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Q: What is the bore spacing of the Ferrari F131 engine used in the F360 Modano?
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How much gas is needed for the Ferrari enzo?

The Enzo Ferrari is a 12-cylinder mid-engine sports car named after the company's founder, Enzo Ferrari. It is currently the most powerful naturally aspirated production car in the world. It was built in 2003 using Formula One technology, such as a carbon-fibre body, F1-style sequential shift transmission, and carbon-ceramic brake discs. Also used are technologies not allowed in F1 such as active aerodynamics. After a downforce of 775 kg (1709 lb) is reached at 300 km/h (186 mph) the rear wing is actuated by computer to maintain that downforce. The Enzo's V12 engine is the first of a new generation for Ferrari. It is based on the architecture of the V8 found in sister-company Maserati's Quattroporte, using the same basic architecture and 104 mm (4.1 in) bore spacing. This design will replace the former architectures seen in V12 and V8 engines used in most other contemporary Ferraris. The 2005 F430 is the second Ferrari to get a version of this new powerplant. In 2004, Sports Car International named the Enzo Ferrari number three on their list of Top Sports Cars of the 2000s. Motor Trend Classic named the Enzo as number four in their list of the ten "Greatest Ferraris of all time". Enzo Ferrari (side)Enzo Ferrari (rear)The Enzo Ferrari is sometimes referred to colloquially (some say incorrectly) as the Ferrari Enzo and Ferrari F60; this gives the false impression that it was named for Ferrari's 60th anniversary, which is 2007 rather than 2003 when the Enzo was launched (the official internal nomenclature is actually F131). The Ferrari Enzo Ferrari is commonly referred to as just the "Enzo" with no marque or other words attached. The car is named after the company's founder, Enzo Ferrari, who died in 1988.[1][2] Celebrating its first World Championship of the new Millennium, in Formula One, Ferrari built the Enzo to celebrate this achievement and the company named the car after its Scuderia's founder, Enzo Ferrari. The Enzo was initially announced at the 2002 Paris Motor Show with a limited production run of 349 units and priced at US $643,330. The company sent invitations to existing customers, specifically, those who had previously bought the Ferrari F40 and Ferrari F50. All 349 cars were sold in this way before production began. Later, after numerous requests, Ferrari decided to build 50 more Enzos, bringing the total to 399. Ferrari built one more Enzo - the 400th car - and it was auctioned by Sotheby's Maranello Auction on June 28, 2005, to benefit survivors of the 2004 Tsunami for €950,000 (US$1,274,229), almost twice its list price. This sum was presented to Pope Benedict XVI, while former Ferrari Formula One driver Michael Schumacher gave the pope a steering wheel to commemorate the donation. This wheel included a plaque which read, "The Formula 1 World Champion's steering wheel to His Holiness Benedict XVI, Christianity's driver." The Enzo Ferrari typically trades above $1,000,000 (£500,000) at auction.[3] Three prototype "mules" were built, M1, M2, and M3. Each was bodied to look like a 348, even though the mules were built in 2000. The third mule was offered for auction alongside the 400th Enzo in June, 2005, bringing €195,500 (US$236,300).[4] Engine of the Enzo Ferrari:The Enzo is a mid-engined car with a 43.9/56.1 front/rear weight distribution. The engine is Ferrari's F140 65° V12 with 4 valves per cylinder, dual overhead cams and variable valve timing. Bosch Motronic ME7 fuel injection is used and the engine is naturally aspirated. It displaces 5998 cc (366 in³) and produces 485 kW (651 hp/660 PS) at 7800 rpm and 657 N·m (485 [lbs-ft of toruqe]) at 5500 rpm.[5] The redline is 8200 rpm.[6] The Enzo has a semi-automatic transmission (also known as the F1 gearbox) using paddles to control an automated shifting and clutch mechanism, with LED lights on the steering wheel telling the driver when to change gears. The gearbox has a shift time of just 150 milliseconds.The transmission was a first generation "clutchless" design from the late 1990s, and there have been complaints about its abrupt shifting. [5][7] The Enzo Ferrari has 4 wheel independent suspension with push-rod actuated shock absorbers which can be adjusted from the cabin, complemented with anti-roll bars at the front and rear.