The all-new Shelby GT500–the pinnacle of any pony car ever engineered by Ford Performance–delivers on its heritage with more than 700 horsepower for the quickest street-legal acceleration and most high-performance technology to date ever offered in a Ford Mustang.Ford Welcome to our weekly round-up of the biggest breaking stories on Driving.ca from this past week. Get caught up and ready to get on with the weekend, because it’s hard keeping pace in a digital traffic jam.Here’s what you missed while you were away.The new Shelby Mustang GT500 is going to be heavy in all senses of the wordThe 2020 Mustang Shelby GT500 is the heaviest Mustang of all time. According to Ford’s dealership guide eSourceBook, the 760-horsepower GT500 will have a curb weight of 4,225 lbs (1,916 kg). Pushing that chunky coupe is a 5.2-litre V8 that pumps power through to the rear wheels via a brand-new Tremec seven-speed dual-clutch auto. There are some ways to lighten it up a bit, like by adding the Carbon-Fiber Track Pack, which cuts out the rear seat. Trump freaks out over automakers siding with California on fuel-efficiency regulationsThe Commander-in-Chief in charge of the the most powerful nation on earth is at it again. This week, Trump lashed out at automakers – via Twitter, of course – over fuel-efficiency requirements. “My proposal to the politically correct Automobile Companies would lower the average price of a car to consumers by more than $3000, while at the same time making the cars substantially safer,” he wrote. The outburst was allegedly caused by news that auto giants including BMW, Ford, VW and Honda had come to an agreement to better the efficiency of their cars through 2026, using Obama-era mandated-in-California rules as their template. Auctioneers blew it with the sale of Ferdinand’s Porsche’s Nazi car The 1939 Porsche Type 64, the only remaining example of one of the ancestors of the marque, was supposed to go up for auction at the recent RM Sotheby’s Monterey sale, and expected to fetch around US$20 million. But, when the auctioneer accidentally started bidding at US$30 million, it drew cheers and laughs from the crowd, especially as bidding quickly rose to US$70 million. That’s when the auctioneer clarified he’d apparently been saying thirteen, not thirty – as in US$13 million – and fourteen, not forty, etc., which caused some auction-goers to walk out and the sale to stall right there on the docket. Something tells us that may have been that auctioneer’s final event.Here’s what the Ram EcoDiesel will costAvailable on all trims in Ram’s 1500 series is the new EcoDiesel option, currently the best-in-class for torque, with 480 lb.-ft. What would you pay for that grunt? Now we know what Ram thinks it’s worth. The EcoDiesel V6 costs $5,800 above the standard Pentastar V6 eTorque in Big Horn and Tradesman, and $3,900 over the Sport, Rebel, Longhorn, Laramie and Limited’s 5.7-litre HEMI V8. Watch for the EcoDiesel badge to start appearing on roads this fall. Toronto drivers play soccer in gridlock trafficWhen all lanes closed on the busy 401 highway near Toronto this week, vehicles came to a complete standstill — but not all drivers did. Two men, one in a suit and the other in jeans and a t-shirt, got out of their cars to take advantage of a bit of open ashphalt in front of a city bus and kick around a soccer ball. A video of the friendly game was posted to a 401 trucker Twitter account. Watch it
Origin: News Roundup: The heaviest GT500, a US$20M auction mistake and Trump’s latest auto tirade
Car Review: 2019 Hyundai Elantra GT N Line
2019 Hyundai Elantra GT N LineBrian Harper / Driving OVERVIEW Sporty looking, sporty driving, semi-hot hatch PROSLooks good, reasonable zip, priced well CONSN Line trim more about style than truly competitive hot hatch performance VALUE FOR MONEYGood WHAT TO CHANGE?Upgrade size of engine to a 2.0-litre turbo HOW TO SPEC IT?As is As letters go N doesnt generate instant familiarity and a knowing nod from car guys. Not like M for BMW, AMG for Mercedes-Benz, GTI for Volkswagen, or even WRX and STI for Subaru. Not yet, anyway, but Hyundai is dipping its toe in the performance waters, its motorsport division spending significant development time back home in South Korea and at Germanys famed Nrburgring race track. Here in