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Ferrari: And finally, Dan the Man hits topic!!

  1. #1
    MC
    Guest

    And finally, Dan the Man hits topic!!

    RUMBLE SEAT
    When the shark bites ...
    Ferrari puts Formula 1 teeth into its F430 road car, another sign of a
    company transformed.
    By Dan Neil
    Times Staff Writer

    October 13, 2004

    A decade ago, visitors to the Ferrari factory announced themselves in a
    small showroom inside an unassuming complex of low brick buildings —
    hip-roofed and painted burnt orange, sturdy and traditional, like
    Ferrari itself.

    Today, the Ferrari campus looks more like Starfleet Academy than the
    house that Enzo built. The new wind tunnel is by architect Renzo Piano.
    The Luigi Sturchio-designed F1 logistics building looks like a zeppelin
    that has crash-landed outside the Fiorano test track. The Product
    Development Center, designed by Massimiliano Fuksas, is like a 3D
    Mondrian painting, its externally framed colored glass boxes stacked
    weightlessly, roofed with reflecting pools and connected with glass
    tunnels. It's part water garden, part gerbil habitrail.

    What has happened in the past decade? Luca Cordero di Montezemolo
    happened. The chairman and chief executive officer, who succeeded
    founder Enzo Ferrari four years after his death in 1988, brought the
    company back from near collapse and engineered its transformation into
    one of the world's most profitable car companies and the dominant force
    in Formula 1 racing, in whose employ is seven-time world champion
    Michael Schumacher. Montezemolo, 56, who managed the F1 team in the
    1970s, was recently appointed chairman of Fiat Group — parent company of
    Ferrari — after the death of Umberto Agnelli. He has resisted — so far —
    entreaties to run for the Italian presidency, which polls show he would
    win in a walk.

    We've got the Donald. Italy has Luca Maximus.

    Yet pared to its essence, Ferrari's business model hasn't changed much
    since Enzo ran the company: Win at Formula 1 racing and amortize that
    investment, when and where possible, in the technical development of the
    road cars.

    For the tifosi — the Ferrari fans — there is a holy purity to this
    philosophy; to Montezemolo, it's just good business sense. "Win on
    Sunday, sell on Monday" works as well in any language.

    I would love to be cynical about Ferrari. One of the few places where
    photography is not allowed is the factory assembly line — such images
    would dull the legend of the cars being hand-built by white-haired Gepettos.

    Yet the degree to which Ferrari has integrated its street car and racing
    divisions is extraordinary. For example, Jean Todt, the director of the
    all-conquering racing team, has recently been named managing director of
    the Ferrari Maserati Group — a position for which he has no credentials
    beyond kicking butt in Formula 1. The same aerodynamics team that dials
    in Schumacher and Rubens Barrichello's F1 cars also develops the road
    cars. The new machining facility builds parts for both the Gestione
    Sportiva and the GT car division. In fact, the very architecture of the
    campus, with its multivectored staircases and connecting tunnels,
    reflects the osmosis between racing and passenger car operations.

    And then there is the brand new F430, the mid-engine, V8-powered
    berlinetta replacement to the 360 Modena. Like the Modena, which sold
    about 10,000 units between 1999 and 2004, the F430 will be Ferrari's
    bread-and-butter coupe, and like the Modena, the F430 is reasonably
    civilized, not a carbon-fiber crucifix like the Enzo hypercar, of which
    only 399 copies were made.

    But the F430 simply reeks of F1 racing technology, including the
    first-ever use in a production vehicle of a race-bred electronic
    differential transaxle — Ferrari calls it "E-Diff." All cars have
    differentials, which allow the driven wheels to rotate at different
    speeds, as required when cars go around a corner; the outside wheels
    travel farther than the inside wheels. Ferrari's E-Diff system comprises
    an electro-hydraulic actuator that shifts torque between two friction
    discs, maximizing traction according to the data coming in from the
    steering angle and accelerator pedal angle sensors, the yaw sensors and
    individual wheel sensors.

    Other race-derived hardware includes optional carbon-ceramic brakes; a
    "launch control" program (not available in the North American market)
    for maximum acceleration from a standing start; and the vehicle dynamics
    manettino, a five-position switch that adjusts the thresholds of the
    traction, stability and antilock systems, the suspension stiffness, the
    E-Diff and the gearbox shifting action, all integrated according to the
    car's constellation of sensors. Just like the one on Schumacher's
    steering wheel. Dial L for lap time.

    On the "Ice" setting, for example, the adaptive suspension is soft, even
    plush; the F1-style gearbox switches to automatic mode and takes a
    leisurely 0.8 second to change gears; the antilock, stability and
    traction control systems all intervene at the slightest indication of
    wheel slip; and the throttle response is relaxed so that an overeager
    right foot won't spin the car.

