One of 
						the most interesting lots in RM Auctions' sales in 
						Arizona later this week will be a Ferrari F40 that was 
						once owned by former Chrysler top executive Lee Iacocca.
						This example has less 
						than 300 miles on the clock from new and boasts a well 
						documented history; it is still on original MSO. The F40 
						has three recorded owners from new, with the first being 
						Lee Iacocca. The last Ferrari to be built under "Il 
						Commendatore", RM Auctions estimated it to fetch between 
						US$650,000 and US$750,000.
						This particular F40 
						was, ironically, bought by Iacocca while Chrysler in fact 
						owned the rival Italian sports car maker, Lamborghini, 
						which it had acquired in 1987 after the Sant'Agata 
						Bolognese-based company had been through a string of 
						owners and bankruptcy. After an also unsuccessful tenure 
						as the owner, Chrysler sold Lamborghini to an Indonesian 
						businessman in 1994. Meanwhile, the F40 that Iacocca 
						bought from new from the factory, was delivered to him 
						in 1991.
						
						Introduced in 1987, Ferrari's F40 supercar was nothing 
						less than a shock to the senses and a masterful 
						combination of raw-edge, radical styling with 
						state-of-the-art technologies used throughout its 
						engine, body and chassis designs. Without question, 
						driving an F40 is truly a visceral experience, hammering 
						the senses with brutal acceleration, go-kart quick 
						reflexes and a howling exhaust note that is music to the 
						ears of the devoted enthusiast. The overall experience 
						is addictive-a powerful narcotic even.
						
						Conceived in 1986, the F40 project was intended to 
						celebrate Ferrari's landmark 40th anniversary. Il 
						Commendatore, Enzo Ferrari, is reported to have said, 
						"Let's make something special for next year's 
						celebrations in the way we used to do it." A friend of 
						Ferrari, Gino Rancati, who received a silver plaque to 
						commemorate the occasion, suggested the car's name. It 
						was inscribed, "To Gino Rancati for a brilliant idea." 
						An accompanying letter said:
						
						Dear Rancati, with this plaque I want to commemorate our 
						meeting on the 4th June when you kindly contributed to 
						the choice of name for the GT car we presented at the 
						Frankfurt motor show. Your contribution has produced 
						excellent results-the 'F forty', based on the idea of 
						forty years of Ferrari cars, identifies and personalizes 
						the fastest Ferrari GT. Kindest regards. G.B. Razelli.
						
						Poignantly, next to this, in slightly shaky script with 
						violet ink, was, "To Signor Gino, Ferrari." Sadly, the 
						F40 was to be the last car that Enzo Ferrari would see 
						launched by the company he founded.
						
						In true Ferrari tradition, the F40 bridged the gap 
						between the company's road cars and racing cars, 
						representing a further progression of the 288 GTO 
						Evoluzione. Cost-no-object engineering produced 
						technical specifications that remain the stuff of 
						fantasy even by today's jaded standards. A carbon-fiber 
						and Kevlar-reinforced steel space frame chassis with 
						composite body panels was mated to an Evoluzione 
						twin-turbocharged and intercooled four-cam, 
						port-injected V-8 engine, controlled by a race-proven 
						Weber-Marelli engine management system and producing 
						close to 500 bhp.
						
						Weighing just 1,100 kilograms, the F40 was capable of 
						blinding performance. Fast Lane magazine road tested the 
						F40 in the late 1980s, achieving zero-to-60 times of 
						just 3.9 seconds. From a standstill, Ferrari's supercar 
						accelerated to 100 mph in just 7.8 seconds and to 140 
						mph in 14 seconds! Independent testing revealed even 
						quicker acceleration times. Regardless of the source, 
						the F40 proved to be the fastest road car ever produced, 
						and its performance abilities remain simply staggering 
						in every respect today.
						
						While the initial production run was limited to about 
						400 examples, the market demand was so overwhelming, 
						even with the car's stratospheric price tag, that 
						production continued until 1,315 F40s were built by the 
						time production ended in 1991. American Ferrari 
						enthusiasts, however, had to wait until 1990 for the 
						chance to own one. With such strong demand, 
						U.S.-specification cars traded at premiums of many 
						thousands of dollars above their list price in the heady 
						"supercar" market of the time. Over a three-year period, 
						only 213 examples of the F40 were built for the U.S. 
						market.
						
						While every F40 is "special" indeed, this example from 
						1991 has covered fewer than 300 miles from new, and it 
						is still unregistered and listed on its Manufacturer's 
						Statement of Origin (MSO). As the 94th of the 213 
						U.S.-specification F40s, it was produced during October 
						1990. With just three owners from new, its original 
						owner was none other than the famed American automotive 
						executive and business leader Lee Iacocca. Having 
						recently received a major service by Patrick Ottis, the 
						noted Ferrari marque specialist, the F40 is now offered 
						from the current owner's impressive private collection 
						and complete with extensive documentation confirming the 
						former ownership of Mr. Iacocca. Among the documents are 
						such items as the Ferrari Certificate of Origin dated 
						October 12, 1990, a U.S. Environmental Protection Agency 
						letter, Italian export paperwork, an engraved "Built 
						Especially for Lee Iacocca" card, the Owner's Warranty 
						and Service Book, the warranty card and one piece of 
						personal correspondence. A genuine "blue chip" 
						investment-quality exotic automobile, this 1991 F40 will 
						certainly continue to top the Ferrari collector's wish 
						list for many years to come.
						
						
						Ferrari F40 Technical Specifications
						471 
						bhp (SAE), 2,936 cc mid-mounted V-8 engine with dual 
						overhead camshafts per cylinder bank, four valves per 
						cylinder, Weber-Marelli engine management and port fuel 
						injection, twin IHI turbochargers, Behr air-to-air 
						intercoolers, five-speed manual gearbox in rear 
						transaxle, four-wheel independent suspension with 
						unequal-length A-arms, coil springs and anti-roll bar, 
						and four-wheel ventilated hydraulic disc brakes. 
						Wheelbase: 96.5".