Ferrari F430 MASSIVE REVS!!! | FerrariChat

Ferrari F430 MASSIVE REVS!!!

Discussion in '360/430' started by tannermash, Sep 21, 2011.

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  1. tannermash

    tannermash Formula Junior
    BANNED

    Jun 16, 2010
    291
    Tennessee
    Full Name:
    Tanner Mashburn
    [ame]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6hDxptff2WE[/ame]
     
  2. Trent

    Trent Formula 3

    Dec 10, 2003
    2,013
    Indialantic, FL
    Full Name:
    Trent
    I am sorry, but this video makes me sick.

    They start the car on a cold motor, conduct a 7 second warm up then off to the rev limiter for 10 seconds. What type of tool does this to a Ferrari or any vehicle for that matter. I can tell it was a cold motor by the water from condensation coming out of the exhaust during the torture test.

    I am not amused.
     
  3. duskybird

    duskybird F1 World Champ
    Owner Rossa Subscribed

    Jan 20, 2007
    12,607
    29 Electoral Votes
    Full Name:
    Bill B.
    Quick, get carbon the VIN!
     
  4. lilleprins

    lilleprins Formula Junior

    Apr 19, 2010
    446
    Torslanda , Sweden
    Full Name:
    Anders T.
    +1 Just stupid.
     
  5. PFSEX

    PFSEX Formula Junior

    Jun 30, 2006
    843
    Las Vegas
    Full Name:
    John Ratto
    This is why it is somewhat important to know how many previous owners a car had when you are looking to buy.

    One out of every 5 (or so - you tell me) owners of these cars is a total idiot, or is rich and doesn't care, or knows he is flipping the car in 3 months. So he does stupid things like this.

    The more owners a car has had, the more the chances that one of them was an idiot.
     
  6. KangarooAR15

    KangarooAR15 F1 Rookie

    Aug 3, 2011
    4,084
    Houston, Texas
    Full Name:
    Matthew
    This is what scares me about buying a car. That stupidity is burned into my brain and there's no way to tell if someone has abused the car like they have in this video.
     
  7. Mattyrae

    Mattyrae Formula 3
    BANNED

    Apr 17, 2011
    2,048
    If you see a 430 Spider from Tennessee for sale, stay away! :)
     
  8. jim94-348

    jim94-348 Formula Junior
    Owner Silver Subscribed

    Aug 19, 2010
    981
    Greenville, NC
    Full Name:
    Jim
    I wish I was his mechanic because there is a big pay day coming
     
  9. MikeR397

    MikeR397 Formula 3

    May 9, 2010
    1,469
    SE Michigan
    Would a compression/leakdown test not pick up on this kinda abuse, nontheless? A visual PPI is ~$300, and I think a compression/leakdown for an F430 is another $300. Seems like a good $600 insurance policy, but of course who knows exactly what/if cold revs do to the engine or if there is a reasonable way to detect it. Yes, very concerning as a used car buyer.
     
  10. Zinger

    Zinger Formula 3

    Apr 11, 2009
    1,894
    Leesburg, Va
    Full Name:
    Ryan M
    That was painful to watch, not cool
     
  11. vf430

    vf430 Formula Junior

    Dec 16, 2009
    666
    SoCal
    What waste of a nice car!
     
  12. Ingpr

    Ingpr F1 Rookie

    Jun 30, 2009
    2,619
    PR
    Full Name:
    David
    Stupidity on it's maximum expression!!
     
  13. 134282

    134282 Four Time F1 World Champ
    BANNED

    Aug 3, 2002
    40,647
    California
    Full Name:
    Carbon McCoy
    That's what I'm talking about! :)


    I have mixed feelings about this. On one hand, I firmly believe in warming up an engine. Even in the summer time, I let a car or motorcycle engine warm up before I drive, and I'm not revving the **** out of it (well, I am on the bike :)). But I used to work for a guy who's daily driver was a 360. And even in the dead of NY winter, he'd just start it up and go - he used to laugh when I warmed it up - and that engine was bullet proof. I mean bullet proof, it never failed or faltered in any way. I partly attribute that to the fact that it was driven daily - the guy didn't even own a battery tender.
     
  14. Jedi

    Jedi Moderator
    Moderator Lifetime Rossa Owner

    Mar 18, 2008
    32,272
    Seattle Area
    Full Name:
    Dave
    #14 Jedi, Sep 22, 2011
    Last edited: Sep 22, 2011
    One point I'm confused about.... where in the video do they say the car is cold?
    All we know is they started it.... but it just as easily be after a long spirited run
    with lots of red-line shifts, only to be shut off and restarted for the video to hear
    it start up.

    If the engine were already HOT, would this be as bad a thing, hitting the
    limiter under no load, vs the obvious YES if were a cold engine?

    I don't really know - just pointing out there's no way to know the car is actually "cold"
    from that video link.

    [edit] just loaded in Youtube instead of embedded.... sounds like it WAS cold in the comments.... :(

    But my question still stands - would HOT have made any difference?

    Jedi
     
  15. F430GT

    F430GT Formula 3

    Sep 29, 2005
    1,300
    Marco Island, FL
    That engine was cold, the condensation on the exhaust says it all.

    Revving a car that cold at 8,500 rpm guarantees damage to the engine. The car needs to be under load, with no load the valvetrain suffers.

