Thanks to this video and a couple of others.....I'm now the proud owner of a 512BB....and my god, what a beautiful machine in person...and the sound.....OMG....
As a teenager, the fights between Boxer fans and Countach fans were even more serious and hardcore than either cars performance numbers. Many a fine Friday and Saturday nights were spent arguing the merits and failings of both. I was firmly in the BB camp ;) **Also...BB stands for Brigitte Bardot...NOT Berlinetta Boxer **
Pininfarina/Fioravanti were not Ferrari marketing and did not name the Ferrari cars. Enzo himself chose the name according to a 2016 interview with Mauro Forghieri which is on youtube in Italian, chief engineer at Ferrari at the time, and the Enzo meant the BB to stand for "Bialbero" or twin cam. However the Journalists named it Berlinetta Boxer mistakenly and the name stuck, even though as Mauro pointed out the engine is not a Boxer engine
Very,very well made video !!! The way you hold the steering wheel tells me a lot...This is experience at it's best....The way Derek Bell says how you should hold the wheel....Gently like that! Same with the shilfter....Thank you for such a wonderful presentation about a fabulous car...I drove one many years ago...Hearing the sound brings back a lot of memories.
YES! My father had a 1976 512 BB, classic red with black trim. Took me 300KPH in it. Sickest ride ever. And his buddy had a red 365 in RHD (though in USA) with bronze-colored wheels that had run at Le Mans and he would come over for Sunday drives. The two Boxers in a mini-convoy. So much fun.
The Ferrari 365 GT4/BB had 375-380bhp with a top speed of 180mph, not 344bhp, the 512 bb had 350bhp, and the 512 BBi had 340bhp do to Ferrari having to adhere to strict EPA emission restrictions during the 1980's because of the fuel shortage in the mid to late 1970's. Go watch Ferrari 365 GT4 BB driven | evo ICONS for the real specs on the car.
The 365 GT4/BB prototype did have 375-380bhp but production cars had about 360bhp, still more than the 344bhp quoted as you wrote. The 365BB revved to 7750rpm red line whereas the 512bb revved to 6500rpm red line. Ferrari lowered the revs and increased the capacity not only for emissions but for reliability reasons also, making the 512BB less powerful but more torquey.
My all time fav Ferrari (365GT4/BB), I have had the pleasure of experiencing a 365 Boxer.....That made a lasting impression on me!! That engine noise!!!
How y'all ate you? I don't mean to be rude. Reason I ask is that I've been told if you're 6 foot and over, it's difficult to sit in & enjoy it. If you're 6'2 and over ( 187 cm) forget it. Rumours going around alleging that the 365 BB's can accommodate a person up to 6'3. Doug DeMuro Reviewed a carburettor powered 512 BB a few years ago and he managed to look quite comfortable in that car. I'm 6'1 and have a friend who's 6'4 and wants to buy a 512 Boxer Berlinetta, preferably a carburettor model.
I remember when the Boxers came out as a boy, I fell in love with them, they look even better today and bar far still my favourite car. You should fo the 400s as well, they fantastic, probably the best looking rear end of any car.
This is the best Boxer video I have seen and thank you for posting this. This is my an absolute favorite car in the world since the first time I saw it at the LA Auto Show in 1980. To this day it’s still the prettiest car ever built for me.
Great video; I think these look so much better than its successor, the Testarossa. A minor point: I don't believe these were ever sold in the USA. I remember at the time their lack of availability added to their mystique (as if they needed it).
Wonderful video! You did a fantastic job in sharing the differences between the models. Thank you for taking the time to make it and share it with all. Fabulous cars.
Excellent video, great to see all the differences with the versions next to each other 👏👌🏁😎 The BB has always been the Ferrari to get from my childhood.