Canada, were seeing the first fruit of the automakers labours in the form of the Veloster N, a pugnacious, 275-horsepower, turbocharged hot hatch. Gearheads everywhere are raising a glass and saying, Glad to see you. Welcome to the party.Thats the good news. But along with affixing N to a couple of key models within its product lineup, Hyundai has also created N Line, which for the driving enthusiasts out there, initially appears disappointing. Its much more performance lite, essentially a trim that adds sporty design elements and modest powertrain and chassis upgrades. Which brings us to the Elantra GT N Line, the first of its kind for the Canadian market, and for the 2019 model year, the replacement for the Elantra GT Sport.OK, so the Elantra GT N Line is Clark Kent to the genuine Superman, the Hyundai i30 N the street-punk European version of the hatchback that we arent getting, at least until Hyundai evaluates the sales success of the Veloster N. Take a moment, register your disappointment, and get over it. The Elantra GT N Line still has enough bona-fides to show you a good time, at a price ($27,199) that is quite manageable for budding track warriors with modest budgets. First off, the Elantra GT N Line at least looks the part, taking a number of design elements directly from the i30 N. At the front, the car has a lower front spoiler for increased aerodynamic efficiency, plus a unique grille different from the more prosaic Elantra GT. At the side, black side mirrors, N Line badges and 18-inch wheels change the profile of the five-door. At the back is a new rear fascia, and with the testers bold red paint scheme, the entire package come across as quite sporty.Those who mightve considered the Elantra GT Sport last year will see familiarity under the GT N Lines hood and the most significant difference between it and a base Elantra GT. Unlike the latters 161-horsepower, normally aspirated 2.0L four-cylinder, the GT N Line is powered by a 1.6L turbo-four sending power to the front wheels via a six-speed manual transmission, or optional seven-speed dual-clutch automatic with paddle-shifters.The boosted engine produces 201 horsepower and 195 lb.-ft. of torque, estimable numbers from a rather diminutive motor. Its willing, with maximum torque reached at a low 1,500 rpm. You can wring it out past 6,000 rpm if you want, but beyond 4,500 it starts to sound a bit strained. Running through the gears is easy-peasy; the shift action is light and direct, with no hint of notchiness. The GT N Line knows its way around a twisting stretch of road as well. Improvements over the Sport include stiffer engine and transmission mounts, quicker steering and a specially tuned multi-link independent rear suspension with larger brakes. The hatchback tips the scales at around 1,380 kilograms, so theres not a lot of mass to move around. Decently wide and grippy P225/40R18 Hankook rubber helps the Elantra scribe a tight line on highway on-ramps. Will it put as big a grin on your face when clipping apexes as the VW GTI, now with 228 horsepower? Nope, but the N Line wont embarrass itself, either. Plus, theres about $4,000 more in your bank account.The hatchs well-contented cabin sports a conventional look, with a logical layout to the dash area, and accessorized with a number of thoughtful N Line touches a leather-wrapped perforated steering wheel, comfortable and supportive sport front seats, a ball-shaped shifter, a unique instrument cluster and door trim garnish, and red seatbelts, stitching and accents. The car comes with Hyundais AVN 5.0 infotainment system, which features a faster processor for greater responsiveness, as well as an eight-inch touchscreen. The only major item missing is navigation, offered only on the automatic model. As expected given the Elantras compact size, rear-seat legroom can pose a challenge to taller passengers. More surprising is the hatchbacks cargo capacity, a generous 705 litres with the rear seats up and a positively cavernous 1,560 litres when theyre folded.Like the GT Sport it replaced, the N Line is more warm than hot hatch, not quite the same caliber as the Volkswagen GTI or Honda Civic Si, but not miles off the mark, either.
Origin: Car Review: 2019 Hyundai Elantra GT N Line
China tariffs will add 25 per cent to cars imported from U.S.
