Quote:
Originally Posted by GTO The luxury German marques avoid using names like Polo, Civic, Innova etc. which can mean different things in different languages. They stick with an alphanumeric naming style that can be deployed across the world, in almost all countries. E.g. S500, 530d, A6 etc. This is the simplest & the best IMHO. |
True, but trust the Italians to make something as straightforward as a numbering system for naming cars utterly undecipherable. Ferrari - that legendary marque behind the "Prancing Horse" symbol - like to name their models for the tech specs of engines found under the hood... but in a totally haphazard and inconsistent manner!
In it's earliest years, Ferrari used the unitary displacement of the car's engine (capacity divided by number of cylinders) as the model name:
Ferrari 125 S 125 S (1947) (the first Ferrari, or at least the first to bear that fabled moniker, was named after its 1500cc V12 engine): 1500 ÷ 12 = 125
159 S (1947) (developed from the 125 S with an increased engine capacity of 1903 cc): 1903 ÷ 12 = 158.58 ≈ 159
166 (1948): 1995 cc ÷ 12 cylinders = 166.25 ≈ 166
195 (1950): 2341 cc ÷ 12 cylinders = 195.08 ≈ 195
275 (1950): 3300 cc ÷ 12 cylinders = 275
340 (1950): 4101 cc ÷ 12 cylinders = 341.75 ≈ 340
212 (1951): 2560 cc ÷ 12 cylinders = 213.33 ≈ 212 (possibly avoiding the number 13 on account of triskaidekaphobia?)
... and so on.
Ferrari 500 Mondial
But it wasn't just the mighty V12s that followed this naming convention. The first four-cylinder Ferrari, the
500 Mondial (1953), featured a 1985 cc 4-cylinder engine (in case you're wondering, they just rounded up 496.25 to 500).
Ferrari 456
This type of designation continued until the
456 (1992) (5474 cc ÷ 12 cylinders = 456.17 ≈ 456) was replaced by the
612 Scaglietti (2004), a car penned by Pininfarina that continued the great Ferrari 2+2 tradition in fabulous style and which was named in honour of Sergio Scaglietti, the legendary Modenese stylist and coachbuilder responsible for bodying some of the most beautiful Ferraris of the 1950s and 60s. He was one of Enzo Ferrari’s closest collaborators, helping the Commendatore build the Ferrari legend. Incidentally, the
500 Mondial (1953) (see above) was the first Ferrari that Scaglietti was commissioned to build.
Ferrari 612 Scaglietti
Ferrari cheated a little with the 612 Scaglietti. You would assume it’s powered by a 6.0-L V12, which it isn’t, because it has a 5.8-L V12. The reason why Ferrari named it 612 is simply because they rounded it up a bit higher than usual.
Then there were a bunch of cars that were named by simply dropping the last digit of their engine's capacity:
400 Superamerica (1960):
4000 cc V12
500 Superfast (1964):
5000 cc V12
550 Maranello (1996):
5500 cc V12
575 Maranello (2002):
5750 cc V12
599 GTB Fiorano (2006):
5999 cc V12
Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano
In the late 1960s, Ferrari introduced a new naming convention: the first two digits represented the engine capacity and the third represented the number of cylinders. This system debuted on the first production mid-engine Ferrari, the
Dino 206 GT (1967) (which had a
2.0-litre V
6). For the first time in history, a Ferrari was built on an assembly line.
Dino 206 GT
This method continued until the
348 (1989) (
3405 cc V
8).
Ferrari 355 Berlinetta
The arrival of the
355 Berlinetta (1994), the last Ferrari model to feature pop-up headlamps, ushered in a new naming system: the first two digits continued to refer to the engine capacity (
3.5-litre), but the third digit now referenced the number of valves per cylinder (
5).
Ferrari 360 Modena
Things became a lot more erratic thereafter: the 3.6-litre
360 Modena (1999) (the first production Ferrari to be constructed entirely in aluminium) and the 4.3-litre
430 (2004), were named by dividing their engine capacity by ten.
Ferrari 458 Spider
The
458 (2009) was named after its engine capacity (
4.5-litres) + the number of cylinders (V
8).
Ferrari 488 GTB
As a throwback to the formative years of Ferrari, the
488 (2015) received its name from the capacity of one cylinder (3902 cc ÷ 8 cylinders = 487.75 ≈ 488).
Along the way, true to Ferrari's somewhat erratic approach to naming their cars, there were a bunch of exceptions to the marque's then prevailing naming convention:
Ferrari revealed the
275 GTB (1964) with a four camshaft engine and it became known as the
275 GTB4 (1966): 275 refers to the capacity of one cylinder (275 cc) and 4 refers to the more powerful 4 camshaft engine.
Ferrari California
The
Ferrari California (2008) revived the name used on the late-1950s
Ferrari 250 GT California Spyder and the 1960s
365 California.
The 'F' in
F12 Berlinetta (2012) referred to
Ferrari and the '12' to the number of cylinders (V
12).
Both the
GTC4Lusso (2016) and
GTC4Lusso T (2016) just have one number corresponding to the number of seats.
Ferrari 812 Superfast
The
812 Superfast (2017) was named after its rounded power output (789 bhp became 800) and the number of cylinders. Incidentally, this is the most powerful and fastest road-going Ferrari ever built (with the exception, of course, of the rear-engined special limited-series 12-cylinders)
Ferrari Portofino
The
Ferrari Portofino (2017) (not to be confused with the Lamborghini Portofino concept car introduced at the 1987 Frankfurt Auto Show) references one of Italy’s most beautiful towns and was chosen by Ferrari because "
Portofino is renowned for its charming tourist port and, over the years, has become internationally synonymous with elegance, sportiness and understated luxury."
Ferrari Roma
The
Ferrari Roma (2020) coupé, which is based on the Portofino, "
is a contemporary representation of the carefree, pleasurable way of life that characterised Rome in the 1950s and '60s" according to Ferrari. A convertible version of the Roma was unveiled in 2023 to replace the Portofino.
And, finally, here's a short primer on the special editions:
Ferrari F40
Ferrari F50
Both the
F40 (1987) and
F50 (1995) refer to the 40th and 50th anniversary, respectively. The reason why Ferrari celebrated their 50th anniversary earlier was because the US emission laws were planned to get tightened.
Ferrari Enzo
The
Enzo (2002) wasn’t called the F60 because there was too much of a gap between the year it was unveiled (2002) and the 60th anniversary off Ferrari (2007).
Ferrari F60 America
The F60 name was, however, used for a Formula 1 car as well as for the
F60 America (2014), which celebrates the 60th anniversary of Ferrari in America.
Ferrari LaFerrari
Last but not least, the
LaFerrari (2013), Italian for "The Ferrari", meaning this is supposed to be the definitive Ferrari. The company's first ever production car to be equipped with the F-1 derived hybrid solution – the HY-KERS system – which combines an electric motor producing over 150 CV with the most powerful incarnation yet of Ferrari’s classic V12, with 800 CV at 9000 rpm.
Ferrari LaFerrari Aperta
To mark its 70th anniversary, Ferrari came out with
LaFerrari Aperta (2016), a spider version of the LaFerrari ("Aperta" means 'open' in Italian).
Note to mods: I realise this thread was initially meant to discuss trivia relating to car names in India and not car names of marques sold in India, but this post took a life of its own... especially when I started adding pictures of some absolute stunners!