The
Ferrari 360 Modena F1 is one of the fastest cars you can
buy, and with the exception of the
Porsche 911 Turbo, it's the quickest car
available with an automatic transmission. This car will
blast from a standstill to 60 mph in a tick over 4 seconds
and rip through the quarter mile in 12.8 seconds at over
112 mph. There are only a few cars on the market, besides
other Ferraris, that accelerate quicker. They are the aforementioned
Porsche, the
Lamborghini Diablo, the
Chevrolet
Corvette Z06, the
Lotus Esprit V8 and the
Dodge Viper. These are also the only cars that can rival the
360's 180+ mph top speed.
During our days with the car in and around Los Angeles,
we never approached such velocities, but we did explore
the Ferrari's off-the-line punch, which will strain your
neck muscles, and sampled its handling around Southern California's
many mountain roads.
It only takes a few corners to realize that the fishtailing
tendencies of its predecessors are history and the 360 Modena
is one of the finest handling cars ever built. Thanks to
its tuned aerodynamics, four-wheel independent suspension,
ABS brakes and excellent traction control system, the 360
can make Ray Ramano look like Mario Andretti. Such roadholding
is usually at the expense of ride comfort. Not in this case.
The 360's around town ride, while firm, doesn't shake your
eyeballs loose, even over rough pavement. Don't misunderstand,
this is no Cadillac. We gave it the coffee test, and have
the stained pants to prove it.
Problems we found during real world use include the
360's low front end, which scrapes itself free of paint
on most driveways. There's also that constant engine wail
coming from just over your right shoulder. Those with sensitive
ears won't last long, plus the cops hear you coming from
a mile away.
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We think the semi-automatic gearbox, which adds $10,000
to the cost of the car, should shift smoother. It often
snaps your neck on upshifts, and bucks hard off the line.
But the transmission does have its good points. First, it
makes changing
gears completely fool proof. The transmission is controlled
with two paddles behind the steering wheel. You pull the
one on the right if you want an upshift, the one on the
left for a downshift. It's really that simple. You don't
even have to take your foot off the gas and there's digital
readout to tell you what gear you've just chosen. And second,
it has a full automatic mode, which proved precious in LA's
heavy traffic. Once you're comfortable with the whole paddle
thing, you can click off upshifts with the flick of a finger,
even with the engine wailing away at 8500 rpm. Fun? Like
Disneyland. It's as close to racing Formula 1 as we'll ever
get.
If things get out of hand, the 360's brakes are at the
ready. Stopping distances from 60 or 80 mph are among the
shortest in the world. The ABS system works perfectly, and
the 360's brake pedal never gets soft even after miles of
abuse.
Steering is just as impressive. It's quick but never
darty, with an effort level that doesn't require the arm
strength of Arnold, and the road feel is incredible. It's
as if the driver's hands are directly connected to the front
tires.