Ferrari exhibit its new 
						flagship V12 four-seater, the FF, for its UK public 
						debut at the Goodwood Festival of Speed next month, 
						lining it up alongside the front engined V8 California 
						and the mid-rear mounted 458 Italia.
						The FF ushers in an 
						entirely new GT sports car concept and represents not so 
						much an evolution as a true revolution with the Prancing 
						Horse’s first ever four-wheel drive system. The FF is 
						the first road car to take drive to the front wheels 
						from the front of the crankshaft, rather than through a 
						separate transfer case. The innovative and patented 4RM 
						system weighs 50 per cent less than a conventional 
						four-wheel drive system and ensures perfect weight 
						distribution (47:53) for the optimum driving performance 
						that clients expect from a Ferrari, even for a Grand 
						Tourer with four seats.
						Performance comes 
						courtesy of the new 6,262cc direct injection engine 
						which develops 660hp at 8,000 rpm. In tandem with its 
						transaxle dual-clutch F1 gearbox, impressive 
						acceleration of 0-62mph in 3.7 seconds is guaranteed.
						Also taking part in 
						the event is the Ferrari 458 Italia, an 8-cylinder 
						two-seater berlinetta with a mid-rear mounted engine, 
						which represents a genuine break with the past in terms 
						of Maranello’s previous high-performance sports cars. 
						Designed to fulfil the expectations and ambitions of our 
						most passionate clients, the 458 Italia continues the 
						Ferrari tradition of putting the thrill into driving as 
						a result of track-derived technological innovations.
						Thanks to a 4,499cc V8 
						engine, which punches out 570hp, the F1 dual-clutch 
						gearbox and a 1,380kg dry weight, the 458 Italia boasts 
						an extraordinary weight-power ratio of 2.42 kg (a 
						power-weight ratio of 413 hp per ton). This means it 
						sprints from 0 to 62 mph in under 3.4 seconds and hits a 
						maximum speed of over 203mph.
						The 458 Italia on 
						display this year at the Festival of Speed will be a 
						“bi-colore” Rosso Fuoco (dark red) car with a Nero 
						Daytona roof (black). This car encapsulates the racing 
						pedigree of the 458 Italia with the full carbon-fibre 
						interior and exterior packages, including carbon-fibre 
						rear diffuser, side sills and F1-inspired front 
						winglets.
						The Ferrari California 
						is the Prancing Horse’s first front-engined V8 which 
						shares styling cues with one of the greatest designs 
						from Ferrari’s history, the 250 GT California. The new 
						California, however, is packed with the latest 
						technology and includes Ferrari’s first application of 
						the dual-clutch 7-speed gearbox, a direct injection 4.3 
						V8 engine with 460hp, the latest F1-Trac traction 
						control system, multi-link rear suspension, and, of 
						course, an innovative retractable folding hardtop that 
						opens or closes in only 14 seconds. The California has 
						already received the critical acclaim of the automotive 
						press around the world, with Top Gear claiming 
						it is a “proper God’s honest, marrow-deep Ferrari”, and
						Autocar describing it as “absolutely bloody 
						marvellous!”
						The Ferrari California 
						on display at Goodwood features a “bi-colore” roof, with 
						the car painted in Tour de France (dark blue) and the 
						roof and A-pillars in Grigio Titanio (Silver) to echo 
						the tradition of bi-colore berlinettas of the 1950s and 
						1960s. The car on display in the Supercar Paddock also 
						features host of extra factory-fit options from the 
						Carrozzeria Scaglietti Personalisation Programme, such 
						as diamond-stitching on the rear seats and Cavallino 
						stitching on the headrests.
						Ferrari is also 
						represented by the Scuderia Ferrari team who will be 
						demonstrating the 2009 F1 car, driven by Marc Gené (TBC), 
						throughout the weekend. Additional fine examples of 
						Ferrari’s illustrious racing heritage can also be seen 
						in the Cathedral Paddock, with the following 
						privately-owned cars entered in this year’s event:
						
							
								| 1951 | 
								Ferrari 340 
								America  | 
								(Fifties 
								Finesse)  | 
							
							
								| 1953  | 
								Ferrari 375MM 
								Berlinetta  | 
								(Classic 
								Endurance Racers) | 
							
							
								| 1968 | 
								Ferrari 
								312/68   | 
								(Garagists 
								Grand Prix Cars) | 
							
							
								| 1968 | 
								Ferrari 246 
								Tasman   | 
								(The Cosworth 
								Years) | 
							
							
								| 1972 | 
								Ferrari 312 
								PB  | 
								(Open Racing 
								Prototypes) | 
							
							
								| 1973 | 
								Ferrari 312 
								B3     | 
								(The Cosworth 
								Years) | 
							
							
								| 1979 | 
								Ferrari 512 
								BB/LM  | 
								(Post-war GTs) |