I will butcher this so hopefully smarter people will jump in. Magneride are magnetic shocks that can be adjusted for stiffness. Pretty sure they were offered from 2009 onwards. I think it is a "must" on a Cali. Putting it into Comfort mode creates a very plush drive and then in Sport the Cali becomes stiff and very responsive.
It's a shock setting, and more of a function of the fluid volume (the metal condenses to effectively pressurize the fluid). Spring settings are what change the ride height.
About a month ago I traded my 430 Spider and Maserati Gran Turismo and went with a California which has become my daily driver in place of the Gran Turismo. Prior to the 430 Spider I had a 355 Spider. I agonized over the pros and cons before making this decision but in the end the pro's were simply too compelling. I love that I can drive this as a daily driver but also take it on the track to do some fun laps. I love that this car is dual-clutch and the shifts sound like a 458's at speed. I love that it can be a coupe or a convertible and with the top down that it is completely open. I love that I can take my three children along for a ride and they no longer have to fight over who gets to go in the "Ferrari". I love that it is both understated and stunning, people are constantly taking pictures or video from their phones or are just simply admiring it. I love that it has conveniences such as NAV and a cup holder for my morning coffee. I enjoy driving my cars and I definitely don't keep them in the garage and I love that I can drive the California just about everyday unless its snowing or there is a hurricane, I have the SUV for that. For someone who belongs to a track and drives a track prepped Porsche Cayman for more "serious" driving, I can say that the California gives me plenty of thrill although I have only driven it on the road thus far. With regard to the unnatural lateral movement mentioned in earlier posts, I have experienced this as well particularly when changing lanes at highway speed on uneven pavement, a very wobbly feeling that is a little unnerving the first couple times you experience it, but I definitely don't feel it on smoother pavement. Another thing I have experienced that I haven't seen mentioned is "ice pedal" where the car doesn't slow crisply when I am under harder braking. I'm not sure if this is the ABS trying to keep me from locking up and perhaps the ambient weather is still a bit cold and brakes are not warmed up, this is the first car I have had with ccb's. One concern I have is about the clutch wear in a DCT. If anyone has had to replace a clutch(s) with a DCT after how many miles was it and how much did it cost? I often get caught in stop-and-go traffic and this has been on my mind. Otherwise I love this car and I am very happy with my decision so far.
Oh yeah almost forgot the reason I started down the path in the first place, I got to consolidate two cars into one so freed up a garage space!
I have had many CCB systems and what you describe is CC brakes that have not yet been warmed sufficiently. Very disconcerting if you're unprepared and need to stop in a hurry. All I can say is to compressed the brakes frequently and gently to warm them up especially in colder weather. That should solve the problem fairly quickly. Good luck with the new car. I recently sold my 458 and Audi GT in order to order a 2013 California. My 3rd Ferrari but my first that I ordered to my specs. It should be here in a few weeks. Waiting impatiently in Philly.
From what I understand of DCT, there is almost no clutch slippage, so they should last at least 100,000 miles. Stop and go traffic should not be a concern. But if it does fail, look out for a very costly bill. With some of the comments on stability issues in the California, I wonder if it has anything to do with it being a convertible? I have never driven a convertible that didn't have some degree of cowl shake or instability on poor pavement, although my F430 spider was pretty good in that regard, not perfect.
I too dislike the occasional bouncy feel when changing lanes on uneven asphalt. I suspect the issue IS the springs. I would be willing to bet that the ROW (non-US) Californias came with stiffer and lower springs.
Sherpa- Fluid volume is unaffected. Varying the current flow changes the viscosity of the fluid, not the volume.
The ricambi site shows different springs between magnaride cars and those without Ferrari Parts, Ferrari Accessories, and Ferrari Performance Products - Ricambi America, Inc. But shows no difference in spring variations between country variants I know Porsche are one company that often sets suspension softer and higher for Cars bound for North America But it doesn't appear that Ferrari do for the California
Ah, that makes sense. You're saying that the metal doesn't condense to change the volumetric pressure (and stiffening the ride) but it sort of changes or expands within the fluid to make it more viscous (and also stiffening the ride)?
The magnets change the viscosity of the fluid but doesn't expand. Think of turning water into syrup and how syrup would not flow as well through the shock's valving. That effect increases damping which yields more control at the expense of a stiffer ride. Read the Wikipedia entry I posted above, it's quite interesting.
If you feel "bouncing," it's not the springs but the damping provided by the shocks. Do you feel that on a Magneride car or one with regular shocks? If Magneride, try driving over the same stretch of road with the manettino set on Sport. You should feel a difference in damping.