RE: Novitec Rosso F430

RE: Novitec Rosso F430

Monday 30th January 2006

Novitec Rosso F430

Ian Kuah gets behind the wheel of a very special Ferrari


Novitec F430
Novitec F430

Right now, Ferrari's F430 is one of the most desirable cars on the planet. Although it represents a significant hike in price over the F360, its driving dynamics are so superior that anyone doing a back-to-back would immediately sign off the extra cash.

That certainly begs the question of why would you want to modify this near perfect machine? The answer depends on your attitude to life. In our experience, there are some people who simply cannot abide by having the same car as their equally wealthy neighbours or friends at the golf club. The more money they have the greater is their urge to be different.

Quality Goods

There are two ways to be distinctive when you modify cars - subtle and bling. One thing we like about Novitec Rosso designs is that they are subtle. Unlike the tuner parts that some companies bolted to unsuspecting Ferraris in the 1980s and '90s, the aerodynamic components from this company are designed to integrate with the styling of the car rather than stand out like a sore thumb.

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Made from the highest quality materials, usually carbon-fibre, these parts are not merely for show. They reduce weight, and with careful attention paid to their effect in wind tunnel tests, enhance stability at speed. While using this light and immensely strong composite material is expensive, it is certainly worth the investment on cars of this calibre.

The new parts consist of a front air splitter fitted below the factory nose section, skirts for the rear of the side sills and a new rear undertray to enhance the ground effects of the factory flat bottom and central venturi. The finishing touch is the rear wing, and all these parts can either be left in black carbon or painted to match the bodywork.

Mechanicals

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The suspension is lowered by 25mm either with sport springs that work with the stock dampers or a complete new suspension kit. The latter system as fitted to the test car has separate fluid reservoirs race style, stainless steel damper housings and is adjustable for height, bounce and rebound. The larger anti-roll bar kit is also fitted to this car.

To fill out the wheelarches, Novitec Rosso uses 9J x 19-inch alloys in front and 12.5J x 20-inch at the rear, shod with 255/30ZR19 and 345/25ZR20 Pirelli P Zero Rosso rubber.

The uprated brake system can be clearly seen through the spokes of these attractive wheels. Made for Novitec Rosso by Brembo, this brake upgrade consists of massive 380mm ceramic discs at each corner with eight-pot callipers in front and four-pots at the rear. The ceramic discs save a total of 20.5kg over the equivalent brakes in steel.

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If you can resist the lure of twin superchargers and the promise of 636bhp with 638Nm of torque, Novitec Rosso's normally-aspirated tuning option for the F430 is perfect if you just want a slightly sharper and more incisive drive.

This adds a pair of flow-optimised carbon-fibre air boxes with free-flow air-cleaners on the intake side, while at the other end of the motor the gorgeous looking and sounding stainless-steel exhaust system with 100 cell metal catalysts to reduce back-pressure sucks the spent gases out faster.

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Finally, the ECU is recalibrated to increase fuelling, advance the ignition curve and raise the rev limit to 8,850rpm. This latter move allows a top speed increase of 6km/h to 321km/h. The power increase takes the horse count from 490 to 520bhp at 8,600rpm with a torque increase of 25Nm to 490Nm (361.7 lb ft) at 5,350rpm.

In the overall scheme of things, an increase of 30bhp is not going to shift the earth on its axis, but in combination with the changes to the suspension and brakes, hones the F430 into an even sharper tool for carving up a challenging road.

On the Road

Out of the box, the F430 has a crisp turn-in with a perfect relationship between steering and chassis and none of the nervous feeling of the F360. The lower ride height, larger anti-roll bars and wider rubber deliver an even more racecar-like feel to the car in the turns, with even less roll. It feels like a giant go-kart, but one endowed with substantial power and an amazing soundtrack.

We like the noise that the stock F430 makes, but the Novitec Rosso car is even more of an aural treat. With the V8 orchestra playing tunes just behind your head, you can make out the deeper roar of the new intake system as the motor spools up through the gears. The exhaust note also deepens, underpinning the thrashing of the timing chains as the flat-plane crank V8 gets into its stride.

This high-revving motor quickly moves its voice up a few octaves as the tacho needle swings past the 4,000rpm mark, and soon it is screaming like a muted Formula 1 car as it approaches its crescendo in each gear. Each upshift is over like lightening as we flick the well-sorted F1 paddle-shift to find the next higher ratio. Instantaneously, the singing wall of sound picks up where it left off.

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When you are approaching a corner at full noise and the time comes to bottle out, braking is simply phenomenal. Were not for the excellent anti-lock system, the car would likely dig two holes in the tarmac under full retardation. This is real brick wall stuff.

The Novitec Rosso F430 F1 experience really comes together when you get into a smooth rhythm on a twisty road. Rather than keeping the throttle nailed in Race mode and receiving a manic jerk each time the 'box upshifts, we ease back on the throttle in anticipation of the upshift and take the sting out of the gear selection. The bigger lungs on the intake side and the freer-flowing exhaust help the engine rev even faster. So while the extra horsepower is partly consumed by the wider rubber, the car feels sharper to respond and even keener to rev.

The steering feel maintains the purity of the stock F430 and its excellent overall balance is unaffected. But mechanical grip is now on another level thanks to the wider rubber and lower centre of gravity and we would not be surprised if lateral acceleration is not in the order of 1.1g to 1.2g.

Interior

Novitec Rosso believes that the cockpit of a Ferrari should be luxurious in an austere sportscar way, so while the seats are replaced with lightweight carbon-fibre items that weight just 7kg each, they are also carefully trimmed in leather and two-tone Alcantara to match the rest of the cabin. Trim inserts are carbon fibre.