US President Donald Trump speaks with reporters as he departs the White House, in Washington, DC, on June 2, 2019.Jim Watson / Getty Images China on Friday announced tariff hikes on US$75 billion of U.S. products in retaliation for President Donald Trumps latest planned increase, deepening a conflict over trade and technology that threatens to tip a weakening global economy into recession.China also will increase import duties on U.S.-made autos and auto parts, the Finance Ministry announced.Tariffs of 10 per cent and 5 per cent will take effect on two batches of goods on September 1 and December 15, the ministry said in a statement. It gave no details of what goods would be affected but the timing matches Trumps planned duty hikes.A separate statement said tariffs of 25 per cent and 5 per cent would be imposed on U.S.-made autos and auto parts on December 15. Beijing announced that increase last year but suspended it after Trump and his Chinese counterpart, President Xi Jinping, agreed at a meeting in December in Argentina to put off further trade action while they negotiated.Trump and Xi agreed in June to resume negotiations. But talks in Shanghai in July ended with no indication of progress. Negotiators talked by phone this month and are due to meet again in Washington next month. BMW, Tesla, Ford and Mercedes-Benz are likely to be the hardest hit by the Chinese auto tariffs. In 2018, BMW exported about 87,000 luxury SUVs to China from a plant near Spartanburg, South Carolina. It exports more vehicles to China than any other U.S. auto plant.Together, Ford, BMW, Mercedes and others exported about 164,000 vehicles to China from the U.S. in 2018, according to the Center for Automotive Research, a think tank in Ann Arbor, Michigan. Most of them are luxury cars and SUVs with higher profit margins that can cover higher U.S. wages. The exports are down from about 262,000 in 2017.Tesla, which is building a plant in China, last year got about 12 per cent of its revenue by exporting about 14,300 electric cars and SUVs from California to China, according to Barclays. Most of Fords exports are from the Lincoln luxury brand, but most of the vehicles it sells in China are made in joint-venture
Origin: China tariffs will add 25 per cent to cars imported from U.S.
VW recalling roughly 117,000 cars in Canada over a rollaway risk
2018 Volkswagen GolfHandout / Volkswagen Volkswagen is recalling roughly 117,000 cars in Canada and 679,000 vehicles in the U.S. to fix a problem that could let the cars roll away unexpectedly.The recall covers certain 2011 through 2018 Jettas; 2015 through 2019 GTIs; 2015, 2016, 2018 and 2019 Golfs; 2012 through 2019 Beetles and Beetle Convertibles; and 2017 through 2019 Golf SportWagens.All have automatic transmissions, manual hand brakes and keyless entry.VW says silicate can build up on a shift lever switch, allowing the key to be removed if the lever isnt in park. That could let the cars roll off unexpectedly.Dealers will add a switch and circuit board to fix the problem. The recall starts on October 11.A VW spokesman says hes not aware of any crashes or injuries due to the
Origin: VW recalling roughly 117,000 cars in Canada over a rollaway risk
Porsche’s new Taycan EV will beat Tesla to a full vegan interior
Porsche could beat Tesla to a fully vegan vehicle cockpit by implementing an animal-products-free interior in its new Taycan EV.The German automaker revealed the much-anticipated sedans cabin late August, ahead of a full reveal September 4, and explained thered be two interior options available for the car, a natural olive-leaf-tanned Club Leather; as well as a fully leather-free vegan option with Race-Tex microfiber, made out of recycled polyester.Now, that fully vegan part does come with an asterisk, because there are still other parts of the vehicle that use animal by-products, such as the tires and various fluids and adhesives. Still, its a step in the right direction.Besides the materials announcement, the reveal showed off the Taycans classic five-gauge instrument cluster, which reminds us of vintage 911s except, yknow, now theyre completely digital and can be configured into different layouts. To the right of the floating glass pod is the 10.9-inch infotainment screen, and a touchscreen for the passenger. The centre console also has screens for a battery level gauge, handwriting inputs and climate controls. Apparently, the system is so powerful it can show a map on every screen without lagging. The screens can also all be turned off for a driver-focused cockpit.Teslas interior is almost fully vegan, with the steering wheel being the only piece that still puts real cow to use. Elon Musk has said the only reason Tesla steering wheels havent been wrapped in synthetic material yet is because its been difficult to find something durable enough that can handle a heating element, but synthetic will be happening
Origin: Porsche’s new Taycan EV will beat Tesla to a full vegan interior
Volkswagen ad banned in U.K. for portraying gender stereotypes