[8] The Enzo uses 483-millimetre (19 in) wheels and has 381-millimetre (15 in) Brembo disc brakes. {| ! Gear ! 1 ! 2 ! 3 ! 4 ! 5 ! 6 ! Final Drive | Ratio 3.15:1 2.18:1 1.57:1 1.19:1 0.94:1 0.76:1 4.1:1 The Enzo can accelerate to 60 mph (97 km/h) in 3.14 seconds[9] and can reach 161 kilometres per hour (100 mph) in 6.6 seconds.[5][6] The ¼ mile (~400 m) time is from 10.8 to 11.2 sec at well over 130 mph (210 km/h) and the top speed is estimated at 350 kilometers per hour (218.5 mph).[5] It is rated at 12 mpg-U.S. (19.6 L/100 km / 14.4 mpg-imp) in the city and 18 mpg-U.S. (13.07 L/100 km / 21.6 mpg-imp) on the highway. Despite the Enzo's extraordinary performance and price, the Ferrari F430 Scuderia (an improved version of Ferrari's current entry level production car) is capable of lapping the Ferrari test track just as quickly as the Enzo.[10] :Ferrari FXXAs the result of the Enzo, Ferrari have decided to use some of the technology developed for it in a small-scale program to get more feedback from certain customers for use in future car design as well as their racing program. The core of this program is a car called the Ferrari FXX. It is loosely based on the Enzo's design with a highly-tuned 6.2 litre version of the Enzo's engine putting out roughly 588 kW (800 hp/800 PS). The gearbox is new as well as the tires (custom-designed for this car by Bridgestone) and the brakes (developed by Brembo). In addition, the car is fitted with extensive data-recording and telemetry systems to allow Ferrari to record the car's behavior. This information will be used by Ferrari to develop their next supercar. Like the Enzo, the car was sold to specially selected existing clients of Ferrari only; the initial price was €1.3 million. Unlike the Enzo, the clients did not take delivery of the car themselves. Rather, it is maintained by Ferrari and available for the client's use on various circuits as arranged by Ferrari and also during private track sessions. The car is not expected to be street-legal or suitable for road use. Ferrari P4/5Pininfarina had wanted to do a special one-off Enzo-based hyper-car and was looking for a backer. After sending out feelers to its clients, American Ferrari collector, James Glickenhaus eventually agreed to back the project by commissioning the car as a modern homage to great Ferrari sports racing cars such as the 330 P3/4, 512 S, 312 P, and 333 SP on the last unregistered U.S.-spec Enzo chassis.[11] The car was dubbed the Ferrari P4/5 by Pininfarina[12] and retains the Enzo's drivetrain and vehicle identification number.[13] The car was unveiled at the 2006 Pebble Beach Concours d'Elegance and appeared in the September issue of Car and Driver. The "photos" previously shown in AutoWeek and Octane were not close to what the car looks like. After its unveiling at Pebble Beach, the P4/5 will return to Europe for high speed testing, press days, and an appearance at the Paris Auto Show in September. Upon seeing P 4/5, Luca di Montezemolo felt that the car deserved to be officially badged as a Ferrari and along with Andrea Pininfarina and James Glickenhaus agreed that its official name would be "Ferrari P 4/5 by Pininfarina". Ted West wrote an article in Car and Driverabout how this came to be: "The Beast of Turin".[14] Maserati MC12The Maserati MC12 is a mid-engined supercar derivative of the Enzo Ferrari developed by Maserati while under control of Ferrari. It was developed specifically to be homologated for racing in the FIA GT Championship, with a minimum requirement of 25 road versions to be produced before the car could be allowed to compete. Maserati built 50 units, all of which were presold to selected customers. A further variation, the MC12 Corsa is a track day car, similar to the Ferrari FXX. The Maserati MC12 has the same engine, chassis and gearbox as the Enzo but the only externally visible component from the Enzo is the windshield.[15][16] The MC12 is slower accelerating (0-100 km/h in 3.8 s) and has a lower top speed (330 km/h) than the Enzo due to engine tuning.[17] However, the MC12 has lapped race tracks faster than the Enzo before, specifically on the UK motoring show Top Gear.[18] The Maserati Birdcage 75th at the 2006 LA Auto Show.The Maserati Birdcage 75th is a concept car created by automobile manufacturer Maserati and designed by Pininfarina. It was first introduced at the 2005 Geneva Auto Show. It draws inspiration from the Maserati Tipo Birdcages of the 1960s and was made as a celebration of Pininfarina's 75th anniversary.[19] It is an evolution of the Enzo's MC12 cousin. does that help??|}


