01 May
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Ferrari President Meets With Apple’s Tim Cook, Remains Bullish on Hybrid Supercars

STANFORD, California — Ferrari President and Chairman Luca di Montezemolo sat down with Apple’s CEO Tim Cook for an exclusive meeting of the minds earlier this week. The Ferrari chief, in the San Francisco Bay Area for the season opener of Stanford University’s View From the Top lecture series, gleaned insight from Steve Jobs’ successor and found shared values between the two brands.

Speaking to the assembled masses of students at Stanford, di Montezemolo honed in on each company’s core tenets, saying “attention to the brand, exclusivity, attention to the people, attention to the environment” and control from a central location are fundamental to each company’s success and continued growth.

Di Montezemolo drew a parallel between himself and Jobs’ role in Apple’s renaissance. The Ferrari president and former chairman of FIAT S.p.A took the reigns of the ailing supercar manufacturer in 1991, helping to reestablish the marque in Formula One racing and position Ferrari as a leader in automotive performance and technology.

During his meeting with Cook, di Montezemolo came away with a few insights into Apple’s methods and goals, specifically the company’s focus on simplicity, design and “a passion for product.”

Di Montezemolo went on to praise the management style and leadership at Apple, including its employees’ commitment to producing world-class products and the continued inspiration that Jobs instilled in its workers.

“When you’ve got a leader in a company like Steve Jobs, people have big respect and big gratitude for what he’s done.”

“When you’ve got a leader in a company like Steve Jobs,” di Montezemolo said during his talk, “people have big respect and big gratitude for what he’s done.”

The talk was primarily aimed at Stanford’s MBA students, with di Montezemolo espousing his own management style and what it takes to succeed on the world stage.

“Vision is something crucial for your people.” di Montezemolo said. “Give them clear goals, clear priorities and give everyone the possibility to grow up internally.”

He also took the opportunity to throw a few barbs towards Ferrari’s competition from Germany, admitting that, “Porsche, after Ferrari, is the best car,” but while “they’re perfect, they’re like a freezer. Cold. I prefer the red technology; the hot technology.”

Technological advancements were an underlying thread during di Montezemolo’s talk, with the Ferrari head citing the automaker’s push towards maximum performance and maximum efficiency, not just for outright speed, but in his words, “emotional driving.”

In an interview with WIRED, the Ferrari president touted the advances the automaker has made with its Kinetic Energy Recovery Systems (KERS), specifically the hybrid V12 drivetrain shown at this week’s Beijing Motor Show and destined to power its next mid-engine, flagship supercar later this year.

When asked about the possibility of moving beyond hybrid technology and into fully electric vehicles, di Montezemolo shakes his head and simply answers, “No.”

“To do electric you need big batteries,” di Montezemolo says, citing both weight and technological concerns. “I believe a lot in the hybrid. I want to build cars that have performance and can travel far. I want to drive from here to New York if I want.” But he concedes that smaller cars for inner-city travel are better suited to electrification and that the Chevrolet Volt – with its plug-in hybrid drivetrain and range-extending engine – is a solid concept.

“I’m not here to sell. I’m here to let you dream.”

He also admits that Ferrari is looking at the possibility of a plug-in hybrid, but for now a KERS-based hybrid system is what the automaker will be focusing on for the foreseeable future.

However, what Ferrari isn’t considering is an SUV – a competitor to the recently revealed Lamborghini Urus.

“Ferrari has to remain a dream and has to remain a car with very innovative technology,” according to di Montezemolo, who chuckles when he says, “It must remain a hedonistic car.”

“Because we have Maserati in our group, they can do as they do,” he says, referring to the forthcoming Kubang SUV from Ferrari’s corporate sibling and its planned launch next year. “I want to maintain our identity,” and di Montezemolo maintains an SUV would dilute the brand.

Towards the end of his address, Ferrari’s president recognized he was speaking to future customers, joking that he’d happily show them one of the 458 Italias parked outside. But after pulling off his tie during the Q&A session, di Montezemolo concedes to a round of applause that, “I’m not here to sell. I’m here to let you dream.”

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

06 August
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300 MPH Feels Even Better When It’s For Charity

Hitting 300 mph on the Bonneville Salt Flats and breaking the AA/Fuel speed record is a worthy goal. Doing so for charity is an even more worthy goal.

That’s exactly what Team 608 has been doing since 1998, racing lakesters and hot rods while fundraising for cancer, juvenile diabetes and autism research.

“Team 608 is self-funded and self-sustaining and 100 percent of the money we raise goes to charities,” said Bob Dauernheim, owner and builder of the #608 Lakester. “It’s our way of pursuing our passion for hot rods and racing, challenging the record books, and giving something back to society.”

Back in 2009, the #608 Lakester topped out at 297 mph after the rules of aerodynamics dictated it could go no faster. So Dauernheim partnered with Olympic bobsled team designer Bob Cuneo to build a more slippery racer. His suggestion? Build an entirely new body with a longer, tapered tail.

