355 - Handles like a modern supercar | FerrariChat

355 Handles like a modern supercar

Discussion in '348/355' started by amazingtrails, Sep 25, 2025 at 1:26 AM.

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  1. amazingtrails

    amazingtrails Karting

    Jan 4, 2025
    119
    I’ve have owned a 488 and I currently own a Huracan Evo and a 992.1 Carrera 4s. All these cars are supercar fast, planted, and handle turns extremely well. What amazes me is that, although it’s much slower in a straight line, my f355 handles turns almost as well as my other cars, especially with the Michelin pilot sport 4s tires. On mountain roads I’m hitting turns at 80 mph. Hard to believe with an almost 30 year old car. Has anyone else noticed this?
     
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  2. Portofino

    Portofino Formula Junior

    Sep 17, 2011
    925
    Yorkshire UK / Switzerland/ Antibes France
    Full Name:
    Portofino
    There’s only so much ( scus the pun ) re invention of the wheel engineers can do .
    Colin Chapman / Gordon Murray s philosophy, weight kills handling is the key .
    Your 355 and my 348 are light relative to modern “ super cars “ ok not as many horses for drag racing , but that’s not your Q . You are taking taking corners .
    I have just completed a euro hoon around the Swiss passes in my 348 SP with a mate in his 488 …. Yep I went round the hairpin bends quicker it was more agile .
    My Michelin PS4 helped over his std Pirelli P zeros . The mich is the current car guys go to tyre at the mo .
    You 911 is a marvel that dispute Porsche best engineer s just can’t defy physics. I mean never mind the rear engine over the axial what about the fwd fuel tanks constantly changing the balance as it empties? Huh .
    At least your Ferrari s tank is sat in the middle of the chassis.
    It’s no surprise really 348 / 355 handle after 30 or what ever yrs .
    Physics has constants in equations. They don’t change .
     
  3. dsmith

    dsmith Rookie

    Aug 3, 2022
    43
    Greer, SC
    Full Name:
    David Smith
    I think a bigger factor is an individual is only so comfortable with cornering making similarly designed cars appear to corner about the same. I guarantee you a 488 has more mechanical grip than an f355. An individual just might not be comfortable exploring those higher limits.

    A highly skilled driver will corner faster in a newer supercar.
     
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  4. INTMD8

    INTMD8 F1 Veteran
    Owner Silver Subscribed

    Jun 10, 2007
    6,817
    Lake Villa IL
    Newer isn't necessarily capable of higher lateral g. Put the same tires and good alignment on an F355 or 488 what makes the 488 capable of higher lateral g?

    Maybe it's more composed on certain surfaces and overall certainly faster but I don't think a huge delta would be observed unless you're up in speed where downforce is a big factor.
     
  5. NepTunes9

    NepTunes9 Rookie
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    Aug 9, 2025
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    Carlsbad, CA
    Full Name:
    Dave Barberree
    I just put Pilot 4S on my 355 but I’ve only had it for 2 weeks so I’ll not be able to compare. I can/do corner quickly now, maybe knowing they are fresh.

    I wonder how long you’ve had your 355 and if you are more comfortable cornering in it since you know it well. My previous Porsche was much more familiar to me.

    I feel like I am learning the feel of the 355 and hope to join you on an 80 mph turn one day! I am still trying to master the clutch work and reduce my gated shifter lurching after car warms up.
     
  6. ryalex

    ryalex Two Time F1 World Champ
    Consultant Owner

    Aug 6, 2003
    26,152
    Las Vegas, NV
    Full Name:
    Ryan Alexander
    No, even with fresh 355 tires, my 458 was taking desert sweepers at speeds 60% higher. Did you replace the steering rack bushings and front shocks?

    In fact part of the 'beginning of the end' for my 355 was that I got a Giulia Quadrifoglio for a daily, and within 4 months had added the 458 because the QV annihilated the 355 in every performance measurement.
     