How many ferrari are produced up to now?

Jump to: navigation, searchThe following engines are built by Ferrari. [hide]* 1 I2 * 2 I4 * 3 I6 * 4 V6 * 5 V8 * 6 V10 * 7 V12 Ferrari was rare among automobile manufacturers in attempting to build a straight-2 automobile engine. The racing prototype never made it to production. * Lampredi ** 1955 2493 cc - prototype with two straight hoods Lampredi designed a straight-4 engine for Formula Two use. Different versions of this engine were later used in Formula One and sports car racing. * Lampredi ** 1951 1985 cc - 500 F2 ** 1954 1985 cc - 500 Mondial ** 1954 2498 cc - 553 F1 ** 1955 2498 cc - 555 F1 ** 1954 2999 cc - 750 Monza ** 1956 3432 cc - 860 Monza Lampredi also modified his four into a straight-6 for racing use. * Lampredi ** 1955 4412 cc - 735 LM ** 1955 3747 cc - 376 S Ferrari's Dino project of the 1960s gave birth to the company's well-known V8 and lesser-known V6 engines. This Vittorio Jano design formed the basis of the company's modern engines right up through the mid-2000s. * Dino ** 60° *** 1958-1962 1984 cc - 196 S/SP *** 1958-1962 2497 cc - 246 S *** 1958-1962 2962 cc - 296 S *** 1958-1962 2863 cc - 286 S ** 65° *** 1957 1489 cc - Ferrari 156 F2 *** 1958-1960 2417 cc - Ferrari 246 F1 *** 1958 1984 cc - 206 S *** 2417 cc - 246 S/I/SP *** 1965 1593 cc - 166P *** 1965-1969 1987 cc - 206S/SP, Dino 206, Fiat Dino *** 1969-1974 2419 cc - Dino 246, Fiat Dino, Lancia Stratos ** 120° *** 1961-1963 1477 cc - Ferrari 156 F1 3.0 L Quattrovalvole V8 in a 1984 Ferrari 308 GTBThe Dino V8 family lasted from the early 1960s through 2004 when it was replaced by a new Ferrari/Maserati design. * Dino ** 1962 2645 cc - 268SP ** 1962 2459 cc - 248SP ** 1974-1981 2927 cc - 308 GT4, 308 GTB/GTS, Mondial 8 ** 1974-1979 1990 cc - 208 GT4, 208 GTB/GTS ** 1980-1986 1991 cc - 208 GTB/GTS, 208 Turbo ** 1984-1985 2855 cc - "288" GTO ** 1982-1984 2927 cc quattrovalvole - Mondial qv, 308 qv ** 1985-1989 3185 cc - Mondial, 328 ** 1987-1988 2936 cc - F40 ** 1989-1995 3405 cc - Mondial t, 348 ** 1994-1999 3496 cc 5-valve - F355 ** 1999-2004 3586 cc F131 - 360 * Ferrari/Maserati engine ** 2002-present 4244 cc - Maserati Coupe/Maserati Spyder/Maserati Quattroporte ** 2005-present 4308 cc - F430 Ferrari is rumored to be working on a 5.0 L version of the Ferrari/Maserati V8 for a decade-ending V10.[citation needed] * Ferrari/Maserati engine ** 2009? 5.0 L Colombo Type 125 Testa Rossa engine in a 1961 250TR SpyderLampredi V12 in a 1954 Ferrari 375 PlusTipo 133 V12 in a 2001 Ferrari 550Ferrari is best-known for its V12 and flat-12 (horizontally opposed cylinder) engines. * Colombo ** 1.5 L Formula One ** 1995 cc - 166 ** 2341 cc - 195 ** 2563 cc - 212 ** 1952-1963 2953 cc Type 125 - 250, 330 America ** 1960 3967 cc - 400 Superamerica ** 1964-1967 3286 cc - 275 ** 1966-1968 3967 cc - 330 GTC ** 1967-1968 3286 cc Four-cam - 275 GTB/4 ** 1966-1976 4390 cc - 365, Daytona ** 1971-1976 4390 cc Flat - 365 GT4 BB ** 1976-1984 4823 cc - 400 ** 1976-1996 4942 cc Flat - 512BB, Testarossa/512TR/F512M ** 1985-1989 4943 cc - 412 * Lampredi ** 3322 cc - Formula One ** 1952 4102 cc - 342 America/MM ** 1953 2963 cc - 250 Export ** 1956 4962 cc - 410 Superamerica, 500 Superfast * Dino ** 1992-2001 5474 cc F133 - 456/456M, 550 Maranello/Barchetta ** 1996-1997 4698 cc - F50 ** 2002-2005 5748 cc - 575M Maranello, 612 Scaglietti * Ferrari/Maserati engine ** 2003-present 5998 cc F140 - Enzo Ferrari, 599 GTB, Maserati MC12 Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Ferrari_engines"


How many models of Ferrari are there?