    At the other end of the spectrum, the "Race" setting puts the car in
    "seek and destroy" mode. The gear changes crack off at 0.15 second; the
    suspension goes rock hard; and the dynamics system — ABS, stability and
    traction — takes its invisible hands away so that a skilled driver — or
    even I — can slide the car around a track. In race mode, the E-Diff
    allows maximum usable power to be transferred to each rear wheel.

    When the car hooks around the hairpin at the Fiorano test track, you can
    lay the power on and the car powers out with the most beautiful,
    progressive oversteer you could imagine.

    According to Ferrari, the F430 laps Fiorano three seconds faster than
    the Modena.

    Does any of this sound familiar? A similar sort of system, employed for
    very different purposes, can be found in the new Land Rover LR3. Its
    five-position switch (rock, sand, mud, etc.) adjusts the concerted
    behavior of systems from throttle response to shock valving. We are
    seeing the first generation of digitally animated automobiles.

    Like the Modena, the F430 uses an aluminum space-frame design built by
    Scaglietti. The weight of the car (3,196 pounds in European trim) is up
    10% over the Modena.

    The body design, a shared credit between coach builder Pininfarina and
    Ferrari head of design Frank Stephenson, sends the Modena to the gym.
    It's intensely muscular, particularly around the rear flanks, which
    include engine intake scoops on the fenders reminiscent of the '60s-era
    250LM endurance car. The quad taillights are the same parts as on the
    Enzo, and both cars' quad exhausts subtly echo the taillight array. Also
    like the Enzo, the F430's rear end is dominated by a vaned aerodynamic
    diffuser curling up from the car's underbody. The car's ground effects
    are excellent. At 124 miles per hour, the car generates 50% more
    road-gripping down force than the Modena.

    The F430's front bumper intakes are a visual analog to the "shark nose"
    design of Ferrari's 1961 world championship car driven by Phil Hill and
    other cars of the era. This is the one false note in the car's styling:
    The actual intake duct, covered in black mesh, is quite a bit smaller
    than the painted-black oval surround. It's plausible, I suppose, that
    the gaping vent holes create Venturi effects that move air more
    efficiently through the twin radiators, but these intakes look phony up
    close.

    The F430 has a monster under glass — the all-new 4.3-liter, 32-valve V8.
    Its flat-crank design punches out 490 hp (25% more than the Modena) and
    343 pound-feet of torque (23% more). Despite the increase in
    displacement, the engine is nearly the same size and weight as the
    previous motor. One vital statistic: The centerline of the crankshaft is
    only about 5 inches from the bottom of the engine, thanks to the use of
    external oil sumps and a smaller twin-disc clutch array just over 8
    inches in diameter. This means the engine's center of gravity is lower
    than the Modena's, which benefits overall handling.

    With its variable-valve timing on intake and exhaust sides (using a very
    racy hydraulic tappet actuation), variable-intake plumbing inside the
    gorgeous red intake plenums, and beautiful polished intake trumpets
    jutting from the cylinder heads, the 4.3-liter motor looks, and sounds,
    the part. The wild noise this thing produces at full honk will make you
    whimper with tearful, lugubrious joy.

    How is the drive? Perfect. Just perfect. Thanks to a slimmer central
    tunnel, the cabin is roomier than the Modena's, and the stitched-leather
    interior, while lean and purposeful, is quite comfortable — you can even
    get a navigation system (take that, purists!). The paddles for the F1
    shifter have been revised so that they fall to hand more easily.

    Stereo? Don't know. Never turned it on.

    On the unwound roads of Emilia-Romagna's hill country, the F430 commands
    utterly. The front-end grip is amazing. The car will refuse no order
    given it; turn the wheel and it goes where pointed, ready or not. Lay on
    the carbon-ceramic brakes and the landscape freezes as if you had
    yelled, "Simon says 'Stop!' " If you happen to be wearing the optional
    four-point racing belts, the sensation is distinctly like being hung up
    by your underwear.

    Romp the throttle and a year's migration of monarch butterflies alights
    in your stomach. Ferrari quotes a 0-to-60 mph time of 3.9 seconds, but I
    have it on good authority -- Car and Driver magazine's intrepid tester
    Aaron Robinson — that the car is a couple of tenths quicker than that.

    Top speed is rated at 195 mph, which I suspect is a similarly
    conservative estimate. Nail the throttle and upshift three times. The
    car rolls its eyes back in its head and takes a bite of time and space.
    Very like a shark.

    The balance, the grip, the steering — it's all so effortless. I've never
    felt anything like it. The only thing I could think of: It's like
    beating up a bar full of rednecks with the world's most perfectly
    balanced set of nunchaku. Whap! Whap! Down they go. Oh, that feels good!

    It's funny to think that if you pointed Enzo Ferrari at this car and
    told him to adjust the timing, he wouldn't know where to start. Despite
    the nearly 500 horses amidships, what makes this car go is less hardware
    than software — a reflection of the hypertech world of Formula 1 racing
    that Ferrari currently owns.

    True, compared with the forbidding technological heights of F1, the F430
    is only at base camp. And yet the view is awfully good from there.

