The F80 is Ferrari's brand-new hypercar. It succeeds the iconic LaFerrari and brings 1,184 horsepower to the output party, ...
The McLaren W1 hypercar gives Ferrari's F80 stiff competition If you look at the power-to-weight ratio, the W1 beats the F80 hollow: 911 hp/ton versus 787 hp/ton. That's not a typo: McLaren's ...
However, as has been well documented since that time, the turbo M3 didn’t quite hit the spot in the UK. On wetter, bumpier, ...
Ferrari has revealed the F80, a LaFerrari successor that uses a turbocharged and hybridized V-6 to make 1183 hp. It should be ...
acknowledged that many will see the F80 and W1 as natural rivals. "From a commercial point of view, I bless the competition," he said. "It has stimulated the market." He's not exaggerating ...
because it generates competition.” It doesn’t seem to have affected enthusiasm for the new F80, though, with 799 units to be built, and all already sold to Ferrari’s most dedicated clients.
Ferrari has a new performance flagship model called the F80, and instead of a howling V-12 engine you'll find a twin-turbo V-6 plug-in hybrid powertrain under its exotic-looking bodywork.
Ferrari has introduced its latest weapon, the F80. Like all of Ferrari's flagship hypercars, the F80 was designed to push the boundaries of performance and technology. In classic Ferrari fashion ...
The F80 is Ferrari’s brand-new hypercar, previously referred to by its codename F250, and it’s not here to play nice. Out goes the operatic V12, replaced by a snarling twin-turbo V6 hybrid ...
Ferrari’s new flagship hypercar, the F80, replaces the LaFerrari with just 799 units set for production. The company offers a range of bold paint options and racing liveries for buyers to fully ...
From the launch, it seemed like the M3 was a bullseye: both it and the M4 looked ... a Competition, such was the popularity before. The most commonly chosen transmission for all of the F80 M3s ...
acknowledged that many will see the F80 and W1 as natural rivals. "From a commercial point of view, I bless the competition," he said. "It has stimulated the market." He's not exaggerating ...