Windows PC using Chrome. Tried it in Firefox and Windows Explorer and it also works. http://car-configurator.ferrari.com/portofino#config/1|50000149|1800|6c0402c0|800|800000|5602||||8000000|40400|7fe00000|3eff Image Unavailable, Please Login
Glad I took the HiFi option in the PF - lol....wonder if stereo supposed to compete with exhaust sound - lol
https://ferrari-cdn.thron.com/delivery/public/image/ferrari/dc631a64-87ab-4e71-8f6b-723c1913a4a0/ayyat7/std/1440x1440/al-tayer-motors-ferrari-portofino-preview-dubai-motor-show-2017 https://ferrari-cdn.thron.com/delivery/public/image/ferrari/37635d59-b960-4bc6-b641-7b2f51c1535a/ayyat7/std/1440x1440/al-tayer-motors-ferrari-portofino-preview-dubai-motor-show-2017 https://**********.imgix.net/ae716oB_QfqUOuOBNC2KyA?w=1800&h=1131&fm=pjpg&auto=compress&fit=crop&crop=faces,edges https://ferrari-cdn.thron.com/delivery/public/image/ferrari/d02cfd3b-bc51-4d22-86ea-b424767d80f2/ayyat7/std/1440x1440/al-tayer-motors-ferrari-portofino-preview-dubai-motor-show-2017 https://ferrari-cdn.thron.com/delivery/public/image/ferrari/c67b87ad-dcfb-4e64-91ad-4b77967cc8de/ayyat7/std/1440x1440/al-tayer-motors-ferrari-portofino-preview-dubai-motor-show-2017
Perhaps they are. I also think this car as well as the GTC4 have the broadest missions in the Ferrari lineup and, thus, as such it wouldn't be truly out of place to have a nice audio system. I think you need that wattage so you can generate dynamic and clear sound.
Anyone know when these will actually hit the streets in the US? My dealer hasn’t even had a private showing yet. They’ve done all the Lussos and the 812 but no PF. I’m thinking about one as a DD as I agree the 488 Spider is an amazing occasional car but not a daily. I suppose I could just call him but figured someone here will know.
Sorry to belabor the point, but I still cannot get the configurator to work. Tried Chrome, Firefox on Apple and P.C. Nothing. Anyone else getting it to work? Confused. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
The only thing I don't like about the Portofino are the standard wheels... Apart from that, it is a masterpiece.
This is the off road version? why so tall? Other than that, Ferrari need a wheels designer urgently, standard ones looks boring and dated.
That is so weird. I was using it in Hong Kong yesterday and it worked fine. I was using the United States version. Get to the US and use the same link and it says "error". Very strange. For some reason Ferrari has turned it off in the US. Not sure why they would do that. Image Unavailable, Please Login
I swear Ferrari does this intentionally. First they design the good looking wheels then they design something less appealing as "standard" I agree with you on that. The upgraded wheels are much better looking. But its the same for the 458/ 488
I'm still having problems with that front end and side aero wall. I want to like it but these photos don't help. The front is just soooooo boring and Japanese-y. The side view and rear 3/4 is really attractive.
Funny. I kind of like the front view, although I still would prefer a hood scoop to nostrils. The side view looks a tad busy right behind the front wheel arches, but only in some colors that I've seen. The rear view, I'm still up in the air. It's nowhere near as "butt ugly" as the 812 IMO, but then again, you really can't see back there from the driver's seat. I can't wait for the driving reports to start filtering in, especially from the F-chat faithful...T
From what I hear of the way the PF drives, it moves the game on very substantially over the Cali which is both logical and to be expected. Ferrari know the criticisms of 'not being a real Ferrari' and will have responded, indeed we know from Macchione's comments that he was also,concerned about the Cali. I believe we will all be more than delighted with the first tests but surely they should be due very soon?
There are some picture views of the PF that I really like, others not so much. In general, I think the in-house Ferrari designers may be taking the "modern Ferrari design language" a bit too seriously, to the point where the designs look too similar to other modern, often "Japanese-looking", designs. IMO, Ferraris need to feature some elements in their contemporary designs that firmly connect them to more iconic, historical details from older cars. While the PF does echo the F12, I'm having a hard time making a connection to more traditional Ferrari, perhaps Pininfarina, details. IMO, Ferraris do not follow market trends but rather follow its own more historical path, and the "flame surface" bodywork does not do that and looks "plasticky". FWIW, a lot of (former) Bimmer fans like me really hated Bangle's flame surfaced, cheap interior BMWs and it was the main reason I stopped buying them. The plastic look may work on small inexpensive cars that actually do employ a lot of plastic parts but you have to wonder why that association would actually compliment a "hand-built" car at this price range????
Very beautifully specced Portofino at the presentation in China (pictures by Ferrari): Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
I've seen these complaints about plastic feel of PF. Can you explain a bit more. Is the plastic feel due to shape, or are you seeing real plastic? The rear bumper/diffuser is of course plastic, but I'm not quite sure where else it has been applied.
Silver red would look great ...i have tried everything suggested but still cannot get the configurator to work
That's a fair question and even before your question I thought about why I feel this way and came to following conclusion: Flame surfacing has the appearance of panels that have been lightly and smoothly "crinkled", not unlike a sheet of plastic that has been wrinkled or clay sculpted with a knife. This differs from pre-2000 style of body lines created by the traditional bending and stamping of metal body panels which leave well defined and conventional-looking body panel creases. The lighter and the smoother the surface creases appear, the more they looks plastic, mostly because we associate those types of surfaces with molded plastic and not metal. Unfortunately, flame surfacing is all about subtle creases on body panels. Flame surfacing also tends to impart an artistic theme to the object, which when overdone, takes away from the old-fashioned engineering and mechanical appeal of high performance cars - it becomes essentially "too concerned about looking pretty", "too feminine" at the expense of the car's mechanical-connection. I've compared rear photos of the PF and the 812 below. Both cars exhibit flame surfacing as well as plastic-looking exterior components. I've added arrows and personal comments. IMO, the 812 mostly gets away with it (from this angle) because the (expensive) dominating rear flank body panels make a very strong statement about the "power" from those wheel wells whereas the PF's rear simply shows way too many creases. Flame surfacing (and plastic parts) come across as cheap ways to modulate the otherwise featureless surface of metal body panels. An expensive has to look expensive to make... it cannot look plasticky. You have to, as much as possible, avoid even the appearance of plastic (paneling). Flame surfacing may be OK or even cool with cars that are economy-minded (aerodynamic) but for a Ferrari, stronger, more expensive-looking external features are more appropriate - big air inlets, scoops, flying buttresses, even aggressive spoilers. If you go too soft on looks, an Fcar starts to looks confused at best. Ferrari is about racing, not boulevard cruising. Think of the reasons why some people add carbon fibre exterior panels, spoilers, wings, black roofs,...etc. to their cars. IMO, you can have flame surfacing but it should not dominate the appearance of the car, even if it's just from some viewing angles. Image Unavailable, Please Login
Thanks for the beautiful photos. IMO, the lighting helps to bring out, harden the appearance of the sculpt lines of the bodywork, lessen the subtleness of flame surfacing.