RE: Driven: Ferrari 458 Italia

RE: Driven: Ferrari 458 Italia

Thursday 19th November 2009

Driven: Ferrari 458 Italia

Ferrari's newest supercar sampled on road and track



The mood seems unusually good at Ferrari at the moment. We're sitting in press conference and their specialists are taking plenty of time to detail the minutiae of their involvement with the 458 Italia. I'm not surprised: since I sat down I've hardly been able to keep my eyes off it.

Driving is tomorrow, though, and tonight the talk is of air spring effect on the pistons, what the additional scavenge pumps for engine oil do, and the numbers describing the means by which the new multi-link rear suspension and steering combine to sharpen turn-in. I scribble the numbers and details into my notebook, and wonder if I'll be able to quantify the gains tomorrow.


I can't - at least not in the numerical terms employed by Ferrari's engineers. What I can say, though, is that the steering is about as sharp a set-up as I've ever experienced in a 'proper' road car. Turn the button-festooned wheel and the 458's nose responds with such clarity, such incisiveness that you really do have to re-calibrate where you'd usually turn in for a bend.

Massive stopping power helps; the CCM discs wiping off the Italia's easily gained speed with ease, the pedal positive after an initial soft response.

But it's a fleeting first experience. My quick squirt of the 458 Italia around the hills surrounding Maranello cut short by the need to get back to Fiorano for my allocated time on the track.


Raffaelle Simone, Ferrari's young-gun test driver, is at Fiorano, tasked with demonstrating the 458's enormous breadth of ability around the circuit's challenging twists and turns.

When you've been involved with the development of a car for years it must be galling to hand it over to a bunch of (sometimes) hapless journalists for their opinions, but Simone laughs it off. He's confident that he's done a good job with the Italia - with more than a little bit of input from all-round Ferrari god Schuey - and he's ably demonstrating it as I strain to stay in my seat while the 458 exerts its extraordinary forces upon me.


You all know it's pretty much all new, the 458 Italia, constructed from aluminium, powered by a glorious-sounding, exhaust flap-bypassing 562bhp, naturally aspirated 4.5-litre V8 that revs to a stratospheric 9,000rpm. You shift its gears via a 7-speed dual-clutch transmission, and it has all sorts of F1 sorcery working on the traction, stability, differential, engine and suspension. The 458 is able to reach 62mph in under 3.4 seconds and reach a top speed of over 202mph, and it's a looker too - at least I think it's the first Ferrari in a while to instantly captivate.

Inside, Ferrari has gone all F1, adding not just the manettino to the steering wheel, but almost everything else. If a control is not actually on the wheel, you can typically stretch a digit to reach it - save for the climate controls, which might explain Simone's choice of a scarf and jacket when I'm in a t-shirt. (Although it's more likely the fact he's nowhere near as well insulated as me, and neither is he Scottish!)


Whatever, I'd love just half his wheelman-ship, though when taking my turn on the track I quickly discover that, for all its ferocious performance, the 458 Italia is something of an easy car to drive. The steering is sublime, its engine a masterpiece that's amazingly tractable at low revs, and all the other controls combine to provide a quite brilliant driving experience.

The suspension with its clever magnetic dampers offers quite ridiculous control and excellent roll resistance, though should the road get choppy there's the option - like the Scuderia - to maintain the harder, faster shifts and throttle response via the manettino in combination with a more compliant damper set-up. That manettino is something of a madness dial; turn it up to CST off and you're in full control, with the 458's numerous electronic systems disabled allowing the Italia to be driven above and beyond the tyres' limit of adhesion.


Never has 562bhp seemed so easily controlled, the instantaneous steering and accelerator allowing the 458 to demonstrate quite silly angles of slip exiting Fiorano's hairpin. It's so controlled, so easy you could do it all day long.

But the real-world beckons, so the 458 and I head up into the hills again to play. It's extraordinarily good, the Italia's route taking in the same roads I drove on the F430 Scuderia, 599 and 599 HGTE launches. I'd be lying if I said I know them, but the 458 is so precise that I'm driving them like I do - such is the utter confidence the Italia gives you as a driver.

If I've any complaints it's simply that turning the manettino from Race to Sport - as I'm doing regularly given the wet, leaf-strewn roads - means an additional press of the damper button to return it to its softer setting. You only really notice it in a bend, when the sharpness of the throttle combined with any bumps from the road transmitted through your foot can result in some jerkiness.


