Only weeks after the reveal of the McLaren W1, Ferrari is answering back with this, the F80. On its face, it looks sort of like any other modern prancing horse, but under the skin this is a very different animal. The Italian automaker blended F1 and Le Mans tech to create this beast. As a result, its beating heart is a twin-turbocharged V6 hybrid that makes a total output of 1,184 horsepower.
The F80 is a successor to the LaFerrari and as such it has big shoes to fill. Ferrari knows that, too. Here’s what it says of this new supercar (that’s right, Ferrari calls this a supercar, not a hypercar).
“The latest addition to this family, the F80, is tasked with embodying the ultimate in engineering for an internal-combustion-engined vehicle and employs all the most advanced technological solutions, including latest-generation hybrid technology for the powertrain, to achieve unparalleled levels of power and torque.”
Let’s first focus on the powertrain because it’s a dramatic departure from every other flagship Ferrari ever made. The LaFerrari and F50 leveraged big V12 engines. Before that, cars like the F40 and 288 GTO made use of V8s. Now, the “ultimate in engineering” is a twin-turbocharged V6 that shares much of its tech with Ferrari’s Formula 1 car and its Le Mans-winning 499P car.
For example, the architecture of the engine itself is “closely derived” from the 499P. That includes the crankcase, the layout and drive chains of the timing system, the oil pump recovery circuit, the injectors, GDI pumps, and bearings. The front motor, a component called the MGU-K unit, is the first of its kind as it was developed, tested, and manufactured by Ferrari itself.
Ferrari incorporated more technology to really push the limit of what the engine can manage as well. The knock control now allows for operation closer to the knock limit thanks to variable-phase valve timing. As a result, combustion pressures can be 20 percent higher than those found in the 296 GTB.
The eTurbo system is tuned to react differently based on the load and the specific gear so as to reduce lag and make the engine feel naturally aspirated. All of the tech incorporated enables this engine to rev to a staggering 9,200 RPM. Ferrari says it’ll go from 0-200 km/h (124 mph) in 5.7 seconds. That’s 0.1 seconds faster than the McLaren W1.
The car also features three electric motors including one in the rear incorporated into the engine and two more at the front. The trio makes a combined 296 horsepower to stack on top of the 900ish ponies created by the internal combustion engine alone.
Drivers will have the option of using three different drive modes including Hybrid, Performance, and Qualify. Unsurprisingly, each has its own unique application on the road or track. Hybrid is basically normal mode, Performance mode is basically like a track mode with consistent boost and the goal of maintaining a 70-percent state of battery charge, and Qualify adds maximum boost without concern for how long the battery lasts.
According to Ferrari, there is also a new “Boost Optimisation” setting that can learn a specific track and then use that data to deliver “an extra power boost in sections of the track where it is most needed.”
Ferrari also built a new set of brakes to handle all of that power. Crafted in collaboration with Brembo, the new discs in the F80 use longer carbon fibers to make the disc not just stronger but also better at dissipating heat. According to the automaker, these brakes are twice as strong and three times as good at conducting heat.
This car is also unique in terms of its cabin. Ferrari refers to this car as a 1+ layout with basically everything inside focused entirely on the driver. The center control stack wraps around the driver, the dash design also focuses on the driver, and even the driver’s seat is uniquely upholstered for the occasion that is this car.
The steering wheel is new for the F80. It gets a new shape with what Ferrari claims are improved ergonomics. Notably, Ferrari also brought back physical buttons for the wheel rather than touch-sensitive ones. They rightly point out that one can use them without having to look at the switchgear.
Underneath the cabin and bodywork, one will find a unique suspension. The upper wishbones are 3D-printed metal that appears more organic than industrial. The car benefits from inboard dampers and in turn, doesn’t need an anti-roll bar to accomplish its goals.
Ferrari says it’ll build just 799 examples of this new halo flagship supercar. Ferrari has sold every one of them already says Autocar. Buyers willing to pony up the $3.2 million dollar price for this car also benefit from a seven-year maintenance program that’ll keep the F80 in peak condition. Now, all we need is a new Porsche flagship supercar so that we can have a new holy trinity.
I’ll be honest,I didn’t even bother to read the article,I just had a thought.