Nice. Such beautiful shapes. At least Ferrari is returning a little to those lovely smooth surfaces. The other way of quickly spotting a 365 is that the rear clamshell shut line is right at the wheelarch, whereas the later cars have the wheelarch starting a few inches further back. TRX tyres and the associated wheels were introduced as a proposed safety measure as it's apparently a lot harder for the tyre to come off the rim in a blow-out. BMW and Ferrari both adopted them but few others. Like the older XWXs they vanished for a while but both are actually now available again.
2:15 Yeah I watched a thing last night where they were restoring a 512 BB in the USA. And the guy said that they never sold any of the carbureted models in America, they were all imports. So you are bang on there mate. The BBIs were sold in the USA
Fantastic video…huge Ferrari fan, specifically the 60’s road cars, knew very little about the Boxers until now. Sincerely appreciate you taking the time to make this…big “thank you” from Detroit, MI.
I want to clarify something , BB means Berlinetta Bialbero, this is a flat engine or V180º is not a Boxer, the configuration of the pistons and the cranckshaft is different from a conventional Boxer.
That sound at startup bought back some wonderful memories. One of my first Ferraris that I got to drive was a 512. Great looks and a better motor. Thanks for a great review.
Wow! I’m impressed with your encyclopaedic knowledge of one of my favourite cars in my favourite era of motoring. New to the channel but you can add another subscriber to the list. 😊
All of you disagreeing with what BB stands for, from the actual Ferrari site: The two Bs stand for Berlinetta Boxer. This name was derived from the fact that the cylinder banks form an angle of 180°. If you still disagree please email Piero Ferrari and make your case.
No, Ferrari has never used a true boxer engine in its production cars. Many people confuse Ferrari's so-called "flat engines" (flat hanging engines) with boxer engines, but they are actually different. Ferrari has used flat 12-cylinder engines, such as the Ferrari 512 BB (Berlinetta Boxer) and Ferrari Testarossa models. Although these engines have cylinders lying flat in a 180-degree configuration, they are not true boxer engines. In a true boxer engine, the pistons move against each other in separate cylinders located on opposite sides of the crankshaft. In Ferrari's flat engines, on the other hand, the pistons share crankshafts, making them flat or 180-degree V engines, not boxer engines.
I'm pretty sure the wheelbase of the 365GTB4 is round about 10cm shorter than the later 512BB/BBi. And the later ones had a chromed prancing horse on the center console. And different covers for the loudspeakers in the door cards.
Actually the wheel base is the same. The added length is all in the rear lid after the wheel arch. Note that on the 365, the rear lid shut line on sides below the sill line - is is vertical. On the 512's that line is angled forward to kind of mimic the door shut line. Just Sayin'
It's somewhat of a misconception that fuel injection was because of American emissions laws. First of all, the Boxer was never imported to the US and secondly Formula 1 had ditched carburetors somewhere around about 1967. It was simply the evolution of progress. I know there is a retro-fetish over carbs these days and there's nothing wrong with that, just don't believe the hype that they are somehow slam-dunk better than fuel injection because they aren't. Nicely done Boxer overview, thanks.
The addition of fuel injection was not related to the American market because Boxers were never imported by Ferrari into the USA. Only grey market sales of Boxers were done in the states.
With respect to the large orange front indicators: don't some of the Berlinetta Boxer's have clear indicators instead? If so, is there any rhyme or reason to which cars had orange versus which had clear?
Some countries in Europe had different rules for the colour of the turn signals. For example many Boxers (and Ferrari 308 and 400, and the Porsche 914) for the Italien market had "clear" lenses/covers for the front turn signals.
He rode 3rd gear up to the speed limit - his desired cruising speed - so that’s the time for 5th. He was in the right gear for what he wanted to do at each moment - first making some noise, then cruising, without an intermediate stage. No rule says you have to go through them sequentially. I might ride 2nd up to the redline for giggles, which is past the speed limit, then immediately back off, shift to 5th and cruise. Works fine.
The owners manual reads "berlinetta boxer" as the name of the car. The owners manual says "flat 12", not V12 The owners manual does not say "boxer engine" .... The layout of an engine is given by the angle and arrangement of the cylinders in the block, not the crankshaft.
