1985 Ferrari Testarossa-highly Collectible Single Mirror Example-same Ownr 37 Yr on 2040-cars
Littleton, Colorado, United States
1985 Ferrari Testarossa Finished in Red with Tan Hides ONLY 18,010 Original Miles Same owner since 1987 There are not many of these cars that have been in the same hands going on 4 decades There are fewer still with 18,000 documented miles Belt Service done 1,000 miles ago With many of this cars siblings selling in Monterrey last week for hundreds of thousands of dollars, it looks like this car is finally hitting its stride after all these years How many 12 cylinder Ferrari's can you buy for under $250,000? Not many! With Fiat built Dino 246's at $500K, this cars time has come Don't hesitate to bid on and own this car today Questions? Please call Mike Hughes at 303-358-2241 |
Ferrari Testarossa for Sale
- 1990 ferrari testarossa rosso corsa red/tan fresh service only 18400 miles(US $89,900.00)
- 1995 ferrari 512m testarossa rosso corsa red/tan #60 of 75 serviced 9700 miles(US $365,900.00)
- 1986 ferrari testarossa low miles red/tan
- Restored ferrari testarossa(US $72,000.00)
- 1985 ferarri testarossa, red w/ black interior, euorpean model car.(US $42,450.00)
- 1995 ferrari f512 m(US $365,000.00)
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Fernando Alonso gives German TV interview driving Ferrari F12 at the Nordschleife
Tue, 16 Jul 2013Fernando Alonso gave a wide-ranging interview to German television station RTL, the Spanish driver and German interviewer conducting the session in Italian, driving a special Italian car on very special German track. Among many answers - from the industriousness of his native Ovideo, Spain to where he relaxes - Alonso gives Ferrari an eight out of ten for the season, admitting they don't have the fastest car but they have a complete car, and refuses to give himself a number, only saying that he is more complete as well than when he first entered.
Beyond the normal-guy persona and wealth of topics, the 10-minute interview is neat for being able to watch Alonso hurl the Ferrari F12 Berlinetta over and around kerbs while he's answering questions. You can check it all out in the video below.
Ferrari vs. Ferrari: Cut convertibles unloved by collectors?
Mon, 05 Aug 2013The New York Times' Wheels blog has a really interesting story on a pair of Ferraris that are set to be auctioned off in Monterey during the Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance. While the two cars are similar on the surface, their differing histories and Ferrari's attitude towards one of them has led to a sort of experimental auction process.
On the one hand, we have one of ten 1967 275 GTB/4 NART Spiders, in the classic Rosso Corsa and appearing at RM Auctions and seen above. On the other, we have a Fly Yellow version that started life as a 1965 275 GTB Coupe, and was converted into a NART Spider. Called a "cut" car, this particular replica is one of about 100 GTB Coupes that were converted into convertibles to satiate the climbing demand for ultra-rare Spiders.
This will mark one of the first times that an original NART Spider will go toe to toe with a replica of itself at auction, and will answer a number of questions about just how important provenance is in the collector car world. Head on over to The Times blog for the full story.
Recap: 2013 Australian Formula One Grand Prix is all about the rubber [w/spoilers]
Sun, 17 Mar 2013A pre-season full of talking points was swapped for a brand-new set of talking points after the running of the opening grand prix of the 2013 Formula One season. The consistency of the regulations from last year to this year and the triplicate dominance of Infiniti Red Bull Racing meant that no one would have been that surprised if the relative order of things remained the same. But teams found so many ways to switch things up that, in typical pre-season fashion, no one was ready to make any bets on in-season performance, and a couple of surprising players suffered the ignominy of getting it really wrong: McLaren knew it was in trouble from the very first test, while Williams drivers applauded their car as the best in years, only to have Pastor Maldonado call it "undriveable" on the very first day of practice in Melbourne.
And then there were those Pirellis, the Italian company talking up the fact that its super soft tires would only go off so quickly that it would force teams to pit at least twice during the race.
Even then, no one could have seen the first round of pit stops beginning on Lap 5.