  7. amazingtrails

    amazingtrails Karting

    Jan 4, 2025
    119
    The only metric I'm referring to where the 355 can hang with a modern supercar is cornering on mountain roads. And by "hang" i don't mean it's faster. I mean it's respectable and even downright fast around turns. Of course, no one buys a 355 because of its performance in 2025. You buy it because of the driving experience - amazing sound, gated manual - and looks - it's beautiful.
     
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  8. Timmo

    Timmo Formula Junior

    Aug 26, 2017
    699
    Continental Europe
    Dissing a 30+ year old design for its dated straight line performance or cornering abilities is missing the point. The F355 is a obviously a classic car, but its qualities lie in its ability to deliver thrills at much lower/safer speeds than any modern, overly-efficient car. It's a car that wants you to have fun with it rather than boast about track times or whatever cold/quantified/meaningless data.
     
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  9. Ob917

    Ob917 Formula Junior
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    Jun 7, 2024
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    Cardiff CA
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    I don’t really take that as a realistic statement. But I’ll tell you what my modified 348 was super fun ripping around yesterday. Hard to drive a car that makes me smile as much as this one.
    And everybody else that sees it on the road, modern sports cars don’t make people smile that much around here.
     
  10. Redlyne_mr2

    Redlyne_mr2 Formula Junior

    Aug 5, 2009
    478
    Calgary, Alberta
    Full Name:
    Ryan D
    On the street/freeway yes, the 355 can be much more fun to drive and appear to handle similar or better. Get it on the track compared to the modern cars at high speed and it gets destroyed.
     
  11. amazingtrails

    amazingtrails Karting

    Jan 4, 2025
    119
    Yes of course this is the case. No one in their right might in 2025 would buy a 355 as a track car.
     
  12. INTMD8

    INTMD8 F1 Veteran
    Owner Silver Subscribed

    Jun 10, 2007
    6,817
    Lake Villa IL
    So if you were rolling through the valley of fire at 100 with the 355 you could do 160 with the 458? (Maybe you are thinking even more wide open, just trying to grasp it)
     
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  13. amazingtrails

    amazingtrails Karting

    Jan 4, 2025
    119
    If you have a 2 mile stretch of straight road you can hit 130+ in the 355 and 190+ in the 488. But again, you don't buy the 355 in 2025 for sheer performance. I would say the overall driving experience of the 355 is different, but just as good or better than the 488 due the the gated manual, f1 type sound, and analog feel.
     
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  14. ryalex

    ryalex Two Time F1 World Champ
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    Aug 6, 2003
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    No but more like a 50mph corner vs 80mph.
     
  15. amazingtrails

    amazingtrails Karting

    Jan 4, 2025
    119
    Not true. The cornering speed difference is not that much. Maybe 5-10 mph cornering difference between a 355 and a 488 in favor of the 488.
     
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  16. Kruegmeister

    Kruegmeister Formula Junior
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    Nov 24, 2016
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    #16 Kruegmeister, Sep 27, 2025 at 7:28 AM
    Last edited: Sep 27, 2025 at 7:34 AM
    It has nothing to do with familiarity.
    I have a 348, 355, 430, 612 & 458 currently & the 612 would Corner the worst even with its HGTC Package.
    The 355 is smaller than the 458 or the 488 & it Corners like a go kart.
    I took the 355 last year to Mid America & when we were running the Old Road Courses I was behind a buddies 430 & a F12 another time. They always had me in the straights but any curvy section I was on their rears thinking I could go faster... & I was just on Hankooks that came with the Car when I bought it (Michelins will go on next)
    My 430&458 feel quite capable & I am used to them all fairly equally so it's definitely not that. The 355 has a shorter wheelbase vs a 488 or my 458 or 430, so it's explainable.
    The 488 is faster on the Track mainly because of advances like Carbon Brakes & Speed you can accelerate to coming out of the Corners
    Side note the 348 is new to me & hasn't been driven enough to go in this comparison.
     
