May 19
Car Reviews and Profiles | Ferrari | Sports Car Market
Title Filter     Display #  
1952 Ferrari 225 Sport Berlinetta “Tuboscocca”
The lifeblood of Ferrari, particularly in the early years, was competition. It is a widely held belief that the creation of road-going versions of the competition sports cars existed almost solely to support Il Commendatore’s racing effort. ...
[read more]
from the June 2013 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1962 Ferrari 250 GT PF Cabriolet Series II
The 250 engine paved the way for a large family of cars that helped Ferrari expand their limited output into series-produced sports cars. The new range was based on the 3-liter V12 engine designed by Gioacchino Colombo. The engine was powerful...
[read more]
from the May 2013 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1960 Ferrari 250 GT SWB Berlinetta “Competizione”
In the tradition of Ferrari’s dual-purpose road and racing berlinettas, the new 250 GT SWB was a tractable and well-mannered daily driver about town — and a veritable beast in a race. Competition-specification cars with additionally up-rat...
[read more]
from the April 2013 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
2004 Ferrari 360 Modena Spider F1
Maranello Motors in England delivered this superb cabriolet to its first owner, an emir of Riyadh in Saudi Arabia. It formed part of a large fleet of vehicles and was rarely used. In 2008, a French industrial company specializing in steel prod...
[read more]
from the March 2013 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1965 Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Barn Find
By the end of the 1950s, the market for sports cars with “family accommodation” had grown sufficiently for Ferrari to contemplate the introduction of a four-seater model. Introduced in the summer of 1960, the first such Ferrari — the 250...
[read more]
from the February 2013 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1965 Ferrari 275 GTS Spyder
There had been open-top Ferrari road cars before the advent of the 250 Series, but it was, chiefly, Pininfarina’s offerings on the latter chassis that established the convertible as a fixture of the Ferrari range. After the experimentation a...
[read more]
from the January 2013 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1972 Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona Spyder Conversion
The ultimate expression of Ferrari’s fabulous line of V12 sports cars, the 365 GTB/4 “Daytona” was the world’s fastest production car at the time of its launch. Capable of over 170 mph, it is surely destined to remain a front-ranking s...
[read more]
from the December 2012 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1956 Ferrari 250 GT LWB TdF
The tragic accident at the 1955 24 Hours of Le Mans that claimed 80 lives had a profound effect on racing. The increasingly potent powertrains of the Le Mans sports cars were identified as a contributor to the disaster, and new regulations wer...
[read more]
from the November 2012 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1974 Ferrari 365 GT4 BB
In November 1971, Ferrari unveiled at the International Exhibition in Turin a Pininfarina prototype called the Ferrari BB Berlinetta Boxer. The style reflected the design of the Dino 246 GT with fewer curves. The engine was very similar to tha...
[read more]
from the October 2012 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1976 Ferrari 308 GTB Vetroresina
The 308 GTB offered here has the lighter fiberglass (Vetroresina) bodywork and dry-sump lubrication of the very first 308 GTBs produced. Introduced at the Paris Salon in 1975, the stunningly beautiful 308 GTB marked a welcome return to Pininfa...
[read more]
from the September 2012 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1957 Ferrari 625 TRC Spider
To call Ferrari’s TRC for 1957 “one of the prettiest Ferraris built,” as pre-eminent Ferrari historian Richard F. Merritt put it, is surely an understatement. It is a design without fault — a timeless, downright breathtaking execution ...
[read more]
from the August 2012 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1973 Ferrari Dino 246 GTS
Enzo Ferrari’s son Alfredo, also known as “Dino,” was a proponent of small-displacement, 6-cylinder technology. After earning his engineering degree, he began development of a V6 racing engine. After Alfredo’s tragic death, Enzo direct...
[read more]
from the July 2012 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1961 Ferrari 250 GTE 2+2 Series 1
"Pininfarina and Enzo Ferrari have collaborated to make a most desirable motor car: expensive, fast and luxuriously comfortable, with a large luggage compartment. All this adds up to a Gran Turismo, with the accent on the ‘Gran,’ par excelle...
[read more]
from the June 2012 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1959 Ferrari 250 GT California Spyder
The 250 changed Ferrari’s destiny. Centered on the famous 3-liter, V12 engine, two Ferrari families were born: one destined exclusively for the track and the other for the road. The racing line gave birth to such legendary cars as the Testa...
[read more]
from the May 2012 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
1957 Ferrari 410 Superamerica Coupe
There were Ferraris…and then there were Ferraris. Enzo Ferrari built a few very exclusive grand touring models for very famous and ultra-wealthy clients. Constructed in several series — in very limited numbers — the Superamericas were tr...
[read more]
from the April 2012 Issue written by Steve Ahlgrim
 
  • «
  •  Start 
  •  Prev 
  •  1 
  •  2 
  •  3 
  •  4 
  •  5 
  •  6 
  •  7 
  •  8 
  •  9 
  •  10 
  •  Next 
  •  End 
  • »
Page 1 of 14