1990 Ferrari 348 on 2040-cars
Logan, Kansas, United States
IF YOU ARE INTERESTED EMAIL ME AT: rosaleerllenhart@f1drivers.com .
1990 Ferrari 348ts priced correctly for what it is, and also what it needs. Im going to lay it all out on the table
so there is nothing surprising, and to be as fair as possible to both of us. Let me start of by saying there is no
service history for this car. I have no records because the previous owner obviously didn't realize you don't just
NOT keep service records for a Ferrari.
I bought this car last August as a nice present for myself. My plan was to slowly, over pretty much the rest of my
life, make every little detail right with this car, and have a concours showroom piece sitting in my garage until
my late 70's and MAYBE sell then. Up front, I have no WANT to sell this car. The reason I am selling it, is for two
reasons, the first one is easy to understand: There is someone out there that can take better care of this car than
me and give it the time it deserves. The second reason is the hard one to swallow... I recently moved.
Ferrari 348 for Sale
- 1991 ferrari 348(US $20,300.00)
- 1990 ferrari 348 ts(US $26,000.00)
- 1994 ferrari 348 spider(US $26,300.00)
- 1994 ferrari 348(US $27,600.00)
- 1990 ferrari 348 348tb(US $30,200.00)
- 1992 ferrari 348(US $22,500.00)
Auto Services in Kansas
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Auto blog
Ferrari names new F1 car F138
Wed, 30 Jan 2013Don't call it the F150. Ferrari has officially announced it will name its newest Formula One car the F138. The machine is the 59th car Ferrari has built to compete in F1, and it's also the last of the company's F1 efforts to rely on a high-strung V8 for propulsion. F1 rules have changed for next year, forcing competitors to use smaller cylinder counts to get around the track. Ferrari has already said it will use a 1.6-liter turbocharged V6 to do its dirty work. That moves brings an end to the eight-year reign the V8 enjoyed.
Ferrari isn't saying much more about the 2013 car, and the only image we have to go on at the moment is the logo you see above. Stay tuned for more information, and in the interim, be sure to check out the painfully brief press release below.
'Ferrari' is an oft-banned search term in China, but why?
Sat, 22 Feb 2014The Internet has been a boon for car enthusiasts; after all, information about any car ever made is available at a few taps of the keyboard, whenever you'd like. Unfortunately, some Chinese motor heads are not quite as lucky because state censors have been intermittently banning searches for Ferrari on the country's micro-blogging sites, according to Time.
The problem has nothing to do with Maranello's supercars; it's what they represent. The Prancing Horse has become the symbol for so-called "princelings," wealthy young Chinese who use their parents' privileges in the Communist elite to afford luxuries.
The first bout of censorship came in 2011 when the son of then-high-ranking politician Bo Xilai was spotted cruising around Beijing in a red Ferrari, a vehicle much more expensive than he should have been able to afford. It started trending on Chinese social media, and censors began blocking searches for Ferrari in the car's red color. The Italian brand was censored again briefly in 2012 when a Chinese investor crashed his Prancing Horse into two other cars in Singapore.
Video proof that LaFerrari has a pure electric mode
Mon, 20 Oct 2014Typically, a hybrid car, with its gas engine and an electric motor/battery pack is able to run on both forms of propulsion independently of each other. That means you can sip gas, run on pure electricity or some variation there of. The Ferrari LaFerrari is not like other hybrids.
See, the successor to the Enzo has batteries, an electric motor and a great, thumping V12 engine, but unlike its rivals from McLaren and Porsche, it has no standalone electric mode. That's been Ferrari's party line since day one. But have the Italians been exaggerating a bit? Judging by this video, it seems like a real possibility.
The video comes from what we're guessing is a European track day. It shows a black LaFerrari stealthily sailing through a tunnel on pure electric power, which it shouldn't be able to do, before its 789-horsepower V12 fires to life.