    *

    2005 Ferrari F430

    Estimated base price: $190,000

    Powertrain: 4.3-liter, 32-valve, dual-overhead-cam V8, hydraulically
    actuated variable valve timing, variable intake geometry, flat crank,
    dry sump lubrication, twin Bosch electronic engine controls, by-wire
    throttle; six-speed electro-hydraulically actuated rear transaxle,
    paddle shifted with auto mode (six-speed manual available).

    Horsepower: 490 at 8,500 rpm

    Torque: 343 pound-feet at 5,250 rpm

    Curb weight: 3,196 pounds

    0-60 mph: 3.9 seconds

    0-124 mph: 17.3 seconds

    Top speed: 195 mph

    Overall length: 177.6 inches

    Wheelbase: 102.4 inches

    Wheels and tires: 19-inch alloys; 225/35R19 (front), 285/35R19 (rear)

    Brakes: 12-inch cast-iron cross-drilled and ventilated discs, four-pot
    calipers

    Final thoughts: Montezemolo's revenge

    Automotive critic Dan Neil can be reached at com.



    courtesy of The Los Angeles Times and MC


    --
    You raise the blade, you make the change
    You re-arrange me 'til I'm sane.
    You lock the door
    And throw away the key
    There's someone in my head but it's not me

  2. #2
    matt
    Guest

    Re: And finally, Dan the Man hits topic!!

    "MC" <net> wrote in message
    news:NWbbd.3072$news.atl.earthlink.net... 


    Liked this:

    "Stereo? Don't know. Never turned it on."


    Liked this a lot:

    "Nail the throttle and upshift three times. The
    car rolls its eyes back in its head and takes a bite of time and space."



    Thought "WTF Dan?" at this one though:


    It's funny to think that if you pointed Enzo Ferrari at this car and
    told him to adjust the timing, he wouldn't know where to start.



    -Matt- "..."







  3. #3
    F2004:
    Guest

    Re: And finally, Dan the Man hits topic!!

    On Wed, 13 Oct 2004 15:35:09 GMT, MC <net> wrote: 

    Yes, yes. ...But how does it compare to Jethro's 'Vette?


  4. #4
    MC
    Guest

    Re: And finally, Dan the Man hits topic!!

    matt borland wrote:
     

    Yeah, it almost seems kind of nasty. But it's true.

    MC


    --
    You raise the blade, you make the change
    You re-arrange me 'til I'm sane.
    You lock the door
    And throw away the key
    There's someone in my head but it's not me

  5. #5
    MC
    Guest

    Re: And finally, Dan the Man hits topic!!

    F2004: 15 of 17* wrote:
     

    "Another column, another time .... Coach Gennaro."

    MC


    --
    You raise the blade, you make the change
    You re-arrange me 'til I'm sane.
    You lock the door
    And throw away the key
    There's someone in my head but it's not me

  6. #6
    matt
    Guest

    Re: And finally, Dan the Man hits topic!!


    "MC" <net> wrote in message
    news:_Bpbd.3925$news.atl.earthlink.net... 


    Yeah, it's true, but I just don't get where it's "funny".


    Hahaha, show me Enzo Ferrari and I'll show you a man
    confused by modern engine management software!


    Errrr, eh?



    Otherwise, Dan's a really good writer.


    -Matt-



  7. #7
    MC
    Guest

    Re: And finally, Dan the Man hits topic!!

    matt borland wrote: 

    C'mon, man. It's the year 2004. Get with the program. He wasn't
    trying to be funny.

    He was trying to be snide. These are the Snide Years. If you're
    educated and a decent writer, you're Snide or you're nothing.

    C'mon, man.

    MC

    --
    You raise the blade, you make the change
    You re-arrange me 'til I'm sane.
    You lock the door
    And throw away the key
    There's someone in my head but it's not me

  8. #8
    matt
    Guest

    Re: And finally, Dan the Man hits topic!!


    "MC" <net> wrote in message
    news:6eHbd.4644$news.atl.earthlink.net... 


    Pffft! "Get with 2004"... this coming from a guy
    with twenty year old Pink Floyd lyrics in his sig...




    -Matt- "Now _that_ was snide. :-)"



  9. #9
    MC
    Guest

    Re: And finally, Dan the Man hits topic!!

    matt borland wrote:
     

    I would offer, counselor, that those lyrics and that song have a bit of
    special meaning to me. To me they could have been written this morning.

    MC


    --
    You raise the blade, you make the change
    You re-arrange me 'til I'm sane.
    You lock the door
    And throw away the key
    There's someone in my head but it's not me

  10. #10
    matt
    Guest

    Re: And finally, Dan the Man hits topic!!


    "MC" <net> wrote in message
    newsZYbd.5697$news.atl.earthlink.net... 


    Ackshully (to use MCPD's spelling), as I typed
    that I had a hard time reconciling that the lyrics
    really are that old.




    -Matt- "The lunatic, is in my head...."




 

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