Recent Updates

 

04/27/2025 12:00 PM

Inside Cosworth: how Brit firm is keeping the screaming V12 alive

 

04/27/2025 12:00 AM

Omoda 3 unveiled as stylish crossover bound for the UK

 

04/26/2025 12:00 PM

Mercedes-AMG to reveal bespoke electric super-saloon in June

 

04/26/2025 12:00 PM

Britain vs the world: when Super Tourers took over

 

04/26/2025 12:00 PM

Nissan shouldn’t rush to replace the legendary GT-R

 

04/26/2025 12:00 AM

2025 BTCC season preview: can Tom Ingram win a second title?

 

04/26/2025 12:00 AM

Alpine A390 prototype review

 

04/26/2025 12:00 AM

Porsche looks to be readying road-going 963 Le Mans car

 

04/25/2025 12:00 PM

Range Rover Electric: fresh pictures ahead of SUV's arrival later this year

 

04/25/2025 12:00 PM

Musk's dream of self-driving Tesla fleets looks as distant as ever

<<    1   2   3   4   5   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 6303   Next >
Ferrari SF90 XX Stradale
Wednesday, Nov 15, 2023 12:00 AM
ferrari sf90 xx stradale 2023 01 cornering front Ferrari piles on the downforce for its first road-legal, special-series XX model It’s almost a decade since Ferrari’s last extra-special-series ‘XX’ car, the La Ferrari-based FXX-K, was introduced. Between that, the original FXX, FXX Evolutione, and the 599XX and -Evo, it’s reckoned that Maranello has so far either made (or, in some cases, remade) fewer than a hundred XX-branded cars in total, only for its wealthiest and most favoured customers.Lately, however, those favoured few have been distracted by other things. The firm’s ‘Icona’ models have been cars of more jewel-like, showcar-level design appeal than the more brutally purposeful XXs, as well as extra-special engineering. So why rekindle the old track-special lineage now? Isn’t it a backwards step?Well, it might be - if that was really what Maranello was up to. But, in some respects at least, the Ferrari SF90 XX Stradale looks a little like an XX model in name only. It’s got an XX badge, sure; and it’s got some very special design features and specification upgrades, to which we’ll come. But buying one won’t get you into the ultra-exclusive ‘XX’ trackdays that Ferrari lays on for its VVIP multi-millionaire collectors. The 1400 customers who will buy one of these cars would outnumber the existing ‘XX’ club members by about fifteen to one (and that’d be an awful lot more expensive catering).The very existence of this car, in fact, suggests that Maranello’s XX experiment may be drawing to a close (although I dare say Maranello will insist otherwise). This, Ferrari says, is more of a tribute to the idea of a Ferrari XX car than a fully paid up member of the track-only model set in itself. And yet it's still a car with some incredible track potential.
< Prev    of 6303   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields