Ferrari F50


The Ferrari F50 is a limited production mid-engine sports car manufactured by Italian automobile manufacturer Ferrari from 1995 until 1997. Introduced in 1995, the car is a two-door, two seat targa top. The F50 is powered by a 4.7 L naturally aspirated Tipo F130B 60-valve V12 engine that was developed from the 3.5 L V12 used in the 1990 Ferrari 641 Formula One car. The car's design is an evolution of the 1989 Ferrari Mythos concept car, while Pininfarina incorporated design cues from contemporary F1 racecar designs, particularly at the front.
A total of 349 cars were made, with the last car rolling off the production line in July 1997. The F50's engine predated the car; it was used in the Ferrari 333 SP for the American IMSA GT Championship in 1994, allowing it to become eligible for the stock engine World Sports Car category.

Specifications

Weight

Engine

Fuel consumption

Transmission

  • Configuration: longitudinal 6-speed manual + reverse, limited-slip differential, RWD
  • Gear ratios: 2.933:1, 2.157:1, 1.681:1, 1.360:1, 1.107:1, 0.903:1, 2.529:1
  • Final drive: 3.70:1
  • *Final drive assembly: aluminum sand casting
  • *Remaining gearset housing: magnesium sand casting
  • *Support bracing: steel
  • Flywheel: steel
  • Clutch: dry, twin plate
  • Cooling: oil-water Oil cooler between gearbox lubricant and engine

Chassis

Suspension

Steering

Wheels/tires/brakes

Colour popularity

  • Rosso Corsa : 302
  • Giallo Modena : 31
  • Rosso Barchetta : 8
  • Argento Nurburgring : 4
  • Nero Daytona : 4

Performance

  • 0–: 3.8 seconds
  • 0–: 8.5 seconds
  • 1/4 mile: 12.1 seconds at
  • Skidpad: 0.95 g
  • Braking :
  • Top speed:

Track tests

The F50 has achieved the following track times:

Ferrari F50 GT

The Ferrari F50 GT is a racing derivative of the F50, intended to compete in the BPR Global GT Series against other series rivals, such as the McLaren F1 GTR. After the series folded, Ferrari was unhappy with homologation specials such as the Porsche 911 GT1 being allowed in the newly formed FIA GT Championship and decided to cancel the project due to lack of funding to compete.
The car was co-developed with Dallara and Michelotto.
Following the motorsport theme of the Ferrari F40 LM, Ferrari developed the F50 GT, a prototype based on the F50 that was built to compete in GT1-class racing. The car had a fixed roof, a large rear wing, new front spoiler and many other adjustments. The 4.7 litre V12 engine was tuned to generate around at 10,500 rpm and of torque at 7,500 rpm. A test held in 1996 proved the car to be quicker even than the 333 SP, but this went unnoticed as Ferrari cancelled the F50 GT project because it was unhappy with FIA allowing homologation special cars such as the Porsche 911 GT1 in the series. Ferrari instead focused on Formula One after the BPR Global GT Series folded. The company sold off the three complete chassis out of the six planned chassis that were built–the test car 001, 002 and 003. Chassis 002 and 003 had bodies fitted before being sold. The remaining three tubs were reportedly destroyed.