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  17. ShineKen

    ShineKen Two Time F1 World Champ
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    Aug 3, 2007
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  18. Portofino

    Portofino Formula Junior

    Sep 17, 2011
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    Yorkshire UK / Switzerland/ Antibes France
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    Portofino
    Wonder why Gandini designed the Stratos with such a short wheel base …… ?
    It killed the rally scene @ the corners
     
  19. Mitch Alsup

    Mitch Alsup F1 Veteran

    Nov 4, 2003
    9,745
    I could hit 162 MPH on the (slightly less than) 1/2 mile front straight at TWS before turning into T1;
    Given 2 miles, an F355 should be able to get into the mid 170s or low 180s.
     
  20. Redlyne_mr2

    Redlyne_mr2 Formula Junior

    Aug 5, 2009
    478
    Calgary, Alberta
    Full Name:
    Ryan D
    I tracked my 355 for the hell of it this summer, my buddy was on my ass the entire tire in his Hura
    Hard to tell from the video buddy but to me that looks like the 355 driver is just a better driver.
     
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  21. Portofino

    Portofino Formula Junior

    Sep 17, 2011
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    Portofino
    #21 Portofino, Sep 27, 2025 at 1:05 PM
    Last edited: Sep 27, 2025 at 1:24 PM
    Threads about cornering . Any fool with a straight long enough, ( wether 200 yards or 2 miles ) and in something with considerable more Hp + some aero advantage can go faster than a old school 355/348 . That’s a given .

    While we ( hopefully refocus ) are on cornering ability - my 208 GT4 @ 1100 kgs on skinny 195 ballon 70 / 14 inch Yokohama’s corners fast too . There becomes a point whereby fatter tyres in tighter turns actually, bcz of the excess scub start to slow down the car .fwd speed is lost by it being transferred into energy lost by the tyre scrub , the tyres heat up . You win the prize of hot rubber for what’s that’s worth at the expense of speed . The 488 tyres will be hotter than the 355 s . You can keep that prize btw .
    The slippage angle , friction of the rubber , wider rubber of say a Countach or Managusta Counterintuitively hinder TIGHT cornering ability.
    Wider rubber transfers the cornering forces by gripping to lateral aspects to slowing it down . The more weight the more energy is transferred through the fat rubber which slows it down .
    It’s better to slip on narrow tyres and release that breaking force , thus allowing or looking another way of the thing to carry speed all be it side ways through the corner or near side ways .
    Combine this with a shorter WB and a few ounces of driver skill lower weight and there you have it a faster cornering car .

    So turning it all around when cars get lardy / heavy through engine size ( compare a lotus 1988 Elise with the new 2025 Testarossa ) the Ferrari needs fatter tyres just to lay down 1080 Hp and carry all that lard of the fwd battery + electrotwackery motor .
    But on Alpine hair pins the €10000 , 30 yr old 1.8 L four banger lotus under 1000 kg on skinny tyres will whip it .

    Not quite the difference but a shorter wheel base , lighter , skinner tyres 355 will corner alpine twisty bits better than any 488 / F8 .
    The 348 arguably a slightly shorter wheel base and skinner rubber better than the longer 355 but we are splitting hairs here .

    As I said earlier it’s weight that kills handing not lack of Hp . Lack of Hp kills top speed and the acceleration to reach said speed .
    Reiterating that’s not the thread ….ultimately. The threads cornering ability Image Unavailable, Please Login
    Simplifying ….a Zillion Hp means more mass ( engine and drive train - chassis to carry ….think Bentley GT new Ferrari Testarossa et al ) thus wider rubber to cope said Hp , to lay it down mostly in the straight line assuming the nannies arn’t cutting in .
    That rubber combined with the mass and longer wheel base slows the thing down in TIGHT hair pins like the pic above .

    Of course on a track be it Nurburgring or other the extra Hp on the straights more than makes up the slower TIGHT corners so the fat car of a zillion Hp records a faster time . The fat car on wide rubber also goes faster on sweeping curves ….it’s fat rubber lays down the Hp = speed current Lamborghini s modus operandi . We owners of lightweight, ( Colin Chapman / Gordon Murray school of thought ) acknowledge this .
     
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