XWX Michelin tires are 70% aspect ratio high profile performance tire with only a V speed rating good up to 149 mph. They were consider lower profile tires. They were the performance sport tire of the 1970s. I wondered why anybody would still have XWX tires on a current car which I saw on a 512 BB at Mecum classic car auction 2024 summer Indianapolis Indiana. I thought they must be old tires, but didn't bother to check the date code. They did still have a V speed rating on them only good up to 149 mph. My 1998 V6 Honda Accord has V speed rated tires, with car having been to 132 mph and likely able to do 140+ mph. It's not a fast speed rating for a high performance sports car. In 1981 People in the Potomac Porsche Club of America were switching out their 911's XWX Michelins for Pirelli P7 low profile tires. I got some used XWX Michelins from a 911 owner. Had them retread by a performance aircraft retreater entering the road course performance tire retreat market or rather making it, for the medium 12,000 mile tread life and put them onto my 914. The retreat XWX tires were great high speed braking tires. At the January 1982 refrigerator bowl at Summit Point at 3°F I was allowed to stay out on the track for 40 laps or more over an hour because nobody else wanted to be. I pushed the car incrementally more and more thinking any moment they were going to call me in, but they didn't. The extreme cold temperatures allowed the 914's stock disk brakes to stay useable "at the limit" modulated race braking use for the whole hour with metallic pads, dropping 65 mph from 105 mph to 40 mph in about 2-1/2 seconds! That calculates out to 38.22 ft/s^2 or 1.2 G. It was like hitting a wall for 2-1/2 seconds. Aircraft retreat tread is designed for braking. This long track season gave me invaluable experience at high G, high speed braking control. My favorite sports car of the late 1970s was the 512 BB. I prefer the looks of it over the later Testarossa. It not a fast accelerating car compared to those of the last 20 years.
Great review of my favourite 70's twelve cylinder Ferrari in the guise of the 365 and one of my three grail car - the 512 BB carburettor verion with a midnight blue 💙 body and cteam coloured seats and interior. 1985 Australian Car Show: - My grail car, the midnight blue with cream interior 1977 512 BB carburettor version, was there. There was a 1984 red Lamborghini Countach that was not a quattravalvole edition. I spoke to the owner. The owner, unbelievably, had had enough of his Countach. He was my height. He hated the Countach for all the reasons that most people over 45 have repeatedly heard. Lamborghini Countach A very uncomfortable ride which is slow. Even when warmed up the Countach was slow. The 0 - 63 mph in 10 seconds is true. The 512 BB's, Testarossa and even the 308 pre-1980 GTB Ferrari's were ALL quicker than the Countach. NOTE - Butt hurt Countach fan boys will not accept the reality that Lamborghini's were notoriously slow before the Quattrovalvole versions. The Countach owner had just purchased the Rhd midnight blue 512 BB at the Car Show. He had driven the 512 BB on the weekend and loved it. He was my height and could easily get into the Ferrari Berlinetta Boxer. He loved the engine and told me that once the engine was warmed up, yhe the Ferrari 512 BB was the fastest road going sports car in the world. Remember, this was 1985 and the Diablo, Jaguar XJ 220 and F 50 did not exist yet. My all time favourite the 288 GTO did exist but owners weren't openly discussing how fast these twin turbo V8's were. NOTE -: A few Ferrari 288 GTO owners discretely admitted that they had reached speeds of 303 mph on their respective car.
My favourite is the 'geniuses' who refer to the 512 BB engine as 'the flat V12 Boxer engine. ' I tried to tell one these said geniuses that a flat V12 makes no sense, hence the word 'flat'as to differentiate the from a V engine. It was like talking to the proverbial brick wall. Lol
@@RoverWaters Actually not correct. Mauro Forghieri was interviewed in 2016 and was the chief Ferrari engineer and he said that Enzo named the car and that the BB stood for "Bialbero" or twincam in English. The journlists "mistakenly" called it Berlinetta Boxer and then the name stuck, but the name is wrong and as Mauro said the engine is not a Boxer engine also.
