2000 Ferrari 360 Modena Coupe 2-door 3.6l on 2040-cars
United States
|
*Rosso Corsa and Saddle * Rare 6 Speed Manual
* 1 of 1 Black Trim and Real working Engine Start Button located on the center console. ( There is no other Ferrari 360 with a Engine start button and black trim in the world!) * Rear Challenge Grill. Dual Power Seats. Rosso Corsa Calipers. Etc. *Upgraded Challenge Stardale Key, Tachometer Yellow Face and Climate Control Vent (Jet engine looking, very nice!)
* Upgraded Exhaust System (Tubi) *Red Led lights in the interior and in the Engine Bay which can be turned of and on with a included remote control. *Upgraded
Flip out 7" touch screen Stereo with Bluetooth, Pandora, iPod/iPhone
connectivity. Also added JL Audio subwooders in a custom made Subwoofer
box with the Ferrari Emblem for a OEM look. ( All that can be removed to
your liking before purchase as I have the original stereo that can but
back professionally.
20,401 Miles. Service
Records up to date. Excellent Condition. Clean Car Fax report: No
accidents.Clean title in hand. This Ferrari needs nothing but a new
owner !
There
is no buy it now or reserve so please bid as much as you would like to
buy it for.
Located in Northern Californian and will assist with shipping the car anywhere in the US. This is the one! everything you could want in a Ferrari and more! Thanks for considering and happy Ferrari buying! |
Ferrari 360 for Sale
2002 ferrari 360 spider rosso corsa tan interior(US $91,888.00)
2004 ferrari 360 spider f1 exhaust extremely clean 18k miles only $94,888.00!!!
2001 ferrari 360 spider convertible super clean, f1, daytonas, super clean!(US $93,900.00)
03 360 f1 modena * only 7k mi * shields * modulars * daytona's * mjr service!!!(US $103,950.00)
2001 ferrari 360 modena coupe 2-door 3.6l(US $75,000.00)
2004 ferrari 360 challenge stadale / 9,813 miles / 2 california owners since new(US $169,999.00)
Auto blog
FCA delays distribution of Ferrari shares
Sat, May 2 2015Even if you can't afford an actual Ferrari, soon you can own a part of the famous company thanks to its upcoming initial public offering. FCA will put 10 percent of the Prancing Horse on the market in the third quarter of this year. However to reap extra money for 2015's bottom line, the rest of the sports-car maker's stock will remain undistributed for a little longer. According to Automotive News, the strategy is quite simple to understand. FCA is holding off until the first quarter of 2016 to divvy up the remaining Ferrari stock to shareholders. By doing so, the automaker gets to claim 80 percent of the Prancing Horse's profits for its 2015 financial numbers. While FCA is already showing strong results through Q1 2015, being able to add extra cash on the balance sheet is always a plus. FCA hasn't set a specific date for the IPO, but Ferrari stock was announced to be traded in the US and possibly on a European exchange, as well. According to Automotive News, FCA currently owns 90 percent of the company, and Piero Ferrari has the remaining 10 percent, which he isn't selling. Related Video:
2016 Ferrari 488 GTB First Drive
Fri, Jun 5 2015After The Last Supper, Leonardo Da Vinci painted the Mona Lisa, after recording their first album, Iggy and the Stooges released the brilliant Fun House. Not every second creative attempt has to bomb like The Strokes' second, Room On Fire, and not every new car model has to be heavier and uglier like the Mustang II. Or at least that was the hope as I arrived in Italy for the launch of the 2016 Ferrari 488 GTB (Gran Turismo Berlinetta, if you're wondering). The new car traces its lineage back through 40 years of mid-engined V8 supercars, one that started with the 1975 308 GTB that replaced the V6 Dino series. But the 488 is also the follow-up to the 458 Italia, which is generally considered to be the zenith of all things Ferrari. With sublime handling and a yowling V8 that made you question how fast you could really travel on public roads, the Italia was an Italian missile wrapped in voluptuous aluminum. When the 488 GTB debuted at the Geneva Motor Show in March, the portents weren't good. As well as having fewer curves and a turbo engine, trouble was brewing inside the stronghold. Last fall, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles (FCA) chairmain Sergio Marchionne sacked Ferrari president Luca de Montezemolo. And Marchionne's plan to sell 10 percent of Ferrari on the stock market raises fears of hedge fund guys calling the shots at this archetypal Italian sports car maker. What's more, there's already talk of increasing annual production from the current cap of 7,000 units to 10,000. But back to the 488 GTB. The new car is based on the same aluminum underbody as the 458, but with less dramatic looks. The source of those looks is not the design department, however. "We gave them [the design department] the shape...they started with that shape." explained Matteo Biancalana, Ferrari's aerodynamics chief. So wind tunnel data penned the GTB's lines, mainly because of an ambitious target to achieve 50 percent more downforce than the outgoing model with no increase in aerodynamic drag. "We had to touch every millimetre of the car apart from the carried-over roof," says Biancalana. The front grille channels air through the radiators, cools the brakes and denies air access to the underbody, which consequently develops low pressure areas that suck the car to the road. There's a moveable spoiler under the body at the rear to reduce drag at high speed in a straight line.
Ferrari hybrid V8 arriving next year, could power Ferrari SUV
Mon, Mar 12 2018Ferrari CEO Sergio Marchionne told Auto Express that the world can expect a V8 hybrid from Maranello next year. He said, "The test mules are out now," but what he wouldn't tell the Brit mag is where that V8 hybrid will go. Everything else in Ferrari's lineup has been recently introduced or refreshed save for the 488, but the 488 is just two years old. With all of the current cars ruled out, the bettors wager on the hybrid V8 appearing in the Ferrari SUV that's also due next year. We've no idea how Maranello engineers will structure the electrical assistance, but Marchionne indicated "more of a traditional hybrid [than the LaFerrari] to fulfill a different role." That means a strictly performance-based kinetic energy recovery system likely steps aside for one that will "yield additional performance" as well as better fuel economy. In further comments to Top Gear — where he expressed a touch of disappointment in the firm's GT car designs and the possibility of a 250 GTO continuation — Marchionne said, "The hybrid element will be much more of a mainstay of the powertrain than it was in the LaFerrari." Look out for plug-in charging and some kind of all-electric range. If all of this speculation holds up come 2019, it also means the Ferrari SUV will reverse its competitors' playbooks — the Bentley Bentayga and Lamborghini Urus, for instance, established themselves with their mightiest powertrains, then got around to plug-in hybrid models. A hybrid SUV would be smart, as we're coming up on an emission target escalation in 2020. Those targets only apply to carmakers selling more than 10,000 units per year, Ferrari sold nearly 8,400 cars last year and aims to crack 9,000 sales this year. The SUV will certainly put the Prancing Horse over the 10K barrier, and as a volume seller, relatively speaking, will make a worthwhile contribution to emissions values. Of course, you have to write Marchionne's quips in pencil, because they're prone to revision. It was only two years ago when Marchionne answered a question about the mere possibility of an SUV with, "You have to shoot me first." Later that same year, Marchionne said every Ferrari sold from 2019 onward would have some sort of hybrid element.








