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Ferrari Enzo
Italian flagship sports car
Italian flagship sports car
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Ferrari Enzo |
| image | Orange Enzo Ferrari (7191948164).jpg |
| manufacturer | Ferrari S.p.A. |
| production | 2002–2004 |
| assembly | Italy: Maranello |
| designer | Ken Okuyama at Pininfarina |
| Frank Stephenson (FXX) | |
| class | Sports car (S) |
| body_style | 2-door berlinetta |
| related | {{ubl |
| layout | Rear mid-engine, rear-wheel drive |
| engine | 6.0 L Tipo F140 B V12 |
| powerout | 660 PS |
| transmission | 6-speed F1 Graziano automated manual |
| wheelbase | 2650 mm |
| length | 4702 mm |
| width | 2035 mm |
| height | 1147 mm |
| weight | 1480 kg |
| 1255 kg dry | |
| sp | us |
| predecessor | Ferrari F50 |
| successor | LaFerrari |
| doors | Butterfly |
Frank Stephenson (FXX) |Ferrari FXX |Maserati MC12 |Ferrari P4/5 |Maserati Birdcage 75th 1255 kg dry
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The Ferrari Enzo (Type F140), officially marketed as Enzo Ferrari, is a mid-engine sports car manufactured by Italian automobile manufacturer Ferrari and named after the company's founder, Enzo Ferrari. It was developed in 2002 using Formula One technology, such as a carbon-fibre body, Formula One-style automated-shift manual transmission, and carbon fibre-reinforced silicon carbide (C/SiC) ceramic composite disc brakes, as well as technologies not allowed in Formula One, such as active aerodynamics. The Enzo's F140 B V12 engine was also the first of a new generation for Ferrari. The Enzo generates substantial amounts of downforce through its front underbody flaps, small adjustable rear spoiler and rear diffuser, which work in conjunction to produce 343 kg of downforce at 200 km/h and 775 kg of downforce at 300 km/h, before decreasing to 585 kg at top speed.
Production and development
The Enzo was designed by Ken Okuyama, the then Pininfarina head of design, and initially announced at the 2002 Paris Motor Show with a limited production run of 399 units. The company sent invitations to existing customers, specifically, those who had previously bought the F40 and F50. In 2004, the 400th production car was built and donated to the Vatican for charity, which was later sold at a Sotheby's auction for US$1.1 million. A total of 498 units were built. Three development mules were built: M1, M2, and M3. Each mule utilised the bodywork of a 348, a model which had been succeeded by two generations of mid-engined V8 sports cars—the F355 and the 360 Modena—by the time the mules were built. The third mule was offered for auction alongside the 400th Enzo in June 2005, selling for €195,500 (US$236,300).
Specifications

Engine

The engine in the Enzo is longitudinally mounted, and the car has a rear mid-engine, rear-wheel-drive layout with a 44%/56% front/rear weight distribution. The powerplant is Ferrari's F140B naturally aspirated 65° V12 engine with DOHC 4 valves per cylinder, variable valve timing and Bosch Motronic ME7 fuel injection with a displacement of 5998.80 cc generating a power output of 660 PS at 7,800 rpm and 657 Nm of torque at 5,500 rpm. The redline is 8,200 rpm.
Suspension, gearbox and brakes

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The Enzo has an automated manual transmission, known as the F1 gearbox, using paddle-shifters to control an automatically actuated electrohydraulic clutch and shifting mechanism, with LED lights on the steering wheel telling the driver when to change gears. The gearbox has a shift time of 150 milliseconds and was built by Graziano Trasmissioni. The transmission was a first-generation "clutchless" design from the late 1990s, and there have been complaints about its abrupt shifting. The Enzo has four-wheel independent suspension with push-rod-actuated shock absorbers, which can be adjusted from the cabin, complemented with anti-roll bars at the front and rear. The Enzo uses 19 in wheels and has 15 in Brembo disc brakes. The wheels are held by a single lug nut and fitted with Bridgestone Potenza Scuderia RE050A tyres.
| Gear | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | Final drive |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ratio | 3.15:1 | 2.18:1 | 1.57:1 | 1.19:1 | 0.94:1 | 0.76:1 | 4.1:1 |
Performance
One-way downhill with 1-foot rollout the Enzo can accelerate to 60 mi/h in 3.14 seconds and can reach 100 mi/h in 6.6 seconds. The ¼-mile (~400 m) time is about 11 seconds, on skidpad it has reached 1.05g, and the top speed has been recorded to be as high as 355 km/h. It is rated at 34 L/100km in the city, 20 L/100km on the highway and 29 L/100km combined. Evo tested the Enzo on the famed Nordschleife Circuit and ran a 7:25.21 lap time. The Enzo in the test had a broken electronic damper. They also tested it at Bedford Autodrome West circuit, where it recorded a 1:21.3 lap time, which is 1.1 seconds slower than the Porsche Carrera GT, but faster than the Litchfield Type-25.
Accolades
In 2004, American magazine Sports Car International named the Ferrari Enzo number three on their list of Top Sports Cars of the 2000s. American magazine Motor Trend Classic named the Enzo as number four in their list of the ten "Greatest Ferraris of all time". The Ferrari Enzo was also described as one of the "Fifty Ugliest Cars of the Past 50 Years", as Bloomberg Businessweek cited its superfluous curves and angles as too flashy, particularly the V-shaped hood, scooped-out doors, and bulbous windshield.
Other media
Before being unveiled at the Paris Motor Show, the show car was flown from Italy to the United States to be filmed in Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle. It was driven on a beach by actress Demi Moore. After filming was complete, the Enzo was flown to France to be at the Motor Show.
Gallery
File:2002 Ferrari Enzo (37977907432) (2).jpg|Giallo Modena File:Nero Enzo. (4470518115).jpg|Nero File:Ferrari Enzo Omotesando Tokyo Japan.JPG|Bianco Fuji File:Ferrari enzo-terabass.jpg|Argento Nurburgring File:Ferrari Enzo in dark grey Stanford Hall 07-07-13.jpg|Grigio Titanio
References
References
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