    Unfortunately, a SD3 read-out won't show anything.

    I would not buy that car, just for the damage done in a few seconds, but no idea on the VIN number.
     
  16. MikeR397

    MikeR397 Formula 3

    May 9, 2010
    1,469
    SE Michigan
    #16 MikeR397, Sep 22, 2011
    Last edited: Sep 22, 2011
    Good question, I'm also curious if revving a hot engine to redline is equivalent to hitting redline while driving, or if no load from being in neutral makes a difference, and if so, how much?

    Regardless, we pay for our toys and even if not ideal, I think we should be allowed to rev them and have some fun, just so long as doing so isn't recklessly damaging. I guess it's even fine to recklessly damage your car if you want, just so long as the next buyer gets the FYI about the abuse.

    ETA:

    Perspective also matters here probably. Revving an engine excessively could cause it to prematurely die, say randomly at 50% of it's otherwise expectant life. Most would frown on that as getting a new engine is viewed as a "repair." However, a "maintenance" item like a clutch might be viewed differently. We all know launching (or if you have launch control) will dramatically increase the wear on your (pricy) clutch, but that's still generally viewed as acceptable if you are ok replacing the clutch and no one cringes when they see Ferrari's launched. Perhaps the magnitude of price for the repair/maintenace item also matters.
     
  17. pmotoring

    pmotoring Formula Junior

    May 8, 2009
    693
    HONG KONG
    Full Name:
    PAT PAT
    What is the point of revving the 430? Showing off...? I guarantee he is not the owner, it's heart breaking.
     
  18. tannermash

    tannermash Formula Junior
    BANNED

    Jun 16, 2010
    291
    Tennessee
    Full Name:
    Tanner Mashburn
    #18 tannermash, Sep 23, 2011
    Last edited: Sep 23, 2011
    I can assure everyone that I personally saw the car warmed up for a proper amount of time...turned off...started again and moved for pictures...turned off....then turned back on for this video all within an hours time
     
  19. Zinger

    Zinger Formula 3

    Apr 11, 2009
    1,894
    Leesburg, Va
    Full Name:
    Ryan M
    #19 Zinger, Sep 23, 2011
    Last edited: Sep 23, 2011
    The car may have been warmed up earlier than the photo shoot but the engine more than likely cooled back down when the video was taken. When the car is warmed up it will not dump condensation like it did in the video. Either way no 430 cold or warm should be hammered to the rev limiter for any amount of time, especially not under a load. You can damage the car very quickly doing this....The impression members have is that the car is abused. The thought that ran through my mind is if the owner posts a video of this what happens when nobody is around? These cars are amazing and sound incredible. I'm sure you were just having fun with the video but this is really not a way to treat a Ferrari.
     
  20. Ferragamo88

    Ferragamo88 Rookie

    Jul 10, 2011
    1
    I am also curious, can any mechanic/engineer please shed some light?

    If you blip the throttle in neutral , does this damage the engine?

    Since the consensus Is that revving and holding the throttle to redline the engine with no load is bad

    Is blipping the throttle also just as bad. Blipping where you step on the gas and release it immediately

     
  21. KangarooAR15

    KangarooAR15 F1 Rookie

    Aug 3, 2011
    4,084
    Houston, Texas
    Full Name:
    Matthew
    To me, it looks like Junior (kid) grabbed keys and revved it for YouTube. Let's hope daddy doesn't see this video and ground someone.

    I would go ballistic if that was my car.
     
  22. Bill S

    Bill S Formula 3

    Oct 2, 2004
    1,995

    I believe reving the engine, even when hot, close to redline with no load will damage it. Ferrari lets you do that. Porsche does not. I cannot rev my CGT or GT3 RS to redline with no load. The computer limits it to around 6 or 7K max.
     
  23. F430GT

    F430GT Formula 3

    Sep 29, 2005
    1,300
    Marco Island, FL
    Revving a car to redline with no load (neutral) hot or warm damages the valvetrain, floating valves and vibrations at the limit (redline) due to lack of load will bend valves, scratch camshaft.

    Then there is a few seconds (close to a minute) to get a F430 to circulate oil on the entire system. I always startup my car with no throttle at all, and let it sit for 2 minutes before moving it. Revving with not enough lubrication yet, is even worse, bearings, scratched cyleinder, cracked pistons, broken rings, these are standard failures on revving a cold engine.

    I learned my lesson with revving engines in motorcycles (dirt bikes) when I was a kid.

    A warmed up car doesn't have condensation on the muffler, it just can't.

    now, where is the VIN #?
     
  24. xraes

    xraes Karting

    Apr 6, 2011
    120
    NC
    Just curious....... how old is Tanner and who does this poor car belong to?


    Rodney
     
  25. big_guy

    big_guy F1 Rookie

    Sep 9, 2007
    3,190
    Ontario, Canada
    Please dont think I am trying to get personal, but it depends on the size of your "blip". :)

    And in this case a larger blip is NOT better than a smaller blip.

    On a more serious note, when I start my car after a couple of days and it idles rough, there are two ways to fix the problem. One is to shut down the car immediately and start it up again (there is a thread that discuses this issue extensively). The other is to give the car a very gentle "blip" (I take it from roughly 1,200 RPM to about 3,000 or 3,500 RPM) to even out the idle. I dont think gentle blips will do any harm.
     

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