The problem is removed with the more compliant suspension setting, and underlines just how quick the accelerator is to respond to your input. Quick enough in race mode to exit corners with a whiff of oversteer, the communication of the chassis and quick-witted steering allowing you to drive it with a showboating style.

There's time when I get back to Fiorano for a coffee and a chat with Ferrari's people, each and every one of them wearing a confident smile that says the new McLaren MP4-12C is going to have to be very good indeed. They're not wrong.





Author
Discussion

Gizmo!

Original Poster:

18,150 posts

209 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Great article... I can't wait until I get to see one of these.

One question: what's the third exhaust pipe for? On the F40 it was a cooling air intake, but the 458 isn't a turbo...?

mackie1

8,153 posts

233 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
It's just for show. I think they all exit the same silencer.

Beefmeister

16,482 posts

230 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all


Courtesy of David Yu (Godzilla)

SpunkyM

250 posts

244 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
I knew it would be good. Still trying to get over the huge price hike above the 430 though. Looks like I will be saving up a good while longer yet.

Stig

11,817 posts

284 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Am I alone in thinking this is proper fugly?

JonyPI

2,548 posts

189 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
nope

Burnham

3,668 posts

259 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Stig said:
Am I alone in thinking this is proper fugly?
Yes, I think you probabbly are.

Beefmeister

16,482 posts

230 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Stig said:
Am I alone in thinking this is proper fugly?
Alone? No.

Minority? Yes.

I've seen it in the metal, and it's stunning.

In my opinion, obviously...

AndrewW-G

11,968 posts

217 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Gizmo! said:
Great article... I can't wait until I get to see one of these.

One question: what's the third exhaust pipe for? On the F40 it was for the Wastegate, but the 458 isn't a turbo...?
EFA, as has already been said, just a styling feature

Snoggledog

7,001 posts

217 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Stig said:
Am I alone in thinking this is proper fugly?
Nope. You're not alone. To my eyes, it looks like a modified copy of the P4/5 and a badly done copy at that.

Davey S2

13,092 posts

254 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Very nice but very expensive.

I'd rather a GT3RS and about £70K in change

JTK

2 posts

173 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
totally different category, 911 gt3 rs to 458 italia. That explains the diffrent price category...

Dagnut

3,515 posts

193 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Stig said:
Am I alone in thinking this is proper fugly?
I think its good looking car but I doubt it will date well, just like the R8 and the GTR, those fussy features will look tacky when we get back to real aesthetic design, Alfa did it with the 8c don't see why Ferrari can't..

fastgerman

1,914 posts

195 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Looks fantastic and sounds (on computer speakers anyway) awesome!

First hot small Ferrari since the F355 in my opinion although the 430 is growing on me. 360 is just a mess from the front - looks like it was dropped on one of those angular speed bumps.

Great article to! Only thing is it looks like it is in 5 different font sizes to me.

nsmith1180

3,941 posts

178 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
I love the look, its awesome! Cant wait until December, when the car comes as DLC on Forza, closest to one of them Ill ever get!

Im sad now.frown

corcoran

536 posts

274 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
wow. that is one ugly thing.

soad

32,890 posts

176 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Not keen on the front lights, looks a bit odd. 599 gtb ain't a beauty either.

Will grow on me, i'm sure though. Stonking motor (performance wise).

Twinpipe

1,396 posts

229 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Haven't had time to read the article yet but just had a quick squiz at the pics and I think it looks amazing. Just a damn good looking car.

Baked_bean

1,908 posts

192 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
The car seems to be getting good press from all those that drive it, it looks like an epic car to me. Shame ill probably never drive one, let alone own one.

p.s is it just me that is pleased by the drive centric controls?

mat205125

17,790 posts

213 months

Thursday 19th November 2009
quotequote all
Beefmeister said:
Stig said:
Am I alone in thinking this is proper fugly?
Alone? No.

Minority? Yes.

I've seen it in the metal, and it's stunning.

In my opinion, obviously...
I'm not a fan either to be honest, and think that it has been over designed in many areas. Don't like the front "face", or the silly triple exhaust outlets ..... like them even less now I've seen that David Yu picture.