A Volkswagen TV commercial set to air in the U.K. has been banned by the Advertising Standards Authority (ASA) there for harmfully portraying gender stereotypes.The ad, for VWs new eGolf, depicts men engaged in a variety of activities such as climbing mountains, traveling through space and competing in para-athletic sports, in contrast with images of women making a sandwich, doing laundry and sitting drinking coffee.When we learn to adapt, we can achieve anything, reads the tagline on the ad, which was intended to show how society can adapt to the more widespread use of electric cars such as the eGolf. However, the advertising authority says it received three complaints about its portrayal of harmful gender stereotypes.The ASA ruled the implication behind the ad is that raising a child and doing household chores are exclusively roles for women, and that adventurous activities are better left to men, reports the BBC.Volkswagen defended the ad saying it made no suggestion that childcare was solely associated with women, says the British news outlet, and the fact that the woman in its advertisement was calm and reading could be seen as going against the stereotypical depiction of harassed or anxious parents in advertising. A second ad, for Philadelphia cream cheese, banned by the ASA at the same time portrays two new dads at a restaurant with their children; the fathers become distracted by some bagels and toast, and leave their kids on the conveyor belt. That ad received 128 complaints for its portrayal of gender stereotypes, which apparently painted men as being unable to care for their children.Both of the ads broke a brand new U.K. ASA rule that states advertising cannot depict men and women engaged in gender-stereotypical
Origin: Volkswagen ad banned in U.K. for portraying gender stereotypes
Should e-scooters stay on roads or sidewalks? Calgary, Edmonton pick opposite sides
The e-Scooter program is causing some concerns for motorists and pedestrians in Calgary on Monday, July 29, 2019.Darren Makowichuk / Calgary Herald As the e-scooter craze continues to grip the world, Calgarians have proven they are not immune to the novelty, racking up 300,000 rides since the 16-month pilot project started mid-July.The City of Edmonton, whose own year-long pilot project started last Friday, doesnt have the total number of rides so far but like in Calgary, Lime and Bird are the only two e-scooter vendors.The regulations in each city, however, are vastly different in one specific way: Calgary riders are allowed on sidewalks but prohibited on roads, whereas Edmonton riders are allowed on roads but prohibited on sidewalks.Neither city requires riders to wear helmets when operating the e-scooters and both are allowed in bike lanes. Both cities have capped the scooters speed at 20 km/h.There are currently 1,000 Lime scooters and 500 Bird scooters in Calgary and 200 Lime and 400 Bird scooters in Edmonton.Alberta Health Services said there have been no reported injuries from e-scooters in Edmonton since they were introduced on August 16 and 17. Calgary has seen 200 e-scooter related injuries since their introduction.Nathan Carswell, Calgarys shared mobility program manager, said there have been 185 calls made to the 311 line, and about 70 per cent of them are negative.Allowing sidewalk riding is probably our top complaint, he said. In saying that, its usually people who feel like a scooter sped by them without alerting them and then it evens out below that from people concerned about the speed to improperly parked scooters and general feedback. A Lime e-scooter rider commutes on Riverwalk in Calgary on Monday, July 29, 2019. Azin Ghaffari / Postmedia A spokesman for the City of Edmonton said its decision to allow scooters on roadways with a maximum speed limit of 50 km/h followed a review of collision data and e-scooter projects in other cities.They ensure people with scooters could still have easy access around Edmonton, the province of Alberta mandated e-scooters could be on roads provided they had a headlamp, tail lamp, a rear reflector, a working handbrake and a kickstand, a spokesman said, adding 80 to 90 per cent of Edmontons roads have a speed limit up to 50 km/h.The City of Calgary worked with existing bylaws to expedite the scooter rollout process, Carswell said, whereas Edmonton took its time to create the bylaws that will govern e-scooter use in that city.Im not trying to say one is doing it right and the other is not, I think thats the beauty of having these controlled pilots is that each citys approaching it how they feel most comfortable, he said. We can look at whats worked in Edmonton and Calgary and whats not and work with the province in the long run to regulate and ensure these devices are considered as part of a new transportation option and done the right way.When the snow flies in Calgary, or sometime around the first of November, both companies will be taking the scooters to their local warehouses until weather improves in the spring to bring them back.Carswell said its during this off-season that the city will look at how the project is going, whats working and what could be improved.The purpose of the pilot is to make some tweaks and monitor the project well look at what people are saying, what kind of ability do we have with the companies to curb this a little better, he said. Once we have a better data set and understanding, we can see what the trend