Thanks to this video and a couple of others.....I'm now the proud owner of a 512BB....and my god, what a beautiful machine in person...and the sound.....OMG....
As a teenager, the fights between Boxer fans and Countach fans were even more serious and hardcore than either cars performance numbers.
Many a fine Friday and Saturday nights were spent arguing the merits and failings of both.
I was firmly in the BB camp ;)
**Also...BB stands for Brigitte Bardot...NOT Berlinetta Boxer **
Pininfarina/Fioravanti were not Ferrari marketing and did not name the Ferrari cars. Enzo himself chose the name according to a 2016 interview with Mauro Forghieri which is on youtube in Italian, chief engineer at Ferrari at the time, and the Enzo meant the BB to stand for "Bialbero" or twin cam. However the Journalists named it Berlinetta Boxer mistakenly and the name stuck, even though as Mauro pointed out the engine is not a Boxer engine
lol - that’s so funny! Very sure it’s Bob the Builder these days!
As a 13 year old kid my bestie's dad had a 365GTBB- blue/crema. I fell in love. It took me 50 years to get one. Dreams do come true. Thanks to God!
Massive fan of the Boxer look, especially in metallic blue as on the 365. Great video, thanks.
Very,very well made video !!! The way you hold the steering wheel tells me a lot...This is experience at it's best....The way Derek Bell says how you should hold the wheel....Gently like that! Same with the shilfter....Thank you for such a wonderful presentation about a fabulous car...I drove one many years ago...Hearing the sound brings back a lot of memories.
YES! My father had a 1976 512 BB, classic red with black trim. Took me 300KPH in it. Sickest ride ever. And his buddy had a red 365 in RHD (though in USA) with bronze-colored wheels that had run at Le Mans and he would come over for Sunday drives. The two Boxers in a mini-convoy. So much fun.
The Ferrari 365 GT4/BB had 375-380bhp with a top speed of 180mph, not 344bhp, the 512 bb had 350bhp, and the 512 BBi had 340bhp do to Ferrari having to adhere to strict EPA emission restrictions during the 1980's because of the fuel shortage in the mid to late 1970's. Go watch Ferrari 365 GT4 BB driven | evo ICONS for the real specs on the car.
The 365 GT4/BB prototype did have 375-380bhp but production cars had about 360bhp, still more than the 344bhp quoted as you wrote. The 365BB revved to 7750rpm red line whereas the 512bb revved to 6500rpm red line. Ferrari lowered the revs and increased the capacity not only for emissions but for reliability reasons also, making the 512BB less powerful but more torquey.
Yes, But could do 134 in third gear incredible
My all time fav Ferrari (365GT4/BB), I have had the pleasure of experiencing a 365 Boxer.....That made a lasting impression on me!! That engine noise!!!
How y'all ate you?
I don't mean to be rude.
Reason I ask is that I've been told if you're 6 foot and over, it's difficult to sit in & enjoy it.
If you're 6'2 and over ( 187 cm) forget it.
Rumours going around alleging that the 365 BB's
can accommodate a person up to 6'3.
Doug DeMuro
Reviewed a carburettor powered 512 BB a few years ago and he managed to look quite comfortable in that car.
I'm 6'1 and have a friend who's 6'4 and wants to buy a 512 Boxer Berlinetta, preferably a carburettor model.
What a wonderful explanation of the evolution of the Boxer !
I remember when the Boxers came out as a boy, I fell in love with them, they look even better today and bar far still my favourite car.
You should fo the 400s as well, they fantastic, probably the best looking rear end of any car.
This is the best Boxer video I have seen and thank you for posting this. This is my an absolute favorite car in the world since the first time I saw it at the LA Auto Show in 1980. To this day it’s still the prettiest car ever built for me.
