RE: Ferrari F355 GTS | Spotted

RE: Ferrari F355 GTS | Spotted

Sunday 8th March 2020

Ferrari F355 GTS | Spotted

Remember when you could buy a Ferrari with a naturally-aspirated V8 and a manual gearbox?



When it comes to hair-raising soundtracks, the 3.5-litre V8 of the F355 is surely as good as it gets in the world of V8 berlinettas. Each successive mid-engined Ferrari has received more power and – up to the 9,000rpm 458 Speciale – more revs. But none have emulated the scintillating scream of the atmospheric F129, which was conceived in an era of equally musical Ferrari F1 machinery, and when 380hp made for a suitably exotic supercar.

Today, an F355 wouldn’t know which way an AMG A45 S went in a straight dogfight, but that’s beside the point. The 1994 belinetta delivers the sort of delicacy which makes lap times an afterthought. So visceral is the experience that two minutes on the open road is sufficient to unearth its obvious talent - not least because by modern standards its limits are relatively low.


Weighing in at 1,350kg, early road test reports praised the F355 for feeling light on its toes, even if accompanying pictures show period appropriate body roll and pitch. Unsurprisingly, the engine begs for revs before coming on song; a peak of 268lb ft of torque doesn’t arrive until 6,000rpm, 2,250rpm before the 380hp max. But that’s exactly what made Ferrari V8s like this so exciting, and the reason why the marque still goes to extreme technical lengths to ensure its latest crop of turbocharged motors retain similarly explosive top ends.

Ferrari did offer an ‘F1’ automatic gearbox option in the F355, but anyone accustomed to today’s technology would likely find this early example of a quick-shifter frustrating. Especially when the other choice, a metal-gated six-speed manual makes swapping cogs immeasurably pleasurable. The click-clack shift action is about as good as it gets, and even if you can’t quite rush the ‘box like today’s equivalents, the combined setup is still good for a 4.5 second 0-62mph time. Plenty quick enough.


Particularly if the F355 in question is of targa-top GTS form. Unlike the fully retractable soft top of the Spider, the GTS got a removable lid that could be stowed away behind the seats. Like a 911 Targa, this bodystyle provided better insulation and far less buffeting, while still providing the elevated vocals and visceral thrills of a wind-in-your-hair performance car. You might even argue that the GTS is the looker of a gorgeous bunch, particularly if your morning commute involves cruising by the Miami beachfront.

These days, it’s only really that sort of clientele that can stretch to F355 heights, because the good old days of £35k examples are long gone. You can double that figure now, and then add a bit more for the very best examples. That being said, today’s Spotted – a 22,000-mile-old minter – has been reduced by £20k from a near six-figure asking price, so it’s not looking like an easy seller’s market at the moment. Not if a F355 GTS as well-kept as this 23-year-old right-hooker is refusing to fly out of the door. Which seems mad, because it is a stunner. And spring is just around the corner.


SPECIFICATION - FERRAR F355 GTS
Engine:
3,496cc V8
Transmission: 6-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 380@8,250rpm
Torque (lb ft): 268@6,000rpm
MPG: N/A
CO2: It was the nineties
First registered: 1997
Recorded mileage: 22,000
Price new: N/A
Yours for: £77,750

See the original advert here.


Author
Discussion

EK993

Original Poster:

1,928 posts

252 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
To this day my 1994 F355 Berlinetta is hands down the car I have the fondest memories of. Rosso with Crema interior. Unfortunately went up in a ball of flames at the side of the M25. Would dearly love another.


MissChief

7,117 posts

169 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
The last really beautiful Form over Function Ferrari? Quite possibly. The F360 and F430 have never really done it for me. The 458 neither. This is what pops into my head the instant someone says 'Ferrari'. Stunning car, just hope it doesn't need fixed, running costs are eye-watering apparently.

MadDog1962

891 posts

163 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
If you want a "hobby car" for weekend fun, and you've got the cash, this is actually a decent proposition. Less costly to own and more useable than good boat. However, it would be useless as a daily driver, especially in the UK. It's more or less a given that maintenance costs for stuff like clutches, exhausts etc are going to be horrifically expensive.

To my eyes these Ferraris are all gorgeous things, but I can never see myself owning one whether I had/have the money or not.

