355 vs 360 | Page 4 | FerrariChat

355 vs 360

Discussion in 'Ferrari Discussion (not model specific)' started by Whisky, Jun 2, 2024.

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  1. Kevin Rev'n

    Kevin Rev'n Two Time F1 World Champ
    Owner Silver Subscribed

    Nov 29, 2009
    24,686
    Honolulu
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    Kevin
    I would think that getting into a 355 would be great for someone who wants to immerse into maintenance as part of their ownership experience. I have done this with my 360 and it is very rewarding to wrench on these cars. Only recently have I had to kick it into the dealer as my life got busy but I still get hands on and accept it as part of my stewardship. YMMV
     
    mvaldezf60, paulchua and tatry68 like this.
  2. Ingenere

    Ingenere F1 Veteran
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    Dec 11, 2001
    6,457
    On the Limit
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    Dino
    #77 Ingenere, Sep 4, 2025
    Last edited: Sep 4, 2025
    It's called supply and demand. If there are a lot of cars available and nobody wants them, the price goes down. Conversely, If there are fewer cars and more buyers, the price goes up.

    I think it comes down to nostalgia, looks, and sound.

    Performance wise they are both pretty old. As good as my 348 Challenge, F40 and CS were, neither one would know which direction my McLaren 570S went. The game has moved on.
     
  3. nicolaprince

    nicolaprince Formula Junior

    May 16, 2021
    372
    Bologna, Italy
    Full Name:
    Nicola Principato
    My 328 is at the workshop since... july. I love her and her design, but I confess that at times I'm tempted to move on to a 360 manual. Did anyone ever do that? Did he miss anything afterwards? Or did anyone ever went backwards? The lines of a 328 to my eyes are magical, much better that in any photograph, but age is... age.
    All the best, Nic
     
  4. WashingtonFerrari61

    WashingtonFerrari61 Formula Junior

    Jun 26, 2022
    498
    Northern, VA
    Jumping from a 328 to 360 is a big jump. The 328 is a pretty car and is way before my time but is one Ferrari that has grown on me since being on this forum. A lot of people forget that the 360 demand was so high during its era, that it was really the start of Ferrari being extremely selective of its allocation selection process. It was the highest production made Ferrari ever at the time and the demand was still so much they could be selective. In short, you should make the jump.
     
  5. BMW.SauberF1Team

    BMW.SauberF1Team F1 World Champ

    Dec 4, 2004
    14,529
    FL
    The 360 should be easier to DIY on than the 355, though, right? You have the access panel in the passenger cabin to get to the front of the engine and everything there unlike the 355 where the engine has to come out on some issues.
     
  6. Kevin Rev'n

    Kevin Rev'n Two Time F1 World Champ
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    Nov 29, 2009
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    Kevin
    Oh yes I think it's a universal understanding that 360 is way easier to DIY. It was part of the design intent from the start IIRC. BUT...my approach is always to detail every accessible item in the project space. This always adds an extra weekend to a couple weeks to whatever I touch. I think if I had a 355 and knew the engine out was coming I would be ready to detail the engine and bay every time, plus everything else lol. It would probably take me 6-14 weeks easy when you consider that as you dig in you'll see parts you need to replace and repaint or whatever! Then all the time to find parts in our aging beauties takes time too!

    I am sure I would have some sort of rolling engine stand and dedicate some clear space to enjoy the design and renew it every....what is it 5 years? The 360 is basically a little maintenance every year and a bigger task every 5.

    I would probably get more enjoyment out of a 355, in my presented scenario, in a climate that had a real winter so I could take my time with that engine out.
     

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