599 option for 2 rear seats? | FerrariChat

599 option for 2 rear seats?

Discussion in '612/599' started by coupe1, Jan 31, 2008.

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  1. coupe1

    coupe1 Formula 3

    Jan 15, 2007
    1,469
    Singapore
    Is there such an option for 2 rear seats in the 599?
    Asking for a friend who has kids.

    Thanks in advance. Cheers..
     
  2. RyanMinor

    RyanMinor Karting

    Aug 23, 2007
    157
    Cave Creek, AZ
    Full Name:
    Ryan Minor
    I do not believe so.
     
  3. Asian1118

    Asian1118 F1 Rookie

    Mar 23, 2005
    3,834
    Shelby twp
    Full Name:
    James
  4. coupe1

    coupe1 Formula 3

    Jan 15, 2007
    1,469
    Singapore
    ok. I must have been confused. Must have mistaken it with the upcoming F149 which is supposed to have option for 2 rear seats
    or a bench like 599.
    Thanks
     
  5. Racer98

    Racer98 F1 Rookie
    BANNED

    Aug 7, 2005
    4,766
    Encino.
    Full Name:
    K-Fence.
    #5 Racer98, Jan 31, 2008
    Last edited by a moderator: Sep 7, 2017
  6. coupe1

    coupe1 Formula 3

    Jan 15, 2007
    1,469
    Singapore
    haha...like this?


    That Ferrari Might Run on Vegetable Oil Someday: Doron Levin
    2008-01-18 00:25 (New York)


    Commentary by Doron Levin
    Jan. 18 (Bloomberg) -- Ferrari sports cars have been
    likened to racehorses, cheetahs and other fleet-of-foot
    creatures. The automaker is worrying about the day when a
    Ferrari might be seen as a dinosaur.
    That's why Ferrari SpA displays at auto shows now include
    one odd exhibit among the $320,000 12-cylinder F599s and low-
    slung $250,000 F430 Scuderias: a F430 BioFuel that can run on
    E85, a mixture of 15 percent gasoline and 85 percent ethanol
    seen by some as less harmful to the environment.
    The Modena, Italy-based company also is pledging to improve
    the fuel efficiency of its models by 40 percent over the next
    four years.
    Ferrari, owned by Fiat SpA, developed the Ferrari
    prototype, shown for the first time at the North American
    International Auto Show in Detroit earlier this week, to send
    the message that it cares about the planet as much as any
    automaker. Inspired by models such as the Toyota Prius gas-
    electric hybrid, mass-market automakers are developing all
    manner of hybrids, diesels, fuel-cell and battery-powered cars
    designed to use less energy and emit less carbon dioxide than
    conventional models.
    Fisker Automotive Inc. is the latest Silicon Valley startup
    to show a prototype of a battery-powered, plug-in hybrid.
    Fisker's Karma will sell for $80,000 and the company claims it
    will reach 60 miles per hour (97 kilometers per hour) from a
    standstill in 5.8 seconds.

    Losing Sleep

    If I ran a company that built Bentleys, Rolls-Royces,
    Maseratis or any ultra-luxury car powered by a huge gasoline
    engine, I wouldn't be sleeping well right now. The latest
    energy-saving regulations in the U.S. and Europe are forcing all
    carmakers to design less powerful, smaller vehicles. Smaller and
    less powerful might be OK for a Ford owner; they're swear words
    to buyers of ultra-luxury cars.
    Tougher rules on fuel consumption are spurred by signs of
    global warming and $100-a-barrel crude oil. Buyers of Ferraris
    and the like may not devote much thought to the price of
    gasoline. But they do wish to avoid surly looks and self-
    righteous comments at the yacht club.
    ``What's important to our customers are the social
    implications,'' said David Reuter, a spokesman for Bentley
    Motors Ltd., a unit of Volkswagen AG. ``Everyone wants to
    pollute less; that's a no-brainer. What we've heard from our
    customers is if Bentley can be socially responsible that would
    be a positive.''
    Reuter said Bentley is working on a strategy to address
    ecological concerns that will be announced in Geneva in March.
    ``We never want to give a customer a reason not to buy a
    Bentley,'' he said.

