Is it lighter than an Enzo or just about the same weight?
Is it lighter than an Enzo or just about the same weight?
That's quite drastic then.
I can imagine all the Enzo owners out there to be quite jealous.
True, but I'm sure the enthusiasts that do drive it often would like the extra bit in performance and looks.
i guess its a 612 because it has a 6 Liter 12 cylinder
Gone:
09 Ducati Monster 696
09 Audi Q5 3.2
03 Infiniti G35 Sedan
07 Honda Civic Coupe LX 5spd
Current:
10 BMW 335d
12 Audi Q5 2.0t
10 VW Jetta TDI
11 Ducati Monster 796
I have seen the car being called 612 P 4/5 quite often, but as Napolis said, the official name is "Ferrari P 4/5 by Pininfarina". It kinda makes me remember when the Enzo Ferrari was called F60. Even Top Gear referred to it as the F60 when they tested it...
As for 612, V12-engined Ferrari are named using the displacement of one cylinder. For example, the 365 Daytona has a 4380 cc V12 engine. V6 and V8-engined Ferraris use the total displacement as the first two digits and the number of cylinders as the third. This name scheme isn't respected anymore, for example the 612 Scaglietti has a 5.7-liter V12 engine, so following Ferrari's original tradition it should have been named 479 Scaglietti. I'm quite sure Ferrari changed the naming scheme because of several models sharing the same engine size, for example the 575M Maranello, the Superamerica and the 612 Scaglietti all share the same engine size. Having different models sharing the same name would be quite confusing for the buyer. Just think about all the 250 models...
Last edited by fisetdavid26; 06-26-2007 at 10:27 PM.
Reginald *IB4R* says:
it was a beautiful 35 seconds.
David says:
that's what she said
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