

F50 GT, A Very Exclusive Club
F50 GT S/N 003 was the
feature car at the RM Classic Car Auction at Scottsdale, Arizona, on
January 23, 2000. With standard F40's selling in the
$250,000-300,000 range, and production F50's bringing
$600,000-650,000, the F50 GT's selling price of $1,430,000 had the
Ferrari world buzzing.
The F50 GT is one of the great "what
ifs" in Ferrari's history. The car was developed in late
1995-96 to be raced by privateers in the 1997 BPR Global GT
Championship series. Developed as a competition coupe version of the
F50, the F50 GT was meant to be a replacement for the F40 LM and its
later variations, the F40 LM GTE, which had been a relatively
successful car in the (now defunct) BPR GT series. Two F50 GT's were
to go to Scandia racing, two more to Ferrari Club Italia which was
going to run with Benetton sponsorship, and a fifth car was going to
be supplied to MomoCorsa. Other cars, if built, were to go to
various European privateers.
While the street version F50 will go from
0-60 mph in 3.7 seconds, and has a top speed of 202 mph, the racing
version F50 GT will launch itself from 0-60 mph in 2.9 seconds, and
has a top speed of 235 mph. The normal engine in an F50 street car,
designated the Tipo F130, is a de-tuned F1-type V12 engine expanded
to 4.7 liters and rated at 513 hp at 8,500 rpm. The F50 GT engine is
designated the Tipo F130A and develops a tire-shredding 750 hp at
10,500 rpm.
The official reasons for the cancellation
of the F50 GT program in late 1996 were the high development costs
and Ferrari's need to focus on Formula 1. Rumors in the Ferrari
world included a refusal by Ferrari to go head to head with Porsche
or Mercedes in GT racing, and/or that Bernie Ecclestone, head honcho
of Formula 1, didn't want Ferrari diverting its resources from F1,
nor did Ecclestone want the Ferrari name in a rival racing series
from which Bernie derived no profit. (Strange how we find this
latter reason so easily believable.-ED.)
As an aside, the BPR series, named after
its organizers, Jurgen Barth (of the Porsche Factory) Patrick Peter
(now organizer of the Tour Auto) and Stephen Ratel (organizer of the
Venturi and Lamborghini Challenge series) is now suing Ecclestone.
They claim he stole their series and replaced it with the new FIA GT
series, conveniently controlled by the aforementioned Mr.
Ecclestone.
The owners of the first three F50's
delivered have not been shy about showing off their hot-rod
Ferraris. S/N 001 was sold to Art Zafiropoulo, a California
collector. This car arrived in the US on April 18, 1997 and was
introduced to the public at the Ferrari of North America-sponsored
Rodeo Drive concours of April 19, 1997, held in Beverly Hills.
The second F50 built, S/N 002, was sold
through Cornes, the Japanese Ferrari importer, to a Japanese
collector, Yoshikuni Okamoto. The third car, S/N 003, was sold
through Ferrari of Beverly Hills to Jim Spiro in Louisiana. All were
sold in the $1,000,000 or "a little more" range.
It was S/N 003 that sold at the RM Auction
in Scottsdale for $1,430,000 including premium and is now on its way
to an Australian collector. With over 350 F50's built, a 150%
premium for an F50 GT, which is really just a race car without a
racing pedigree (think 288 GTO) seems absurd. Add in the knowledge
that there are three tubs left at the factory waiting for someone
with the patience and checkbook to own S/Ns 004, 005 and 006 and the
price seems even crazier.
On the other hand, in today's dot-com
economy, where a private 757, a fifty-room mansion or ownership of a
Major League sports team doesn't buy exclusivity, an F50 GT, the
latest and most potent Ferrari GT race car ever built, does
guarantee bragging rights in the club of young billionaires who are
always looking for new ways to one-up their buddies. And paying a
$400,000 premium? That just means their stock will have to go up
another fifty cents a share to make that money back. |

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