    Minimal Impact

    Unlike more common car brands such as Ford or Nissan,
    makers of so-called exotic cars such as the $222,000, 520-
    horsepower Lamborghini Gallardo Spyder, sell only a few thousand
    cars worldwide a year. Lamborghini, whose emblem is a raging
    bull, sold 2,406 vehicles worldwide in 2007, up from 2,087 a
    year earlier.
    Cars made by Lamborghini, owned by Volkswagen's Audi unit,
    emit more than 400 grams of carbon dioxide per kilometer. The
    European Union wants carmakers to reduce emissions to 120 grams
    or less by 2012.
    Some will wonder how limiting a handful of rare, little-
    used vehicles can help the atmosphere much, even if you doubt
    that carbon dioxide is putting the planet on the path to
    destruction.
    ``The volumes are too low to make a difference in emissions
    or energy consumption,'' said Bob Austin, an automotive
    consultant in Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. Thus, any
    calculation of a Ferrari's environmental impact must take into
    account how few of them exist and how few miles they log on the
    roads each year, he said. Explaining this to the U.S. Congress
    or the European Union will sound a tad elitist.

    Avoiding Insults

    Facts are facts, though. Buyers of ultra-luxury models tend
    to own several cars. For running out to Starbucks, they probably
    keep a Prius (or two) for sheer novelty value or just to be able
    to travel free of harassment or insult on Earth Day.
    New technology might be the savior. Bayerische Motoren
    Werke AG, owner of Rolls-Royce, is working on a hydrogen-powered
    combustion engine for its high-end BMW 7-Series cars. One day,
    Austin said, BMW might consider installing the engine in its
    $350,000 Rolls-Royce Phantom.
    Big and sophisticated high-end diesels also could placate
    regulators. The public relations goal, after all, is to claim
    that energy consumption has been reduced -- not stamped out
    altogether.
    My hunch is that the designers and engineers of glamour
    brands will soon figure out how to retool their image, if not
    their vehicles. The E85 Ferrari was a good first effort.
    With so much posturing and junk science guiding the
    environmental movement, there also must be ways to make a few
    thousand supercars seem harmless.

    (Doron Levin is a Bloomberg News columnist. The opinions
    expressed are his own.)
     
  7. supraman55

    supraman55 Formula Junior

    Jun 16, 2006
    579
    Full Name:
    Vladislav
    This option will be available on "F149". Ferrari will give their customers possibility to choose if you want it 2+2 with small rear seats or two-seater with rear shelf similar to 599 GTB. Your friend needs to wait for this car. Best.
     
  8. Etcetera

    Etcetera Two Time F1 World Champ
    Silver Subscribed

    Dec 7, 2003
    23,856
    Full Name:
    C6H14O5
    The children will fit in the trunk.
     
  9. redferrarispyder

    redferrarispyder Formula Junior

    Sep 29, 2007
    321
  10. rberg32

    rberg32 Karting

    Mar 14, 2007
    245
    No such option... however, I think the shelf behind the seat will definately fit a midget.. Tell your buddy to look into the 612..
     
  11. BritBlaster

    BritBlaster F1 Rookie

    Jul 25, 2005
    2,865
    Bellevue, WA
    Full Name:
    Paul
    I love this quote.
    I have a modest 33' cruiser/fishing boat. In its most efficient cruise, it sucks down petroleum products like it's sponsored by OPEC -- a figure of 1.5mpg makes the Ferrari look like a econobox.
    I can only imagine what the big motor-yachts must suck down, let alone behemoths like "Octopus" ...
     
  12. CAPRISTO EGOISTE

    Oct 25, 2007
    99
    Istanbul
    Full Name:
    CAPRISTO EGOISTE
    Of course not, consider buying 612 Scag
     
  13. dan360

    dan360 F1 Rookie

    Feb 18, 2003
    2,669
    Boston
    Well I was in St Thomas a few weeks back on a chartered yacht. We went to the fuel dock to fill it back up with diesel. We had to park next to "Rising Sun" (Ellison's 450ft yacht) and they had just tried to buy 85,000 gallons of fuel which was a half tank! The guy who runs the fuel dock had told them "No, that's more than I have and I need to keep fueling everyone else".

    Just filling up his fuel tank costs more than a 599...
     

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