MDL111

6,977 posts

178 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
MadDog1962 said:
If you want a "hobby car" for weekend fun, and you've got the cash, this is actually a decent proposition. Less costly to own and more useable than good boat. However, it would be useless as a daily driver, especially in the UK. It's more or less a given that maintenance costs for stuff like clutches, exhausts etc are going to be horrifically expensive.

To my eyes these Ferraris are all gorgeous things, but I can never see myself owning one whether I had/have the money or not.
It is actually fine as a daily driver - comfortable seats and suspension (obviously no toys on board)

MikeM6

5,011 posts

103 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
This is my favourite Ferrari of all time.

chelme

1,353 posts

171 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
MadDog1962 said:
If you want a "hobby car" for weekend fun, and you've got the cash, this is actually a decent proposition. Less costly to own and more useable than good boat. However, it would be useless as a daily driver, especially in the UK. It's more or less a given that maintenance costs for stuff like clutches, exhausts etc are going to be horrifically expensive.

To my eyes these Ferraris are all gorgeous things, but I can never see myself owning one whether I had/have the money or not.
Hmm. I have watched and heard the same about the F355 being horrifically expensive to maintain which is why I have stayed away and admired/lusted from a distance. :-)

RobEB

96 posts

96 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
When it came out, the film Goldeneye really brought this car to us, it showed us the shape, the noise, the driving. With an attractive woman at the helm who wanted to race.

Helicopter123

8,831 posts

157 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
Would this be a better overall experience as a weekend car than say, a Cayman GTS 4.0? Or is the cost and maintenance going to make it a chore? Looks stunning and analogue, in a good way.

Turbobanana

6,294 posts

202 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
Dear Pistonheads

Please stop writing every article about cars over 10 years old in the same tone that suggests decent handling, performance and technology hadn't been developed then. The 355 was one of the most beautiful, desirable, dynamic and fastest cars of its day and time has done it no harm. That it couldn't keep up with a modern hot hatchback only goes to prove the pace at which manufacturers are forced to move in order to meet the demands of the car buying (sorry, leasing) public.

It's getting boring. Why not write something that explores how said hot hatchback can be faster.

cerb4.5lee

30,745 posts

181 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
I was only looking at these a couple of days ago in the classifieds wishing that I had the money for one. They have always been one of the best looking cars ever made to my eyes.

The red exterior and cream interior...plus the open gated manual just seem like heaven to me. cloud9

Dave Hedgehog

14,569 posts

205 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
that is lovely

anonymous-user

55 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
Helicopter123 said:
Would this be a better overall experience as a weekend car than say, a Cayman GTS 4.0?
One's a Ferrari F355, the other is a mundane car.

cayman-black

12,659 posts

217 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
EK993 said:
To this day my 1994 F355 Berlinetta is hands down the car I have the fondest memories of. Rosso with Crema interior. Unfortunately went up in a ball of flames at the side of the M25. Would dearly love another.

I think that would be enough to put me of Ferrari for life.

I must admit i prefer the 360 Modena to these.

Rumblestripe

2,959 posts

163 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
From the time when a Ferrari was just beautiful. So pretty that if you never drove it you'd still get your money's worth by simply looking at it.

10

Osinjak

5,453 posts

122 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
EK993 said:
To this day my 1994 F355 Berlinetta is hands down the car I have the fondest memories of. Rosso with Crema interior. Unfortunately went up in a ball of flames at the side of the M25. Would dearly love another.

Enough to make a grown man weep. What happened there?

Drive Blind

5,098 posts

178 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
I was in Italy on holiday in 2003. I had made a few jokes about 'I thought everybody would be driving Ferrari's'

Then it finally happened, an F355 came out a car park and passed in front of us. Watching from the pavement, inside my head I was like an excited 6 year old shouting 'boot it' The driver nailed it in 1st and then let it overrun all the way back down to walking speed, sounded glorious.

vonhosen

40,249 posts

218 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
cloud9

Leins

9,479 posts

149 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
Personally, I’ve always thought the 348 was prettier

Branch666

250 posts

76 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
Brilliant. Love memories like that. I remember a bloke come past a country pub i was sat outside in a 355 sideways, everyone outside was slagging him off. To me his was like superman.

skylarking808

802 posts

87 months

Sunday 8th March 2020
quotequote all
EK993 said:
To this day my 1994 F355 Berlinetta is hands down the car I have the fondest memories of. Rosso with Crema interior. Unfortunately went up in a ball of flames at the side of the M25. Would dearly love another.

A bit of a "Hoovies Garage" moment?