RE: One-of-49 Ferrari 458 Speciale Aperta for sale
RE: One-of-49 Ferrari 458 Speciale Aperta for sale
Friday 12th May 2023

One-of-49 Ferrari 458 Speciale Aperta for sale

Right-hand drive, delivery mileage and two very special signatures make for one incredible 458


It was kind of assumed that the Maserati MC20 Cielo was going to be good, but it feels like something special in a niche crammed full of sensational cars. And it’s achieved that not through some great technological advancement, but through doing the important stuff really well: it looks a million dollars, makes more than 600hp from an unforgettable engine, is enormously exciting to drive and can riff off Italian sports car heritage without being wedded to it. Great minds think alike, eh…

As with the coupe equivalent, there had been a hardcore Ferrari V8 Spider before the Aperta (the Scuderia 16M), and there have been many more after, although it would be easy to argue for the 458 being the best of the breed. It got the dual-clutch transmission denied to the earlier car, while keeping the thrill of a naturally aspirated V8 that everything after it gave up. Turbocharged Ferraris are some of the best forced induction supercars out there, but the appeal of a 9,000rpm, flat-plane-crank, atmospheric V8 remains undeniable. And if ever 605hp could feel like just the right amount of power, it was in a Speciale; the later turbo cars could be just terrifyingly rapid.

The Speciale’s classic status was recognised almost the moment it was revealed, trimming weight and adding attitude to the 458 Italia, aka the best Ferrari V8 berlinetta of the 21st century. So the same honour was extended to the Aperta on its arrival. The world knew that the mid-engined cars would never scream like this again or, arguably, look this good again, and the global 499-unit allocation was spoken for before you could say Slide Slip Control.

Almost a decade after its reveal, that a Speciale will still cost more than £300,000 says much about the regard it's held in. As the less focused but undoubtedly far more collectible open version, it’s hard to remember Apertas ever being less than £500,000. If you’ll excuse the pun, they’re undoubtedly very special Ferraris. But some examples raise the bar a little further.

This Aperta, for example, is notable as a right-hand-drive car, believed to be one of just 49 such cars globally. It has covered just 87 miles, moreover, which is low even for cars usually kept for collections. Presumably, it’s never actually gone anywhere; sad given how sensationally it’s going to drive - and how good it looks with £16,000 of optional Bianco Fuji paint - but some opportunity for the next lucky owner.  Oh yes, and this 458 has been signed as well. The autographs of both Kimi Raikkonen and Sebastian Vettel are scribbled on the Aperta, which is nothing if not a talking point. Given this Ferrari was registered in 2015, you would assume it was from their first season together as Scuderia teammates. A little cherry on top of a modern Ferrari masterpiece.

The price is only on application, but bear in mind another Aperta is for sale with a positively leggy 569 miles at £700k and you can make an educated guess. It’s going to be more than two MC20’s worth of Ferrari, put it that way. But nobody needs reminding of just how desirable the very best drop-top Ferraris remain. When the time comes that new ones are even more advanced and people will talk in reverential tones about the days of Raikkonen and Vettel, the Speciale A is still going to be one of Ferrari’s finest. And cars don’t really come much better.   


Author
Discussion

Dohnut

Original Poster:

676 posts

73 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
The initial message was deleted from this topic on 12 May 2023 at 10:45

Dohnut

Original Poster:

676 posts

73 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
Where are the sigs?

If on a tyre I'm not biting.

Muzzer79

12,840 posts

214 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
Looks like the signatures are on the door sill

GianiCakes

658 posts

100 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
89 miles. A tragic waste of a good car.

fantheman80

2,488 posts

76 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
GianiCakes said:
89 miles. A tragic waste of a good car.
Quite, judging by the arch to tyre gaps, it’s still got its transport blocks in

trevalvole

1,984 posts

60 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
Quite a contrast between the sleek styling of most of the car and the technical nature of the rear diffuser.

twinturban

333 posts

149 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
Don’t get these at all, the hard top version must be a much better Speciale yet the wobbly versions go for so much more. Fair enough on a regular 458 but the whole point and benefit of the Speciale version is eroded by a heavier, less rigid chassis. Each to their own, I’m sure it’s a glorious thing in isolation but that is not a proper Speciale.

bumskins

2,268 posts

42 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
twinturban said:
Don’t get these at all, the hard top version must be a much better Speciale yet the wobbly versions go for so much more. Fair enough on a regular 458 but the whole point and benefit of the Speciale version is eroded by a heavier, less rigid chassis. Each to their own, I’m sure it’s a glorious thing in isolation but that is not a proper Speciale.
Good point, were I ever in the fortunate position i'd be picking the coupe over the roadster any day of the week.

I wonder if all the Porsche fanboys see the same logic in light of the Boxster RS or whatever the f**k it's called...

(of course they won't - "Oh, but the Boxster was conceived as a convertible!" they'll cry...)

Davey S2

13,389 posts

281 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
Does nothing for me as it's just a collector piece.

When I look at cars like this I picture myself redlining it along the Route Napoleon not having it shipped to an air conditioned garage to sit until it gets sold again for a profit.


WCZ

11,397 posts

221 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
incredible, wonder what the price is? they were £600k for a long time

GreatScott2016

2,422 posts

115 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
Not the biggest Ferrari fan but the profile and rear are particularly fab in my view. Just a shame that no one has enjoyed it .... yet smile

AJM6

109 posts

224 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
To spend circa £700k on this and not drive it is a curious way to live.

After all, I am able to not drive it for free!

Master Bean

5,078 posts

147 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all

sutts

1,109 posts

175 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
AJM6 said:
To spend circa £700k on this and not drive it is a curious way to live.

After all, I am able to not drive it for free!
What would this have cost new? Presumably the owner is making a very tidy profit on the original price.

wpa1975

14,351 posts

141 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
GianiCakes said:
89 miles. A tragic waste of a good car.
Agreed

Paul_M3

2,527 posts

212 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
sutts said:
AJM6 said:
To spend circa £700k on this and not drive it is a curious way to live.

After all, I am able to not drive it for free!
What would this have cost new? Presumably the owner is making a very tidy profit on the original price.
A check of an old Evo review suggests they started at around £228k.

Although I personally think it's a terrible waste not to have used it, I'm also sure that's a better return than a lot of 'investments' over the last 8 years...

WCZ

11,397 posts

221 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
sutts said:
What would this have cost new? Presumably the owner is making a very tidy profit on the original price.
the profit is alright but there's been some better investments in recent years:

812c - £400k new, now selling for £1.8m

also the new SF90 LM is going to be even more limited edition than the 812c and will be very track focused, i'm expecting it to have similar insane price within a few years

garypotter

2,067 posts

177 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all

also the new SF90 LM is going to be even more limited edition than the 812c and will be very track focused, i'm expecting it to have similar insane price within a few years
[/quote]


Really? i have heard they are very hard to drive, too much power if that was ever a thing and not sure the looks of the SF90 will survive

MyFingerSlipped

18 posts

41 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
I don't understand buying a car like this and not using it at this end of the market.
For anyone that buys a car of this value money clearly isn't an issue so why are they all so fixated on accruing more of it? So they can buy another car that they don't use? Another house they won't live in?
Well at least they'll have a story for the grand kids about the time they owned a Ferrari and went on the drive of a lifetime between their garage and a car transporter!

Dombilano

1,417 posts

82 months

Friday 12th May 2023
quotequote all
Tonne and a half of paperweight. Pointless.