When I was a young fawn I had pictures of the F40 and the F50,yes, I was born in the late eighties. Do kids still have posters of cars on their walls and memorize the statistics? I really wanted to care about the F80. Yes, I had to scroll up to remember the name.
sorry about this, I had tequila.
I’ll be more impressed when Ferrari admits what percent content the interior material is made of ground up poor people.
All I have to say is that this having a V6 is a fucking TRAGEDY…I don’t care about all those EV junk motors… I want a REAL engine especially in a Ferrari
Oooowww…
A C8 f#cked a Vector, and the result then slammed a wall head on…
The suspension looks bonkers with that organic control arm
A V6? I’ll start the conspiracy theory now, it’s a Chrysler Pacifica engine.
Of course it is,Stellantis was bought by Ferrari.
They couldn’t even be bothered to add the horizontal black line that was emblematic of all previous F## Ferrarris. I would have been happy with a strip of exposed carbon down the side. It’ll look the same in pictures, which is the only way I’ll ever see this car.
I remember when cars were actually designed.
I wish for an alternate universe where Ferrari never moved from Pininfarina to their in-house design team. Their cars just keep getting uglier and uglier.
Is that story interesting enough for an article? I was lamenting the disassociation with pininfarina, myself, on seeing this new design but I don’t know the specifics of why they are no longer working together.
They went downhill right after the split (812, F8) but have really rebounded. The SF90 is great, the 296 is not my thing but objectively pretty, the Roma is timeless and the 12Cilindri is strange in all the best ways. I even like the Purosangue for what it is, but I recognize that won’t be a popular opinion.
Having said that, this F80 is a no from me.
I like how this looks and I’m sure it’s awesome to drive. I’m sure the Ferrari Faithful will love it.
Cars like this used to excite me a lot when I was younger.
But these days it doesn’t excite me much… especially in light of the fact I can go nearly as fast on a public road for a fraction of the cost with a used Tesla Model S.
I feel more excited by the Tesla Semi (and other electric trucks), electric transit buses and other electric commercial vehicles that are replacing diesels.
And that’s because the proliferation of those vehicles should lead to better air quality, less noise and lower asthma rates.
And I say this as someone who has asthma and has a daughter with asthma.
i don’t know how old you are,but fuck,we’re old.
I’m 50. I don’t feel old though.
I just rode 68km on my bicycle this past weekend.
While my legs feel tired and a bit achy, my body doesn’t feel ‘broken’.
I think Ferrari missed the boat with this one, although it sure sounds like their share price is doing just fine and this model is already sold out of course.
That said, for these untouchable hypercars that most of us can’t even dream of, I think Bugatti is following the better Business plan. Basically, treat them like luxury watches. Technology+electrification has leveled the playing field so much when it comes to speed, especially straight line speed. A Tesla model s plaid can probably beat this car in a straight line, and the new Corvette ZR1 may have a higher top speed… or at least be close. And those cars are like one 20th of the price.
Also, for all the impressive tech, like I said above, that tech always feels obsolete now within 5 years or so.
So back to Bugatti, I think that’s the move. Focus on beauty, focus on luxury, and also make sure it performs pretty well too. It’s no coincidence that it’s new dashboard is heavily influenced by wrist watches. At this point the hypercar market, I would be chasing timeless over tech.
It’s good to see that hood bras are back. The dream of the 90’s is alive in Italy, apparently.
LOL
I get that this and every super- hyper- mega-car are purpose built machines to scream power, wealth capability and status, but if Ferrari could try to infuse them with some taste and style, that’d be great.
Anywho, everyone who missed out on an F80 should totally be watching Cars and Bids. In a couple decades.
Big yawn. These unobtanium exotic cars are, I guess, cool from a “look what we can do” perspective, but I just have a hard time seeing them as real cars, since they’ll never be driven more than a few miles from a trailer to a car show, any only then by whatever aged plutocrat or soulless finance bro who can afford the ludicrous price.
It’s hard to be excited about a car that I will probably never see in person, DEFINITELY will never be able to drive, and that costs an order of magnitude more than my house AND all of my cars put together. Also, it’s not even pretty.
In my opinion, stuff like this should be relegated to a brief blurb or occasional roundup of “Here’s the latest flex on the poors” unless there’s something genuinely interesting or revolutionary or groundbreaking about it. It’s just not relevant to 99.9 percent of the population.