List of Ferrari enginesFrom Wikipedia, the free encyclopediaJump to: navigation, search The following engines are built by Ferrari.Contents[hide] 1 I22 I43 I64 V65 V86 V107 V12[edit] I2Ferrari was rare among automobile manufacturers in attempting to build a straight-2 automobile engine. The racing prototype never made it to production. Lampredi 1955 2493 cc - prototypewith two straight hoods[edit] I4Lampredi designed a straight-4 engine for Formula Two use. Different versions of this engine were later used in Formula One and sports car racing. Lampredi 1951 1985 cc - 500 F21954 1985 cc - 500 Mondial1954 2498 cc - 553 F11955 2498 cc - 555 F11954 2999 cc - 750 Monza1956 3432 cc - 860 Monza[edit] I6Lampredi also modified his four into a straight-6 for racing use. Lampredi 1955 4412 cc - 735 LM1955 3747 cc - 376 S[edit] V6Ferrari's Dino project of the 1960s gave birth to the company's well-known V8 and lesser-known V6 engines. This Vittorio Jano design formed the basis of the company's modern engines right up through the mid-2000s. Dino 60° 1958-1962 1984 cc - 196 S/SP1958-1962 2497 cc - 246 S1958-1962 2962 cc - 296 S1958-1962 2863 cc - 286 S65° 1957 1489 cc - Ferrari 156 F21958-1960 2417 cc - Ferrari 246 F11958 1984 cc - 206 S2417 cc - 246 S/I/SP1965 1593 cc - 166P1965-1969 1987 cc - 206S/SP, Dino 206, Fiat Dino1969-1974 2419 cc - Dino 246, Fiat Dino, Lancia Stratos120° 1961-1963 1477 cc - Ferrari 156 F1[edit] V83.0 L Quattrovalvole V8 in a 1984 Ferrari 308 GTB The Dino V8 family lasted from the early 1960s through 2004 when it was replaced by a new Ferrari/Maserati design.Dino 1962 2645 cc - 268SP1962 2459 cc - 248SP1974-1981 2927 cc - 308 GT4, 308 GTB/GTS, Mondial 81974-1979 1990 cc - 208 GT4, 208 GTB/GTS1980-1986 1991 cc - 208 GTB/GTS, 208 Turbo1984-1985 2855 cc - "288" GTO1982-1984 2927 cc quattrovalvole - Mondial qv, 308 qv1985-1989 3185 cc - Mondial, 3281987-1988 2936 cc - F401989-1995 3405 cc - Mondial t, 3481994-1999 3496 cc 5-valve - F3551999-2004 3586 cc F131 - 360Ferrari/Maserati engine 2002-present 4244 cc - Maserati Coupe/Maserati Spyder/Maserati Quattroporte2005-present 4308 cc - F430[edit] V10Ferrari is rumored to be working on a 5.0 L version of the Ferrari/Maserati V8 for a decade-ending V10.[citation needed] Ferrari/Maserati engine 2009? 5.0 L[edit] V12Colombo Type 125 Testa Rossa engine in a 1961 250TR Spyder Lampredi V12 in a 1954 Ferrari 375 PlusTipo 133 V12 in a 2001 Ferrari 550Ferrari is best-known for its V12 and flat-12 (horizontally opposed cylinder) engines.Colombo 1.5 L Formula One1995 cc - 1662341 cc - 1952563 cc - 2121952-1963 2953 cc Type 125 - 250, 330 America1960 3967 cc - 400 Superamerica1964-1967 3286 cc - 2751966-1968 3967 cc - 330 GTC1967-1968 3286 cc Four-cam - 275 GTB/41966-1976 4390 cc - 365, Daytona1971-1976 4390 cc Flat - 365 GT4 BB1976-1984 4823 cc - 4001976-1996 4942 cc Flat - 512BB, Testarossa/512TR/F512M1985-1989 4943 cc - 412Lampredi 3322 cc - Formula One1952 4102 cc - 342 America/MM1953 2963 cc - 250 Export1956 4962 cc - 410 Superamerica, 500 SuperfastDino 1992-2001 5474 cc F133 - 456/456M, 550 Maranello/Barchetta1996-1997 4698 cc - F502002-2005 5748 cc - 575M Maranello, 612 ScagliettiFerrari/Maserati engine 2003-present 5998 cc F140 - Enzo Ferrari, 599 GTB, Maserati MC12


Who took power over Australia?

In the eighteenth century, the British took over and colonized the continent of Australia. They started with a small penal colony on the east coast and from there, expanded to colonize the whole continent. There were many reasons for this including trade, commerce and power. This essay will explain all of those reasons. The first reason for Britain's colonization of Australia was to provide a new location for the criminal population. In the 1600s and 1700s, Britain had a major problem with crime and would send their criminals to America. The criminals who were sent to America would be those convicted of petty crimes such as theft. However, in the 1770s the American colonies revolted and Britain could not send their criminals to that location any longer. Therefore they turned to Australia as the new country to serve this purpose. Source (Catalogue ref: CO 201/8 f131) tells us some of the numbers of prisoners being sent to Australia. It says that there were 3068 prisoners in Sydney and paramatta. This gives us an idea of the number of prisoners there were in Britain and why they had to be shipped over. The overflow of criminals was a major problem and was the main reason Australia was colonized.


What are some popular all in one desktop computers?

It depends on what you are wanting to use the desktop for and what price range you are wanting to stay in. There are several different brands out there in the market. Dell Studio XPS 8100 and the Apple IMac are the two top rated for 2011.