F8 Tributo launch references the 308 | Page 2 | FerrariChat

F8 Tributo launch references the 308

Discussion in '308/328' started by vaccarella, Feb 28, 2019.

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  1. dflett

    dflett Formula 3
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    Jun 24, 2005
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    I think it looks a mess. A bit of corvette, a bit of new NSX, a lot of 458 still, but now covered in what could be a body kit. There seems little cohesiveness to the design from the front to the side to the back. I thought the same of the 488 though. I have a huge amount of respect for Flavio Manzoni but I think Ferrari really misses Pininfarina's input on the regular production cars IMO. The MM and SP38 were much better designs built on the same platform.
     
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  2. dflett

    dflett Formula 3
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    Mandatory speed limiters are coming to new cars in Europe apparently. Within 3 years according to European Transport Safety Council.
     
  3. Rosey

    Rosey F1 Rookie

    Nov 5, 2015
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    Yes, Pinifarina and Ferrari... RIP.
     
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  4. Martin308GTB

    Martin308GTB F1 Rookie

    Jan 22, 2003
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    It's a proposal coming from the EU. They discuss it since 2010. First it was a proposal for light commercial vehicles, which didn't even come till today. And with the strong german carmaker lobby I doubt, that it will ever come.
    The European Union didn't even manage to force Germany into a general Autobahn speed limit up till today. Recent new discussions were choked off once again.

    Best from Germany
    Martin
     
  5. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

    Mar 26, 2011
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    Well, the actual fact is that I feel nothing about these new cars: really nothing: Zero, zilch, nada, nitchevo. I remember the times when a new Ferrari appeared and there was that burn inside me saying "this is so unfair to me: I deserve this car more than anyone else, but I can't afford it". Nowadays they don't look nice to me (the last new car having a shape I liked was the original Aston Martin DB9 in 2004 or so) and so irrelevant: I mean, speed limiter or not, what use could I have for a car that can sprint up to 330 kp/h, but is legally limited (speed limiter or not) to 80 kp/h. None; these are useless. I never believed I could say that one day, but they leave me totally cold, I couldn't care less.

    Rgds
     
  6. vaccarella

    vaccarella Formula 3

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    I wonder if your 20 year old self would have felt the same, if he could have peered into the future to see these images.
     
  7. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

    Mar 26, 2011
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    Valid question...answer is truly "I don't know"; but I have to admit that the next generation after me, in my family, my nephews and nièces, today between 20 and 30, couldn't care less about cars, and even less than that about sportscars. To them, these are useless pieces coming from a dinosaur age trying to stay relevant, but failing to do so.
    To me, having a toy that you could not at least from time to time exercise "somewhat" makes no sense at all; I have zero interest to drive such a car at the 50 kp/h city limit to show off.
    I really would be happier with a "Nuovo Fiat 500", which, to my eye, is also prettier than this F8; I agree with "dflett" above that it looks much too much of a "kit car" with flippers, winglets, and what-have-you. And the wheels are really ugly. The rear is a mess. Last Ferrari I liked were the 355/.550. Then it stopped for me, it really did. Only the 458 was "not too bad".

    Rgds
     
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  8. Martin308GTB

    Martin308GTB F1 Rookie

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    #33 Martin308GTB, Mar 6, 2019
    Last edited: Mar 6, 2019
    Hi Bruno,

    exactly my thoughts. Here's mine, or our's, or my wife's. Don't know exactly :)
    1,4 quattrovalvole :) 100hp, Sports suspension. I think perfect for Paris city traffic.


    Best Regards
    Martin
     
  9. trs666

    trs666 Karting

    Apr 17, 2014
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    Tommi S.
    I am not sure your thought of younger generations are universal. Often get thus up from kids 4 years and up, on car shows they often want to sit behind the whee. My son is 16, taking license for light motorbike (KTN Duke 125) and says all too often: dad when you get old my sister can get the house and apartment ay Tenerife, i want the Ferrari. They are not all green vegan hipsters or what ever is in now.
    ///TRS
     
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  10. Martin308GTB

    Martin308GTB F1 Rookie

    Jan 22, 2003
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    #35 Martin308GTB, Mar 6, 2019
    Last edited: Mar 6, 2019
    No matter, how I hate disagreeing with Bruno (nerofer), but you are absolutely right. I live in a fairly rural region of SW-Germany, but near the worst vegan left-green city with hipsters all around of the whole country. And anyway kids love cars and you see myriads of upgraded ricers or top end hatchbacks with 18s behind the wheel.
    And when cruising around in the nearby, even more rural french region, the kids seem to be even much more excited when seeing a Ferrari. I love the 'Ferrari'-shouts with that french accent :)

    Best from Germany
    Martin
     
  11. vaccarella

    vaccarella Formula 3

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    I think it depends a lot on the father's attitudes. I see that in my wider family, for sure.