Origin: Should e-scooters stay on roads or sidewalks? Calgary, Edmonton pick opposite sides
Used car buying guide: Ferrari 456
Apologies – we’re a bit late to this V12 gem. In around 2009-10, prices for the 456 fell back to about £40,000 tops, while some cars in poor condition dropped to as low as £25,000. Then from around 2014 they began to rally, only to fall back slightly a couple of years ago. It all means that today you’ll struggle to find a good right-hand-drive 456, or the later 456M, for less than £40,000 while, if you want to sleep soundly in your bed, you’ll need to spend between £58,000 and £65,000 for a proper one with a low mileage and a good service history. That last bit – a good service history – is crucial. Too many 456s have gaps in their histories, a legacy of those rock-bottom prices when many people with shallow pockets but eyes bright with the dream of Ferrari ownership snapped up the cars. Once reality kicked in, the first thing to go was servicing, with the result that lots of cars have patchy histories with few signs of the necessarily regular 6000-mile fettle and 24,000-mile cambelt change. Many have since found good homes and had their service histories patched up. In any case, the model is, despite the litany of checks we advise (see below), a tough and reliable old thing. Indeed, it was Ferrari chief Luca di Montezemolo’s intention that it should be. He figured that building a reliable and practical supercar to be driven rather than locked away, as is the fate of most Ferraris, would be his brand’s best advertisement. The car was launched in 1992 as the 456GT and wasn’t replaced until 2003. In between times – 1998 – it was facelifted when it became the 456M, for Modificata. Whether GT or M, the 5.5-litre front-mounted V12 produces the same 436bhp, driving the rear wheels through a six-speed manual gearbox that went from being a dog-leg gate to a more usable H-pattern in around 1995. Alternatively, from 1996 there was a four-speed torque-converter automatic. Naturally, the former attracts a premium, but the automatic is reliable and a good fit if you just want to cruise effortlessly from country to country. Not that the 456 can’t lift its skirts. In fact, for a time it was the fastest four-seater car in the world, with a top speed of 188mph. Four-seater? Well, two-plus-two, really, but there’s just enough space for a couple of adults in the back. Switchable suspension, in combination with a self-levelling rear set-up, is standard and, in Normal mode at least, very comfortable, but it all needs checking, as we explain. It’s linked to the brakes and problems there can cause the suspension to default to hard. With the facelift, the 456M became a little quieter and more refined. Production ended with the 456M GT Scaglietti, also known as the Schumacher Edition. You’ll pay a fortune for one of those, but with luck you should find a perfectly good standard 456GT or 456M for around £50,000. Hurry before prices move. An expert’s view Martin Rowles, director, Rardley Motors: “The 456 is a usable everyday supercar. We have some through our workshop with over 100,000 miles on them. Increasingly, though, it’s seen as an investment and quite a few sit in garages never turning a wheel. Often it’s these that give trouble. Saying that, I reckon 30% are ‘Friday cars’ – it doesn’t matter how well they’ve been serviced, they’ll always have a problem. When checking one, establish what was done and when. The air-con service, valve clearances and brake fluid change are vital jobs but often ignored. My favourite is the manual. This, together with a low mileage, can mean a price difference of around £10k over an auto with a higher mileage.” Buyer beware ■ Engine: Valve clearances need checking every 32,000 miles. The hoses in the engine’s V may need replacing. Check for cracks in the aluminium around the exhaust manifold. The fuel pump mount in the fuel tank can break up, blocking the pump. ■ Gearbox: On manuals, check the oil cooler and pipes in the rear bumper for corrosion. On automatics, listen for drivetrain noise caused by worn spider gears. ■ Suspension: Check the switchable suspension’s actuators. Test the diaphragms in the self-levelling rear suspension hydraulic accumulators by inserting a screwdriver where the hose enters. If it goes in too far, there’s a problem (a split diaphragm causes the shock to become locked and burst). Check for cracked bushes and rusty wishbones. ■ Brakes: A faulty brake pressure switch that puts the suspension in anti-dive mode can cause the suspension to go hard. Check brake fluid has been changed – it can crystallise, blocking the pipes. ■ Body: Look for rusty sills behind the rear wheels. A new bonnet is £10,000. Check window gaps – failing glass mounts are a problem. Replacement front fogs for early cars are no longer available. Check delamination of rear screen and that the headlights pop up. ■ Interior: The leather trim on the dash and parcel shelf shrinks, and the rubberised coating on the ashtray, dash vents and switchgear goes tacky.
