MASERATI IN THE NEWS NEW FERRARI CHALLENGE TO MASERATI
12/20/05
Powered
by a front-mounted 400bhp 4.2-litre V8 driving a rear-mounted transmission,
the new model
should sell for around £85,000 in coupe form and
could lift Ferrari sales from just under 5000 cars per year to as
many as 8000.
Rumored to be called
Project California, sources in Italy say Ferrari engineers are already
working on the new car, which will also come
in drop-head form.
It is the first tangible evidence of a new dawn for Ferrari after its
recent split from Maserati.
The California
is believed to be based on Maserati's planned replacement for the Spider
and Coupe models. Scooped by Autocar - year (21/28 December),
development of these new cars was halted just before control of Maserati
was handed over to Alfa Romeo in February.
The proposed 'baby'
Ferrari is the first concrete sign that Maranello is preparing to break
free of its self-imposed production limits
and take
a risk on exploiting one of the most widely recognized brands in
the world.
The California
is based on conventional steel monocoque chassis, although it uses
a transaxle transmission, located on the back axle.
With the
engine mounted well back in the nose, the combination gives a near-perfect
front/rear
weight distribution. This front-mid engine layout (though without
the transaxle) is also employed by the California's closest potential
rival,
the Aston
Martin V8 Vantage.
Although engineers
have been working on two wheelbases for the new Maseratis, it's expected
that Ferrari will utilize the shorter
chassis,
which would
have underpinned the Spider.
Insiders expect
the California to use a Ferrari-modified version of today's 400bhp
4.2-litre V8 Maserati engine, which would confirm
the
California's
position below the F430 in the Ferrari line-up, with its 490bhp
4.3-litre V8.And in the UK the F430 coupe is priced at £118,000, which means
there's a gap in Ferrari's market for an £85,000 coupe.
However, there's
little chance of the California simply being a worked-over version
of the Mk2 Maserati coupe.
Senior insiders
told Autocar that cash-strapped Ferrari had not committed to tooling
up the new Maserati designs, so Ferrari's
designers will
have to start from scratch on the styling, inside and out.
After the controversial
styling of the front-engined 612 Scaglietti, Ferrari bosses will surely
be looking for a coupe
that has
the appeal of the new
Aston Martin models as well as the legendary day-to-day
usability of the Porsche 911.
Meanwhile, with
the replacements for the Maserati Coupe and Spyder put on hold, it's
thought that Maserati may
turn to
new partner
Alfa Romeo
for help to replace its entry-level models. Alfa's sophisticated
'Premium' platform could provide the basis for a new
coupe and cabriolet model.
The new Alfa Romeo
Brera could provide the bare bones of the new models. And according
to the terms of the
recent
split
between General Motors
and Fiat, GM will supply Fiat Auto with a version of
its Northstar V8 engine
that can be transversely mounted.
Insiders say this
will be modified by Maserati engineers and hooked up to a full-time,
rear-biased four-wheel-drive
system.
Maserati had been
a millstone around Ferrari's neck since late 1999, and it was blamed
for dragging it
substantially
into
the red last
year. Despite
a respected three-model range, Maserati sold just
4600 cars last year, and although that was a massive increase
over
previous years, it is
said to need to make 10,000 cars per year at its
refurbished Modena factory
to move into healthy profit. Ferrari bought Maserati
from Fiat in late 1999. Fiat, in turn had bought
the ailing
brand in
January
1990
from
DeTomaso. Despite investing in a unique platform
and sophisticated engineering, Maserati
has been taking too long to show a return on Ferrari's
investment.
Autocar has been
told that the marriage of the two supercar makers ultimately failed
because Ferraris
components
were too expensive
to use in the cheaper
Maseratis.
[Simon: Thanks
to Autocar for this article] Maserati UK Club
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