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Ferrari’s front-engined V12 four-seaters sold well despite being derided by puri
↳ WHAT TO PAY £60,000–£80,000 ↳ WHY YOU SHOULD Ferrari will never build a naturally aspirated open-gate manual supercar ever again (probably) ↳ WHY YOU SHOULDN’T The sills rot, it looks a bit startled
Aesthetics are so subjective that it seems a fool’s errand to address them at length here. However, this is a new Ferrari. And one that adopts the name Testarossa. A car that is almost exclusively rem
Reviving the Testarossa name places the new 849 alongside the 12Cilindri at the top of Ferrari’s series-production range. It replaces the SF90 – an ambitious supercar defined by a V8 hybrid powertrain
With a controversial name and equally controversial predecessor, Ferrari’s new 849 Testarossa has a long to-do list as it aims to improve on the SF90
Something is not right. Racing cars are meant to be more difficult to drive than road cars; extra power and performance but less harnessed, so trickier to access and control than with the engineering
Martin Brundle, Derek Warwick and David Brabham all pick out the 3.5-litre V8 Jaguar XJR-14 among the finest racing cars they ever drove. Ross Brawn’s design for Tom Walkinshaw Racing ‘only’ won three