Stating that it is the most powerful and the most versatile car it has ever built, Ferrari debuted the new FF at Geneva, the first-ever four-wheel-drive Ferrari. Using a direct-injection gasoline V12 engine of 6.3 liters making a towering 660 hp and part-time all-wheel-drive, the FF can sprint to 60 mph in just 3.7 seconds and go on to a top speed of 209 mph. Ferrari CEO, Amadeo Felisa said that the legendary sports car maker asked itself ‘what should be the configuration of this next 2+2?'
"This needed to be a 2+2 for all conditions," Felisa told us. "That meant four-wheel-drive. Actually, we had already done some research into four-wheel-drive, though the FF's components and design are, in fact, all new."
Power is primarily delivered by the rear wheels, but power can also be transferred to the front wheels when necessary on slippery surfaces. The FF can individually apportion torque to each of the four wheels since all vehicle controls are integrated into a single processing unit.
The FF's design is somewhat controversial, but no one wins awards or hearts by being conservative or timid. Indeed, this design just may be the type that grows on Ferrari fans from all corners.
The FF will also will provide the chassis for a new-generation, V12-engined platform for the future.