Fangio won the
Pau Grand Prix on the same day as Parnell took the
Richmond Trophy at
Goodwood.
David Hampshire won the
Nottingham Trophy later in the year. Fangio also won the
Formula Two Ramparts Grand Prix, at
Angoulême, in a 4CLT chassis fitted with an
A6GCM engine. The
Milano team modified a 4CLT for use in 1950 and 1951, but without success. Also for 1951 B. Bira modified his '49-spec 4CLT to accept a more powerful, , naturally aspirated
OSCA V12 engine. This engine developed around . With it Bira won the Goodwood race early in the season, but in its only World Championship appearance, at the
1951 Spanish Grand Prix, it retired on the first lap.
4CLT/50 In late 1949 a number (two or three, depending on source) of the remaining Sanremo cars were converted for use in the
Temporada series Formula Libre races in
Buenos Aires, Argentina, in the 1949 to 1950 summer season. This model was referred to as the 4CLT/50; although that name is sometimes also applied to the 1950-specification Formula One cars, the Temporada cars are the only ones that were referred to as such by the factory. The modifications were mostly restricted to enlargement of the engine capacity to . Despite these improvements the series was dominated by Ferrari, and following the final race the cars were shipped back to Italy and reconverted to Formula One specifications.
The Platé 4CLT A long term campaigner of Maserati automobiles,
Enrico Platé recognised the Maserati's shortcomings as a Formula One vehicle, and converted a 4CLT/48 into the Maserati-Platé 4CLT
Formula Two variant. As F2 was for
naturally aspirated cars, the first step was to remove the superchargers. After this, to counteract the resulting loss in performance, the compression ratio was more than doubled and capacity was upped to the class limit of . With the lower power output from the revised engine, weight was shed and handling sharpened by reducing the wheelbase.
Final race wins De Graffenried won the Richmond Trophy, and
Giuseppe Farina the
Paris Grand Prix, in 1951, but with the switch to Formula Two rules for the World Championship from onwards, the old 4CLT chassis were found to be overweight and underpowered in comparison to their newer rivals. Despite having been the mainstay of top-flight racing since the end of the 1930s, the 4CL and 4CLT rapidly fell from favour, as smaller and lighter machines began to emerge from European factories still recovering from the effects of war. Today, many 4CL and 4CLT models survive and are regularly campaigned in historic motorsport events, as well as being on static display in museums. ==Technical data==