“It’s hard to be excited about a car that I will probably never see in person, DEFINITELY will never be able to drive, and that costs an order of magnitude more than my house AND all of my cars put together.”
+1
I feel much the same way. And a car like this gets even less exciting when you consider you can go almost as fast at a fraction of the cost with a used Tesla Model S Plaid.
I don’t hate this new Ferrari. I’m glad it’s far more efficient than past Ferraris with the hybrid tech. And I think it looks good.
But I also find it’s hard to get excited over it.
All 799 of them will be locked away in rich people’s car collections and never go past delivery miles. I’ll bet in a decade that the collective mileage of all of them will be less than my minivan.
I think you are 100% correct there. I can’t get excited about these kinds of cars.
$3.2 mil for a slightly uglier Camaro.
Slightly?
Looking at that front end seems like Ferrari were ‘inspired’ by the Cyberthang. Butt ugly but from the front.
I’ve said it several times and I’ll say it again-Ferrari made a huge mistake ditching Pininfarina. Outside of the Enzo and Ferrari The Ferrari, which are two of the ugliest cars ever made, the vast majority of their Pininfarina cars had a level of class and elegance to the designs that the modern stuff just doesn’t. You could also see a clear design lineage.
All of their modern stuff is just so visually unappealing to me. It’s all busy, aggro for the sake of being aggro, hard edged where it should be soft, etc. To borrow Clarkson’s quote about the FK9 Civic Type R, they all look like “cars they wouldn’t stop designing” to me.
Granted my opinion is completely irrelevant as I’ll never be able to afford one…and for their nouveau rich clientele nothing is too ostentatious or gauche. In this new gilded age it’s all about screaming about your wealth at the top of your lungs rather than trying to be inconspicuous. But at the end of the day this and none of the other current Ferraris really stir my soul in the same way that 360s, F430s, the F50, 550 and 575, etc. did when I was a kid.
You’re right. This, the 12 Cilindre thing, and the Purosangue are all aesthetic disasters. But they’ll get away with it, though, and the European auto journalists will slobber all over them because Ferrari can never do any wrong.
The Enzo has aged incredibly well.
I’m going to have to disagree with you there. It’s always been a needlessly busy, overly angular mess. The front end might as well be automotive brutalism…and while I do think there are manufacturers that can pull that sort of idea off Ferrari is not one of them.
Sold out is sold out but I don’t see this example of automotive brutalism as a future classic.
No doubt a technical tour-de-force from Ferrari, but these cars feel more and more remote to me. Also not a fan of the way it looks. I like the 12Cilindri, and think the face works there – but not on this.
The whole car seems reverse engineered from the inevitable LEGO model due to come.
That wishbone, though. It’s giving me certain ‘Westworld vibe’, but I’m digging it.
I almost had the same thought concerning the LEGO model 🙂
Those NACA ducts.
I kinda like it aside from looking like it’s already wearing a bra.
I guess I’m just getting old because every angle of this looks horrible to me. In that respect, it’s similar to most of the new crop of race car-inspired, aero-optimized supercars starting with the Aston Martin Valkyrie and AMG One.
I’m sure it’s amazingly capable, but I can’t imagine anyone drooling over its design 50 years from now like a classic Ferrari.
The racing engine derived technology is cool, but with the C8 ZR1 now having 1064 HP from only the ICE, the power figures (especially if it’s counting both ICE and electric motor combined) barely seems impressive… and the styling doesn’t do much for me either, especially the front-end (continuing a recent Ferrari trend – I honestly kind of hate the 296 GTB’s front fascia).
So overall.. eh.
If money were no object, and even if I was on Ferrari’s “list”, I’d be hard pressed to pick this over the ZR1. It’s not attractive in any sense. Neither is the ‘Vette, really, but somehow the ‘Vette’s performance seems more accessible. This seems like a whole lot of fussiness for nothing.
What’s the point of circuit-optimized boost when essentially none of these will ever set tire on a circuit.
Too busy. Wanted something pretty. Seems like our only hope is Porsche for this round of hypercars since the McLaren W1 is ugly too.
I’ve occasionally had cars like that, too:
https://live.staticflickr.com/8601/16521047870_9ce25a2579_c.jpg
And yours actually has a passenger seat, not just a seatbelt for strapping your passenger to the back wall of the cabin!
I can see that being done in a prison bus or something highly utilitarian, but not in a stinking Ferrari!