    In the main, sons of petrolheads tend to appreciate good engineering, especially if they've also a positive relationship with their father & are not rebelling in some way. So far, so good with my kid, he loves being in the 308, but he's still pretty young.
     
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  12. Martin308GTB

    Martin308GTB F1 Rookie

    Jan 22, 2003
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    Paul,

    I rebelled seriously in my teen years against my petrolhead father (he purchased his 308 when I was 16) But it did again improve later. And in retrospective it was a good relationship (R.I.P.)
    I think a certain amount of rebellion against our parents in the teenager years was just normal.

    My older brother is a different issue. He's a left-green vegan teacher driving an EV :)

    Best from Germany
    Martin
     
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  13. dflett

    dflett Formula 3
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    The uk has wanted this forever. I used to live near their motor research lab 25 years ago and they were testing vehicles electronically limited to the local road speed limit back then. They were testing transducers on the speed limit signs back then. I read this new proposal was agreed by motor manufacturers to incorporate the tech from 2022 onwards in Europe. On the first vehicles, one will be able to disable the feature.

    How long will Germany retain its no-limit autobahns against the environmentalists?



    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
     
  14. dflett

    dflett Formula 3
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  15. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

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    No, really. Besides, it's not road-legal here, as it has no windshield.

    And...you would have to sell more than a kidney; something else must be added, some other "spare parts". A kidney would bring you "only" about 45.000 dollars in most developped countries (in which, usually, it is illegal to sell body parts...) except in Israel where it could fetch about three times more. About 25.000 in China; much less in Africa.
    You wouldn't be able to buy that car with it. A liver would bring you about 40.000 dollars. A kidney + a liver = 85.000 dollars. That's still somewhat short. Now, I think of other spare parts, but...

    Rgds
     
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  16. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

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    Some kids still do, but some others don't give a thought. And I think that the number of those who still do is much less than it was thirty years ago.
    Don't trust the French, by the way. Those who cheer your car would not hesitate to take it away from you, given the chance.
    Rgds
     
  17. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

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    I never thought that my thought is an universal rule. But I'm pretty sure that, even if some kids of today still love cars, the number is much less than it was thirty years ago.

    Rgds
     
  18. nerofer

    nerofer F1 World Champ

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    Love it, but the truth is that the best for city traffic in Paris (if you are living and working inside the city itself) is, by far, the tube; it's faster, more reliable than any car and always on time. A car is useless in Paris, except between 23:00 and 6:00. And it is a liability, because it's so difficult to find parking space, so you get fined all the time.
    Had one of my brother's cars (a VW "polo") for about two years in my building's garage, because he had no parking space for it during that time. He said "use it anytime you want, it's insured, etc..." the fact is, I never did, because I don't need to.
    I even forgot about it completly, to the point that when I decided it was time to exercise it, the battery was flat.
    Rgds
     
  19. JuLiTrO

    JuLiTrO Formula Junior

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    I agree with that and the topic deserves a thread on it. Who is going to look after Classics when we are not around anymore?
    What can we do now about it?

    Sent from my Lenovo YT-X703F using FerrariChat.com mobile app
     
  20. vaccarella

    vaccarella Formula 3

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    A old guy near me had a barnful of beautifully kept vintage Rolls Royces. 20s to 40s. Their engineering & coachwork were incredible and his understanding deep. But they aren't my thing. He died a year or two ago & they all went to auction for a song. Collectables will always be subject to fickle changes in fashion and these attitudes drift from generation to generation.
     
  21. Furanku

    Furanku Formula Junior

    Sep 25, 2009
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    Interesting you'd say that. Last Saturday I met with a friend of mine who owns, among many others, a 250 GTO, and guess what new car he just purchased? An Abarth 595 Competizione. He said it was very fun to drive!
     
  22. Martin308GTB

    Martin308GTB F1 Rookie

    Jan 22, 2003
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    Till the Green Party will take over the government. But this will still take a good while. Like mentioned there was a new debate recently but was literally choked off by the conservatives.

    But isn't the 'METRO' much more dangerous? At least during certain night hours? :)

    I can imagine that very well :)

    Best Regards
    Martin
     
  23. Crowndog

    Crowndog F1 Veteran

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    The last car show I entered my 308 in won the Kid’s Favorite Award. The rest of the awards went to classic American muscle cars. I’ll bet a lot of kids at that show got extra chores when they got home.
     
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  24. Crowndog

    Crowndog F1 Veteran

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    My point being that kids are not biased. They get that visceral feeling when looking at a real work of automotive art.
     
  25. Martin308GTB

    Martin308GTB F1 Rookie

    Jan 22, 2003
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    I have the feeling, that the poison works in France. Look, what their carmakers dare to offer.

    Best Regards
    Martin
     

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