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The Novitec Rosso F430 is a very complete car. Although you can buy the individual components or just have the interior trimmed like the test car, we liked the sum total of the sometimes small but always significant changes that make this car visually more distinctive, dynamically more incisive and an even more desirable Ferrari.

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Author
Discussion

xm5er

Original Poster:

5,091 posts

248 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
I do like the front end on that, however the halfordesque rear wing is not to my taste.

I reckon with the splitter, the superchargers and the brakes they could have my money.

Ah well, back to reality.

Swoll

18,369 posts

258 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
Engine/suspension/brake mods sound fantastic.

But the bodykit/wheels/interior are awful IMHO

Roll on the F430 Challenge Stradale!

V12AML

209 posts

219 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
Swoll said:
Engine/suspension/brake mods sound fantastic.

But the bodykit/wheels/interior are awful IMHO

Roll on the F430 Challenge Stradale!


I agree its horrid putting body kits on car like this, anyone remember the DB7 Alfred Dunhill- that had a body kit and it looked crap and tacky, so does this Ferrari. Keep the engine mods ect and a few discreet body changes but The Fast and The Furious look is not right on any Ferrari.

munky

5,328 posts

248 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
And as for that Novitec plate on the centre console...

Mr Whippy

29,029 posts

241 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
Novitec bodykit accessories for your Ferrari F430 now available from Halfords!

The mechanical stuff looks nice though

Dave

dinkel

26,939 posts

258 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
It's easy to say the spoiler spoils it . . . but man, this is THE driving machine to have at the mo. If only Lambo had an answer . . . and it's not the G.

L100NYY

35,208 posts

243 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
I normally despise aftermarket mods on Modena's finest but I like this, apart from the rear spoiler that is. I would also have the rear diffuser painted in black but other than that it looks really rather good.

The front end treatment is,I think, an improvement on the standard car which I always felt looked a bit 'open mouthed'!




I'm still immensley jealous of anyone that owns a standard one though

Harry Flashman

19,348 posts

242 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
Someone Max Powered the 430! A sad day

Tuning mods sound great, though.

TimW

3,848 posts

247 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
Looks more 'suede' interior than leather.

turbobungle

574 posts

224 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
I think its great, especially painting some of the front intakes so they don't look so huge, give me the superchargers and forget the rear wing though, job done! Anyone know how much that would cost? Bet there's no change from £200k! If anyone wants to sell one, i'll swap the 355 and the supra? Oh go on then, you can have the misses as well!

Marki

15,763 posts

270 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
xm5er said:

I do like the front end on that, however the halfordesque rear wing is not to my taste.



I thought the same , but i would have described it as TVR 450 SEAC lookalike

hendry

1,945 posts

282 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
L100NYY said:
I normally despise aftermarket mods on Modena's finest but I like this, apart from the rear spoiler that is. I would also have the rear diffuser painted in black but other than that it looks really rather good.

The front end treatment is,I think, an improvement on the standard car which I always felt looked a bit 'open mouthed'!




I'm still immensley jealous of anyone that owns a standard one though


Agree. And I would have the rear lights back to red again. Got to be a better way to spend £200K than a Murphy O'Largo.

That said, the Englishman in me says I should really be spending it on a Bristol Fighter and looking down my nose at this...

4WD

2,289 posts

231 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
About as subtle as a stick in the eye.

R988

7,495 posts

229 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
4WD said:
About as subtle as a stick in the eye.


As is any Ferrari....

Maranellolt7

4 posts

219 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
Would everyone shut up the whining and complaining, it's all right as long as it is not your car. Am I the only one that likes everything on it? Most people probably hate the bodykit & the wing, but it looks fabolous to me, and to me it does blend in with the car, I loved that they added forced induction also. Everyone is NOT the same, I must be one of the few that doesn't want my car to look just like everyone elses, even if it is very expensive. And i'm not into bling, so don't start that crap. I just don't like stock vehicles, if I had an Enzo I would tune it to go even faster, and I could care less what other people will say, because it's mines, not yours.

>> Edited by Maranellolt7 on Thursday 26th January 19:52

>> Edited by Maranellolt7 on Thursday 26th January 19:52

turbo tim

20,443 posts

231 months

Thursday 26th January 2006
quotequote all
Maranellolt7 said:
Would everyone shut up the whining and complaining, it's all right as long as it is not your car. Am I the only one that likes everything on it? Most people probably hate the bodykit & the wing, but it looks fabolous to me, and to me it does blend in with the car, I loved that they added forced induction also. Everyone is NOT the same, I must be one of the few that doesn't want my car to look just like everyone elses, even if it is very expensive. And i'm not into bling, so don't start that crap. I just don't like stock vehicles, if I had an Enzo I would tune it to go even faster, and I could care less what other people will say, because it's mines, not yours.


I like it too. (including the bodykit)

PetrolTed

34,425 posts

303 months

Friday 27th January 2006
quotequote all
I like it all... a lot.

lap_time

339 posts

227 months

Friday 27th January 2006
quotequote all
Personally I love every detail of the car, bar the horrid rear wing. Rest of the 'kit looks fine to me, and who wouldn't want to make a 430 go faster AND sound better? I do believe Novitec also made a fairly similar 650hp twin turbo 360. As for Lambo not having anything to counter this, the Gallardo SE just came out, then there's the promised 550hp SV and even a lighter, faster, RWD Jota based on the 'Lardo.

jellison

12,803 posts

277 months

Friday 27th January 2006
quotequote all
Yep like that - would have to be the blower conversion though - that steering wheel is crap though.

olly

2,174 posts

284 months

Friday 27th January 2006
quotequote all
Vast improvement over the standard F430 IMO !

I think it' stunning (I don't even mind the rear wing !)

If I was going to have one though, I'd have the superchargers but a different interior - that suede/alcantara looks cheap !)