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Ferrari planning sleeker FF coupe?

Thu, 10 Apr 2014


There are a lot of things you could call the Ferrari FF. Innovative, advanced, pioneering, ponderous... beautiful may not be one of them, though. Because while it does pack Ferrari's first all-wheel drive system, it doesn't pack it into a very pretty shape, alternately described as a chopped shooting brake or stretched hatchback. Word has it, though, that Ferrari is working on a solution.

That solution, according to Car and Driver, would be to chop it down into an FF coupe. Apparently separate from the SP FFX project that ultimately emerged as a one-off, this rebody could potentially solve the FF's stylistic shortcomings and attract more buyers, while retaining the 6.3-liter V12 engine that drives 651 prancing horses to all four wheels. But here's where it gets tricky: if Ferrari simply sloped the roofline and got rid of the rear seats, the finished product would end up precariously close to the F12 Berlinetta, albeit with an extra set of driven wheels.


We'd sooner guess that Maranello would lengthen the form slightly to keep the rear seats, add a trunk and give it a more graceful profile, though the elongated form of the preceding 612 Scaglietti strikes us as what Ferrari was trying to get away from with the FF in the first place. And guessing is as good as we've got at this point, as our attempts to get more from Ferrari PR resulted in a sad (if predictable) "no comment."

Whatever form it takes, C/D projects that the FF coupe could arrive later this year or early next, bringing with it some other minor cosmetic changes. Its price tag would likely hover, like the existing FF and F12, around the $300,000 mark, making it a natural competitor to the Rolls-Royce Wraith, Aston Martin Vanquish or a well-equipped Bentley Continental GT Speed.

By Noah Joseph


See also: Ferrari gives employees record $5,600 bonus on strong year, Race Recap: 2014 Bahrain Grand Prix is racing like you dream about, Alfa Romeo considering Ferrari-developed engines for new product lineup.