Under the hood, the 25-foot-long, 3,100 lb. racer is still powered by a 582 inch, 1,150 hp big block engine designed by the legendary Tony Feil and powered by 114 octane racing fuel. It redlines at 7,800 RPM.

If Dauernheim’s redesigned car, piloted by Don Biglow, breaks 300 mph, a team supporter will donate $5,000 to Autism Speaks. If it averages over 315 mph on two back-to-back runs, the #608 Lakester will also set the speed record for AA/Gas Lakesters.

Dauernheim is one of many speed freaks who uses a hobby to help the community. Earlier this summer, Ducati auctioned off a new bike and motorcycle tour package to support the Urban Zen Foundation, and on September 24th members of the Ferrari Owners Group will participate in a San Francisco-to-Los Angeles rally to help fund youth programs at Opportunity Impact.

We’re suddenly feeling more charitable.

Photo: A. B. Shuman, Team 608

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

22 July
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The Hybrid Ferrari of Tomorrow

When the top brass at Ferrari like your car design, you’re onto something.

Kim Cheon Ju, Ahn Dre and Lee Sahngseok took first place in the Ferrari World Design Contest in Maranello, Italy. The three budding designers, students at Hongik University in Seoul, Korea, were personally congratulated by none other than Paolo Pininfarina, chairman of Ferrari’s styling counsel and non plus ultra of Italian automotive aesthetics. That’s almost as cool as the three-month internships they’ll serve at Ferrari HQ in Maranello.

They were among more than 50 teams from design schools around the world who submitted their designs for the “Ferrari of the Third Millennium,” a vehicle extreme enough to wear the cavallino rampante. The design brief was simple: The car must be fast, it must be light and it must be packed with leading-edge tech. Fuel efficiency was a top concern, so many teams specced hybrid drivetrains.

The seven finalists’ submissions included a 3-D rendering and a 1:4 scale model, complete with a full interior. The cars were designed using Autodeck Alias.

The winning design is called Eternità (above) — painted, of course, rosso corsa. It’s got microscopic ground clearance, sleek lines and styling decades beyond anything Enzo Ferrari could have imagined.

These are concepts, and they’ll probably never see production, but that’s not the point. Ferrari says the contest is meant to foster “the creative energy of the next generation.”

“I saw at first hand the many genuinely innovative ideas that these talented youngsters sent us and could feel the enormous passion and commitment that had gone into them,” Ferrari chairman Luca di Montezemolo said in a statement. “I am certain that some of these suggestions will come to light in the Ferraris of the future.”

Big shoes to fill, indeed.

Photos: Ferrari

The second-place design, Xezri, by Samir Sadikhov of IED in Turin, Italy.

Third-place design by Henry Cloke and Qi Haitao of the London Royal College of Arts.

A look at the finalists.

Video: HighGearMediaVideos/YouTube

A word on the contest.

Video: Autodesk/Youtube

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

14 March
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Ferrari Four: A Ferrari For Families

Sorry! We just love cars and had to post this.

Ferrari has pulled the sheet off the all-new FF, an all-wheel-drive beast with 660 horsepower and room for four.

The FF — for Ferrari Four — unveiled today at the Geneva auto show isn’t just a replacement for the aging 612 Scaglietti flagship. It is Maranello’s attempt to build a “versatile” supercar to compete with the likes of the Aston Martin Rapide, Bentley Continental GT and Porsche Panamera.

“With the FF, we open a new book in Ferrari’s history,” Ferrari Chairman Luca Cordero di Montezemolo said today in Geneva. “This is something we have never done before.”

Ferrari calls the FF “a completely new take on the sporting Grand Tourer theme.” Most of the tech specs came out in January with the first photos the car, but they’re worth running down again.

The 6.3-liter V12 is good for 660 horsepower and 503 pound-feet of torque, with most of that grunt available at 1,000 RPM. The FF will do zero to 62 mph in 3.7 seconds and top out at 208 mph. The seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox is mounted at the rear axle, contributing to the car’s 47-53 weight distribution.

Power hits the ground through all four wheels using Ferrari’s patented 4RM system. Ferrari says the car provides superlative grip in even the worst conditions — they’ve actually tested the car in snow — because torque is distributed to each wheel as needed to ensure optimal traction.

“Four-wheel drive is a revolution for Ferrari,” Fabio Barone, 38, chairman of the Passione Rossa owners’ club, told Bloomberg. “You can finally drive a real Ferrari, with its extreme performance, to take your family skiing.”

All that and room for 15.9 cubic feet of cargo space with the rear seats up. Despite the added tech and cargo capacity the FF weighs 3,946 pounds dry.

We love the styling by Pininfarina; it reminds us of the 250 GT SWB Breadvan we love so much. Not everyone agrees with us, but love it or hate it the first year’s run of 800 cars reportedly is sold out — at $359,000 apiece.

Photos and video: Ferrari

Via Wired Autopia: http://www.wired.com/autopia/

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