Origin: Used car buying guide: Ferrari 456
Under the skin: How Tesla is making cars think like humans
Never mind when, can self-driving cars ever even work at all? That’s probably the question in the minds of most people. But to work, fully autonomous cars will require the invention of a machine that has the cognitive abilities of a human. The building block of a human nervous system is a neuron and millions of them form a neural network in the body’s central nervous system. To make autonomous cars a reality, computer scientists need to create artificial neural networks (ANNs) that can do the same job as a human’s biological neural network. So assuming that really is achievable, the other thing an autonomous car needs is the ability to see, and this is where opinions in the industry are split. Until recently, conventional wisdom had it that as well as the cameras, radars and ultrasonic sensors cars already have for cruise control and advanced driver assistance systems, lidar (light detection and ranging) is essential. Lidar is like high-definition radar, using laser light instead of radio waves to scan a scene and create an accurate HD image of it. One stumbling block has been the high cost of lidar sensors, which only two years ago cost more than £60,000. Lower-cost versions on the way should bring the price down to around £4000 but that’s still a lot for a single component. Not everyone believes lidar is even necessary or desirable, though, and both Tesla and research scientists at Cornell University have independently arrived at that conclusion. Cornell found that processing by artificially intelligent (AI) computers can distort camera images viewed from the front. But by changing the perspective in the software to more of a bird’s-eye view, scientists were able to achieve a similar positioning accuracy to lidar using stereo cameras costing a few pounds, placed either side of the windscreen. Tesla reasons that no human is equipped with laser projectors for eyes and that the secret lies in better understanding the way neural networks identify objects and how to teach them. Whereas a human can identify an object from a single image at a glance, what the computer sees is a matrix of numbers identifying the location and brightness of each pixel in an image. Because of that, the neural network needs thousands of images to learn the identity of an object, each one labelled to identify it in any situation. Tesla says no chip has yet been produced specifically with neural networking and autonomous driving in mind, so it has spent the past three years designing one. The new computer can be retro-fitted and has been incorporated in new Teslas since March 2019. The Tesla fleet is already gathering the hundreds of thousands of images needed to train the neural network ‘brains’ in ‘shadow mode’ but without autonomous functions being turned on at this stage. Tesla boss Elon Musk expects to have a complete suite of self-driving software features installed in its cars this year and working robotaxis under test in 2020. 50 trillion operations per second Tesla boffins say a self-driving car needs a neural networking computer capable of performing a minimum of 50 trillion operations per second (50 TOPS). By comparison, a human brain can manage about 10 TOPS. The new Tesla computer consumes no more than 100W of power so it could be retrofitted. Bosch and NVIDIA are developing a similar ‘brain’ for autonomous cars ready for 2020. It’s called the Bosch AI self-driving
Origin: Under the skin: How Tesla is making cars think like humans
Inside Ferrari’s new design studio
Last year Ferrari finally opened its own design centre, having for years seen design houses, most famously Pininfarina, lead the styling of its models. Ferrari head of design Flavio Manzoni has told Autocar that a large in-house team is now essential due to the complexity of the design process and the need for multiple designs to be integrated into architectures from the beginning. The days of a car maker supplying a chassis to a coachbuilder for styling are over. “One of the main reasons for an in-house design team was the growing complexity of our cars,” Manzoni said. “The technology and aerodynamic requirements grow day by day. Interaction is needed between the different areas. “Using the other system, you could not now conceive the shape of a new Ferrari on top of the mechanical parts designed before. You had a chassis, then a coachbuilder. The coachbuilder designs the dress on top.” When Manzoni joined Ferrari in 2010 there were just a handful of designers. Today there are more than 100 working in the 1400sq m design centre in facilities that encompass everything from clay modelling to two ateliers where more than 200 customers come each year to meet with designers and individually personalise their new Ferrari. Manzoni also spoke of his desire to give each model its own distinct look, rather than a Russian doll-style approach. “We never follow the strategy of a ‘family feeling’ effect in the range,” he said. “You consider the shape, and that must reflect the essence of each project. It’s a very difficult thing to do, but each car must also then still be recognisable without a badge. But it makes the job more fun. It’s difficult, as every time you have to be new but consistent.” The SUV will be the most ‘different’ Ferrari yet, but it is a challenge Manzoni has relished. “We are very lucky,” he said. “We made a job to start from an idea that’s the consciousness of the richness of Ferrari: the forms, patrimony. “But at the same time, we are not slaves to history. We have a beautiful architecture. Our job is between prudence of tradition and the courage of innovation. This expresses our approach. There’s lots of responsibility for the brand, but a courage to evolve in different directions and break many rules. The SF90 breaks many rules. We didn’t use round rear lights but we’re happy to have made something different. “You should start with a lot of curiosity, the desire to make something really strong and
Origin: Inside Ferrari’s new design studio