RE: Ferrari 458 Italia: Spotted

RE: Ferrari 458 Italia: Spotted

Saturday 2nd March 2019

Ferrari 458 Italia: Spotted

F8 Tributo left you wanting a mid-engined V8 berlinetta? Here's a nearly new example of grandad



Although Ferrari calls its freshly revealed F8 Tributo a new car, it is essentially a heavily reworked version of the 488 GTB. That much is clear from the car’s technical layout, which includes a midship V8 of 3.9-litres mounted within an aluminium monocoque and a familiar skin wearing extra fins and intakes. It’s a menacing thing and the accompanying numbers speak for the pace on offer - but make no mistake, this is a major revamp rather than a next-gen Ferrari.

Of course, this was also true of the 488, itself having evolved from the 458. Its monocoque and dimensions were very similar to its predecessor’s, as were the design details, while the way it drove was very clearly ‘458 plus’ – well, ‘plus a lot’. The hyper-responsiveness was quickened further still in the 488 and we all know how trading the older car’s normally aspirated 4.5-litre V8 for a turbocharged unit affected its performance.


But did it make the car more special? If you live by numbers than it’s likely each successive mid-engined Ferrari has appealed more than the last. But by other measures, the 458 is arguably the most remarkable; it’s Maranello’s last series production atmospheric V8 berlinetta after all. Certainly many buyers have thought as much, as evidenced by the number of barely used 458s on the classifieds. In order to cash in on the car’s illustrious title, they have suffered only minimal mileage since they were registered.

The owner of today’s Spotted has gone one step further. Their right-hand drive car was built in 2012 for the UK market but survived off the DVLA’s books for four years, meaning it is – as far as we can tell – the last registered 458 in Britain. Evidence of its late entry into the database comes with its 66 plate, prior to which it had only covered a handful of miles. And while a now seven-year-old car that spent the first half of its life in stasis before travelling only 600 miles might be a cause for concern, this one has been serviced annually, which suggests it could genuinely be in like-new condition. For someone with a couple of hundred grand to spare, it really could be a choice of this or the new F8.


Which would you choose? The new car would undoubtedly walk away from our 458 in a straight race, be it on a drag strip or a circuit. Plus, we might assume it’d be easier to live with thanks to improved cabin technology, the latest damping hardware and a more seamless seven-speed dual clutch gearbox. But the theatre of the 458’s 4.5-litre engine and its unadulterated breathing apparatus is unbeatable. Nothing builds and builds towards a 9,000rpm crescendo so gloriously. When everything’s electrified and muted by the next CO2-cutting tech, it’s this what we’ll miss the most.


SPECIFICATIONS - FERRARI 458 ITALIA

Engine: 4,497cc, V8
Transmission: 7-speed dual-clutch, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 570@9,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 398@6,000rpm
MPG: 21.2
CO2: 307g/km
First registered: 2016 (built in 2012)
Recorded mileage: 600
Price new: £178,390 (2009)
Yours for: £199,995

See the original advert here.

Author
Discussion

Esceptico

Original Poster:

7,497 posts

109 months

Saturday 2nd March 2019
quotequote all
Yes to buying a 458 rather than a 488 but no to paying 488 money. Just buy one with a few more miles.

Esceptico

Original Poster:

7,497 posts

109 months

Saturday 2nd March 2019
quotequote all
AdamV12AMR said:
After the F8 article I went straight to the classifieds to check out 458 prices.

Was absolutely staggered by the number of Speciales for sale. Felt like it was one Italia for every two Speciales, with the performance model still commanding at least +60% price point.

I assumed they were built in much lower numbers than the base car, which is what accounted for their value. But the used market suggests not.

They just must be a LOT better or, more likely, Ferrari transcends the laws of supply and demand scratchchin
I did the same and was also surprised. However could be a difference between advertised price and what they actually sell for.