Ferrari LaFerrari aka da Enzo successor

Beautiful by all means but...(of course I find something to nit pick on)

If the 527 is the biggest street legal engine, why not throw that in there?
 
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Damn, its always nice to see cars like this being driven hard. I wonder if the battery gets too depleted during long track sessions though? Like if the battery can't charge fast enough during braking
 
I need to find a wallpaper size in this. So much winning

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http://auto.ferrari.com/en_EN/news-events/news/road-trip-exclusive-ferraris/

Collecting A LaFerrari In the Presence Of its Predecessors

Most of the LaFerrari customers have received their prized possession through a dealer or a shipment agency. But that does not seem to be the style of Jon Hunt, an avid car collector. Mr Hunt is an out an out Ferrari enthusiast who -at this moment- owns all the limited edition special series Ferraris. He. along with his friends and two sons, did a road trip all the way from London to Modena to collect his all new LaFerrari. The sight is unreal; watching these 5 exclusive Ferraris together beautifully portrays the development progress that Ferrari has achieved over the years.

All his cars are finished in the traditional Ferrari “Rosso Corsa”. He tells us how he loves to drive his cars and that he has clocked around 16,000 km in his Enzo. He has owned the F40 for more than 20 years and puts the 288 GTO up ahead in the list because of its driveability and comfort.
 
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LaFerrari FXXK

Track car putting out 1030bhp with 187 from the electric motor and 848 from the V12.

Bonkers

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http://www.topgear.com/uk/car-news/laferrari-fxxk-revealed-2014-12-03


Merry Christmas. Happy Hanukkah. Cheery Chinese New Year. This is the LaFerrari FXXK (yes, we know) - the track-only, experimental iteration of Maranello's hybrid masterpiece - and if it hasn't gone straight to the top of your festive wishlist, you may wish to check you haven't perished on the inside.

The basics, then. The entirely-not-road-legal FXXK employs the same basic V12-plus-electric drivetrain as the road-going LaFerrari, but making even more power. 101bhp more power, to be precise, boosting total output to 1036bhp: 848bhp coming from the 6.3-litre naturally aspirated V12 (at 9200rpm, no less) and 187bhp from the electric motor. Combined torque stands at ‘over 664lb ft'.

The internal combustion engine has been substantially overhauled for track duty, with new camshafts, redesigned intake manifolds and, most intriguingly, mechanical tappets replacing the traditional hydraulic efforts.

Ferrari also notes that the silencers on the exhaust system have been ‘eliminated', an appropriately sinister word for a noise likely to cause lasting, wonderful aural damage.

Though there's no word on a 0-62mph time, that extra power - along with some mighty trick-sounding Pirelli slicks, which feature embedded sensors feeding back information on longitudinal, lateral and radial acceleration - will mean a substantial decrease on the road-going LaFerrari's 2.9-second benchmark. Fast.

Aero? You can't handle the aero. The FXXK has sprouted a whole bunch of additional devices of downforce, innovations Ferrari says are derived from its expertise in endurance racing's GT category. At the front lurks a deep, double-deck spoiler, with vertical fins that channel air over the car's flanks, and boost the efficiency of the aerodynamic underbody.

There's yet more madness round the back, where a monster diffuser optimises air extraction from the underbody, and makes the FXXK a bugger to reverse-park.

Most interesting are those fin-winglet arrangements either side of the retractable rear spoiler. In ‘low-drag' configuration (with the rear spoiler retracted), these winglets function as guide vanes, while boosting the spoilers efficiency in ‘high downforce' mode.

Ferrari says it all adds up to 50 per cent more downforce than the standard LaFerrari can muster, the FXXK generating 540kg at 133mph.

The LaFerrari's HY-KERS electric system has been overhauled for race duty, too, with four modes now selectable from the steering wheel manettino: Qualify (for maximum performance), Long Run, Manual Boost and Fast Charge. Speaking of that manettino, you'll also be able to call up a newly calibrated version of Ferrari's genius Slide Slip Angle Control traction technology, which will do a far better version of metering power to those 345-section rear tyres than your puny right foot will ever manage.

A point of order: this is not, officially at least, the LaFerrari FXXK. Ferrari refers to it simply as the FXXK, with no mention of the LaFerrari anywhere in its press bumf. The ‘FXX' part you'll be familiar with, while the ‘K' refers to its kinetic energy recovery system. Any resemblance to a popular expletive is purely coincidental.

Like Ferrari's previous XX models, the FXXK won't qualify for any existing race series, with ‘client-test drivers' (or ‘minted punters' to the rest of us) feeding into a Maranello ‘test programme' over the next two years.

Ferrari hasn't yet announced how much you'll pay for the privilege of sort-of-owning an FXXK, or even how many will be built. Based on previous XX models, we'd suspect a price tag somewhere around £2m, and a production run of 30 or so cars.
 
"Gimme dat Enzo"

Pharrell-Williams-Black-Ferrari-Enzo.jpg
 
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