1991 Ferrari 348 Ts Gated Manual on 2040-cars
Stuyvesant, New York, United States
1991 FERRARI 348 TS GATED MANUALMeticulous maintainedRare 5 speed manual Giallo over Nero leather and only 45k
miles.The 348 replaced the 328 and shared resemblance with the Testarossa with straked panels on the doors.This ALL
ORIGINAL is a TS version with the Targa roof painted body color, which gives it the Berlinetta look and the
enjoyment of a Targa.
R3.4L V8 engine produces 316 horsepower at 7,200
rpm and 238 lb-ft of torque at 5000 rpm, reaching a high speed of over 176 miles per hour and capable of climbing
from 0-60 in just 5.4 secondsCOMES WITH its original owner's manual, an extra key and the original front tool
kit. CAR HAS JUST HAD ITS ALL ITSMAJORS1)TIMING BELT SERVICE2)NEW CLUTCH3)Flushed all fluids and replaced, recent oil change4)NEW ENGINE HEAD5)NEWWATER PUMPABSOLUTELY NO LEAKSCLEAN CARFAXNO ACCIDENTSCLEAN CLEAR TITLEEXTERIOR AND INTERIOR ARE IN Excellent
conditionABSOLUTELY NO RUST, AND NON SMOKERS CARCLUTCH IS BRAND NEWTIMING BELT SERVICE DONEALL FLUIDS FLUSHEDTHIS
Ferrari 348 for Sale
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LaFerrari testing with turbo V6 F1 engine?
Mon, 02 Dec 2013If Ford went and tested a NASCAR engine in a production Ford Fusion, it'd just be silly. Ferrari testing its new 1.6-liter, turbocharged V6 Formula One engine in a LaFerrari hypercar is not silly - it's excellent.
Now, we can't be certain if the video shown above is actually Ferrari's new F1 powerplant. Based on the big roof-mounted intake, the weird sounds coming from the camo'd LaFerrari and the teasers we've been hearing from other F1 engine providers, the race engine is a tantalizing idea.
The other possibility, perpetuated by our friends over at Road & Track, is that Ferrari is using the LaFerrari to test a next-generation powerplant. That looks good on paper, but this car strikes as being far too loud for any road legal engine. What do you think? What's Ferrari up to at Fiorano? Scroll down for the video and then let us know in Comments.
Race Recap: 2013 Malaysian Grand Prix is a fool in the rain
Mon, 25 Mar 2013Humidity, hunger and heartbreak were the takeaways from the Malaysian Formula One Grand Prix. A proper track with a wider variety of straights and corners than the street circuit in Australia, the second race of the season was expected to be a better test of the performance of the 11 teams on the grid. It was also supposed to be a more accurate test of the Pirelli tires, the bits of rubber at the four corners of the car still at the top of the performance agenda for all the top teams except for McLaren, which even larger issues with its new car to deal with.
Then it rained. Then it rained some more. Then it rained so hard just before the race that numerous drivers slid off the track on the parade lap. Then came the race, and then came the figurative tears and ones of the crocodile variety as well.
Heads continue to roll at Scuderia Ferrari
Fri, Dec 19 2014It's a year of restructuring at Ferrari – especially when it comes to the Formula One department. Dissatisfied with the team's performance of late, parent company Fiat fired Ferrari's chairman, replaced its team principal twice and brought in another multiple world champion to replace the one it already had. But that's not the end of it. Under the direction of new chairman Sergio Marchionne and team principal Maurizio Arrivabene, the Maranello-based outfit is undergoing a purge in its ranks. Ferrari has fired its veteran engineering director Pat Fry (pictured above at left), its chief designer Nicolas Tombazis (center) and its tire guru Hirohide Hamashima (whom the team picked up shortly after Bridgestone left the sport, not pictured). In their places, Ferrari has named appropriate replacements, and has shuffled some additional staff around. F1 journalist Alberto Antonini, for example, has taken over the press office from Renato Bisignani who will now run the Scuderia's new commercial department. More vital, however, is James Allison, a longtime F1 engineer who previously worked for Ferrari for five years and returned from Lotus last year to take up position as the team's new technical director – too late to influence last season's chassis but now charged with developing next year's. Whether the radical reshuffling of its staff will be enough to reverse the team's fortunes, nobody can say for certain at this point. But without a single grand prix victory this past season, things can hardly get any worse for what historically has been the most victorious team in all of motorsport. The Scuderia Ferrari has been reorganized Maranello, 16 December – Within a few days from his arrival Maurizio Arrivabene, Managing Director of Ferrari's Gestione Sportiva and Team Principal of Scuderia Ferrari, has restructured his team with a flatter structure and clear assignment of responsibilities. James Allison is the Technical Director with two Italian engineers and home grown Scuderia talent reporting to him: Chief Designer Simone Resta and Power Unit Director Mattia Binotto, the latter will be supported by Chief Designer Power Unit Lorenzo Sassi, among others. Furthermore James Allison will direct track engineering activities ad interim.