I don't think it spells the end of an era for Ferrari, but it's not for me. Ugly rear and too much luxury. Honestly, the only thing I hate about my 308 is the d@mn "power" windows. If Ferrari were to return to the spirit of the F40 - no stereo, no leather seats, a largely unfinished interior, terrifying power, and astonishing handling - and do THAT for +/- $200k, then I'd be all over that. If I wanted storage capacity, comfort, and lots of gizmos and geegaws, I could buy a VW Passat.
Yes I see your point as I've been vocal in prior posts, in prior threads, about the F149 appealing to women and men, skewed to women. That isn't a secret to anyone. But what are you comparing the performance to? The Scuderia? The 599GTB? The Enzo? The performance benchmarks for the California eclipse most cars. Power 460 bhp / 343 KW @ 7750 rpm Torque 485 Nm / 358 ft lbs @ 5000 rpm BHP/Liter 107 bhp / liter Power to weight 0.27 bhp / kg Top Speed 310 km/h / 193 mph 0-60 mph 3.9 s How are these specs sub-par? sub 4s/460bhp/358ft/193mph is embarrassing? Those are muscle car range benchmarks for a retractable hardtop coupe. Those are great numbers even at it's weight. It's not far behind the F430. But they're entirely different cars for different expectations. Compare it to the F430: Power 483 bhp / 360 KW @ 8500 rpm Torque 465 Nm / 343 ft lbs @ 5250 rpm BHP/Liter 112 bhp / liter Power to weight 0.33 bhp / kg Top Speed 315 km/h / 196 mph 0-60 mph 3.9 s Before anyone crucifies me, remember I maintain that they're entirely different cars for different expectations.
IIRC the Forza article said 60 percent of the buyers are new to Ferrari. Of course none of those 60 percent post on this board.
That may be true for you, but Ferrari would not sell many of these at 200K. People just expect more from the cars. This argument has been going on for decades. When the Boxer came out, Ferrari was accused of abandoning its "race car for the road" roots by putting out such a luxurious car. Ferarri can't win with the hard core but it's the poseurs who pay the bills. Dave
If that's true, then the Cali will succeed at what it is intended to do------expand their appeal and market. Dave
A dealer with one of the longest waiting lists in the US doesn't have a single "new owner" on the list for a California- not one. So much for your "60% new owners" Forza fantasies. Maybe in China and Russia where the increased factory output WAS going (before the global economy fell on its ass) I don't drive a 308. By 2010 I'll have either traded my Ferrari or given it to a friend who is the executor of my estate and I'll have bought a REAL GT: Maserati GT-S and a real sports car, either a Porsche GT3 or GT3RS. I've driven 19 cars worth $8 million in the past few months (and decided on the two I just mentioned) and in two weeks I've been invited to test a car in the multi-million dollar range that will cost the owner $300-500 in tire wear just for my demonstration mileage. And I wont miss any of you either.
I think because Ferrari used the California name, expectations were very high, especially for how the car was to look. I have not seen the car in person yet but from the pictures, not really a big departure from the 599, and alot like the Corvette in some ways. At the very least they should have done something that didn't look like anything else in Ferrari's lineup.
From what I've read- you are right about the fact that a lot of current owners are going to order the new Cali. Some will be adding, others trading. And in certain markets, a lot of new customers are placing orders, too. In the beginning, the novelty of the Cali will compete directly with the similarly priced F430 eating into it's sales numbers. But then the F430 will be phasing out and the Cali will be priced at the bottom of the model line. The successor of the F430 will probably be $40-50K more expensive.
It really seems Dan Neil was right Ferrari messes up and shoots themselves in the foot they do it with both barrels, Ferrari makes more money selling its licensing crap than cars, this car by doubling production plus the fact its not a wow car that young kids will dream about takes away from the Ferrari mistique, I don't see much licensing of Mercedes or Jaguar, no I am not a buyer of a Cali never would be not even for a bimbo girlfirend if I were filthy rich but I don't want to see the brand tarnished and watered down by average designs and big production numbers even though it may have a trick transmission and a few other gizmos
Mercedes and Jaguar do sell branded merchandise. I even get catalogs in the mail from Mercedes with everything from clothing, watches, pens, umbrella's, soccer balls, and other accessories. At most dealers, you will find Mercedes brand merchandise for sale.
My BMW dealer looks more like a Toys R US store when you walk inside. BMW Skateboards, pedal cars, die cast, radio control, stuffed animals, etc. I don't think it stops anyone from appreciating the products on the showroom floor.
I believe you've missed the point: the 250 PF Coupe was hardly Ferrari's most extreme iteration, it is a gentleman's GT, yet one that did and still does speak first to the enthusiast driver, while being very easy on the eyes. In catering to the tastes and requirements of Suge Knight, Kevin Federline, and Rosie O'Donnell Ferrari, via FIAT, have lost that sharpness of purpose. Further: All-aluminum cars should offer a weight and thereby inherent performance advantage, viz the Elise or NSX: Everything in Ferrari's current all all-aluminum fleet can be optioned out to two-tons or nearly so, the Cali 2+ being the most egregious having but two seats and compromised room for but "one set of golf clubs". The Cali 2+ is loathed because it is the very last step before Ferrari follow McLaren Mercedes' SLR, two tons of carbon-fiber codpiece, for those completely bereft of natural endowment. All of which is fine from the perspective of maximizing revenue from the 'key-fob competitors' market, but it leaves the enthusiast driver searching elsewhere for satisfaction. With all respect, you're daft.
the picture on this months Forza reminds me of this, the front grill looks like a smiley face Image Unavailable, Please Login
I don't recall insulting you or anyone else. Perhaps you can explain to us what in my statement would make anyone "daft". Dave
Wow, thats 19 cars with an average worth of over $400k each!!!! Are there even 19 different non vintage cars that average over $400k each???
That all depends on what scale they are. I'm looking at a 512M and 575GT right now while I'm eating dinner.
Im diggin the new California... Will it stand the test of time. We will have to see. The performance on the car is great. I love the rear end design, can do without the front end design. The interior looks good. Forza magazine originally stated that the back seats would serve a purpose which is the reason for calling it a 2+ rather than 2+2, but now thats its ready to roll, thats a different story.. Will it end up being a modern mondial? We will have to see. According to my local Ferrari dealer, they are already preordered for the first 2 years in production. So get it now if you want one.