RE: How do you improve on Ferrari Daytona SP3?
RE: How do you improve on Ferrari Daytona SP3?
Yesterday

How do you improve on Ferrari Daytona SP3?

Novitec reckons it has the answer - wait till you hear it...


Modifying very high-end cars is obviously Novitec’s stock in trade; no fear for it when faced with a McLaren 750S or Rolls-Royce Ghost or Lamborghini Revuelto, they are merely a jumping off point for the concept of ‘more’. But some cars, surely, resist the idea of aftermarket tinkering. They are simply too costly to buy, too obviously prized for their originality and (yes) all too often bought as immovable assets, thereby negating the requirement to ‘upgrade’ them in the first place. 

Based on the fact that Ferrari built fewer than 600 examples of the Daytona SP3 and they each cost a couple of million quid, we assumed that the mid-engined ‘Icona’ series car numbered among the latter. But apparently not. Novitec, it turns out, has gone where few other tuners fear to tread, and broken out the spanners for a light round of Germanic tweaking. 

Granted, aside from the inevitable Vossen wheels, it has limited its attentions to a single area: namely, the exhaust. This seems prudent for two reasons. Number one, for the reasons listed above, it seems very unlikely that any Ferrari owner is going to consent to a change of appearance when it comes a car that already looks unlike any other. But (number two) they might be very receptive indeed to the concept of an exhaust which permits the engine to expel its spent gases more freely. 

Because, lest we forget, the 6.5-litre V12, producing 840hp and unfettered by hybrid assistance, is very much the reason for buying an SP3 in the first place. Mid-mounting the F140 motor is not something it takes lightly - the successor to the LaFerrari, after all, is powered by a hybridised twin-turbo V6. This makes the Icona model seem like even more of a throwback than it did originally - and what better way to double down on this theme than having it sound ‘reminiscent of motor racing at high engine speeds’? 

Novitec doesn’t go into exhaustive detail about the new exhaust, except to say that it is fully thermally insulated, features metal catalysts and has been ‘elaborately calibrated’ to help increase output by 28hp. Probably you wouldn’t notice that, although if the video is anything to go by, it seems likely that you’d notice a change in sound levels with the flaps open. Even sticking with the standard tailpipes, Novitec’s modified SP3 (even when short shifting) seems impressively loud. 

The firm also offers to take things up a notch or two in the cabin, as well (you can have Alcantara and/or leather applied to pretty much any surface you like), though we’d assume the take up for that is roughly equivalent to the number of buyers who think the choice of three staggered 20/21-inch alloys preferable to Maranello’s original offering. But hearing that sound every day (or at least every time you get around to visiting your climate-controlled, underground bat cave) would have us sorely tempted to take Novitec up on the rest of the package.


Author
Discussion

Curtis E Buss

Original Poster:

8 posts

13 months

Yesterday (12:23)
quotequote all
If this had a gated manual it would be the greatest car of this century so far.

Clivey

5,561 posts

226 months

Yesterday (15:14)
quotequote all
Curtis E Buss said:
If this had a gated manual it would be the greatest car of this century so far.
I can't wait until Ferrari and the rest of the legacy sports / super / hypercar manufacturers discover that this is the way and a perfect antidote to the onslaught of sterile, forgettable EVs.

Motormouth88

693 posts

82 months

Yesterday (17:26)
quotequote all
I generally think most new Ferraris look like a dogs dinner but this looks absolutely sublime

hxc_

413 posts

206 months

Yesterday (17:56)
quotequote all
Love those mirrors.

nismo48

6,181 posts

229 months

Yesterday (19:26)
quotequote all
Sublime cloud9

Maccmike8

1,529 posts

76 months

Yesterday (19:28)
quotequote all
Curtis E Buss said:
If this had a gated manual it would be the greatest car of this century so far.
Wrong, that already goes to GMA T.50.

Curtis E Buss

Original Poster:

8 posts

13 months

Yesterday (20:07)
quotequote all
The GMA is great, but its looks are not in the same league as this beauty.

Maccmike8

1,529 posts

76 months

Yesterday (20:30)
quotequote all
Curtis E Buss said:
The GMA is great, but its looks are not in the same league as this beauty.
Looks of course are subjective and the rear of this looks terrible. Tacky. Form over function.

Robertb

3,337 posts

260 months

Yesterday (21:11)
quotequote all
Aventador SVJ with Gintani exhaust has the edge I reckon.

SDK

2,680 posts

275 months

Yesterday (22:44)
quotequote all
Awesome cars !
I watched a standard SP3 sell at auction for $26 million eek


Frogmella

314 posts

112 months

SDK said:
Awesome cars !
I watched a standard SP3 sell at auction for $26 million eek
I attended Cavallino over the weekend, that car was there along with I think, 4 others.

That was the weakest of the bunch finish wise. There were some stunners, including one with a color shift paint that went from what I thought was a silver into a pearlescent and then, gold.




CH80

317 posts

19 months

Within the context of modern cars, it doesn't get better than this. It just doesn't.

biggbn

29,841 posts

242 months

I think this is a fussy, overstyled mess. Others seem to lije it. It is an assault on the eyes. Controversial and divisive. So, everything a supercar should be....

WPA

13,443 posts

136 months

SDK said:
Awesome cars !
I watched a standard SP3 sell at auction for $26 million eek
That was a charity auction, they are not worth that much normally.

These are fussy to me but a lot better looking than the new Testarossa.

RedLightGreenLight

87 posts

46 months

Simply lovely this car.

The rear styling is what the new testarossa should have had I.e. larger and longer grills similar to the original TR. The new Testarossa having a tiny rear grill in comparison