Great video; I think these look so much better than its successor, the Testarossa. A minor point: I don't believe these were ever sold in the USA. I remember at the time their lack of availability added to their mystique (as if they needed it).
Clint Eastwood had a 365 Boxer.
They were sold in the USA but in limited #s
Well, you're obviously wrong.
The Testarossa were prettier.
Wonderful video! You did a fantastic job in sharing the differences between the models. Thank you for taking the time to make it and share it with all. Fabulous cars.
Excellent video, great to see all the differences with the versions next to each other 👏👌🏁😎
The BB has always been the Ferrari to get from my childhood.
Timeless, lovely shape.
That was a great summation of the Boxer lineage.
Nice. Such beautiful shapes. At least Ferrari is returning a little to those lovely smooth surfaces. The other way of quickly spotting a 365 is that the rear clamshell shut line is right at the wheelarch, whereas the later cars have the wheelarch starting a few inches further back.
TRX tyres and the associated wheels were introduced as a proposed safety measure as it's apparently a lot harder for the tyre to come off the rim in a blow-out. BMW and Ferrari both adopted them but few others. Like the older XWXs they vanished for a while but both are actually now available again.
Thank you for feeding my ferrari addiction.
Love that test drive. You look so pleased with it. Nice.
2:15 Yeah I watched a thing last night where they were restoring a 512 BB in the USA. And the guy said that they never sold any of the carbureted models in America, they were all imports. So you are bang on there mate. The BBIs were sold in the USA
3:06 That 365 is immaculate! Has it been restored or is it like that from New?
Fantastic video…huge Ferrari fan, specifically the 60’s road cars, knew very little about the Boxers until now. Sincerely appreciate you taking the time to make this…big “thank you” from Detroit, MI.
I want to clarify something , BB means Berlinetta Bialbero, this is a flat engine or V180º is not a Boxer, the configuration of the pistons and the cranckshaft is different from a conventional Boxer.
Great video Ian, use to see the white 512 BBi that Scott has in Esher back in the 80's . Lovely car.
That sound at startup bought back some wonderful memories. One of my first Ferraris that I got to drive was a 512. Great looks and a better motor. Thanks for a great review.
You forgot to mention on of the main differences. The 365 has a shorter wheelbase than the 512s.
That was a great overview Ian. Appreciate the level of meaningful detail you went into here. The sound is utterly glorious! Cheers Jason #jcr_cars
Love the way you explain the differences between the Boxers, Fantastic!!
Love these side by side overviews - thanks Ian!
This was fantastic...thank you so much for covering a Ferrari classic that is often over looked. Forza Ferrari !
Wow! I’m impressed with your encyclopaedic knowledge of one of my favourite cars in my favourite era of motoring.
New to the channel but you can add another subscriber to the list. 😊
Fantastic video - thank you! Which ferrari red is the 115 BOX car that you drove? It's lovely and much richer than Rosso Corsa
Great post. Thank you for taking the time to compose the video
All of you disagreeing with what BB stands for, from the actual Ferrari site: The two Bs stand for Berlinetta Boxer. This name was derived from the fact that the cylinder banks form an angle of 180°. If you still disagree please email Piero Ferrari and make your case.
No, Ferrari has never used a true boxer engine in its production cars. Many people confuse Ferrari's so-called "flat engines" (flat hanging engines) with boxer engines, but they are actually different.
Ferrari has used flat 12-cylinder engines, such as the Ferrari 512 BB (Berlinetta Boxer) and Ferrari Testarossa models. Although these engines have cylinders lying flat in a 180-degree configuration, they are not true boxer engines. In a true boxer engine, the pistons move against each other in separate cylinders located on opposite sides of the crankshaft. In Ferrari's flat engines, on the other hand, the pistons share crankshafts, making them flat or 180-degree V engines, not boxer engines.
Good Informative Production Guys - Keep up the good work
LOVE these geeky videos ! Thanks !
Very informative, thank you.
Very engaging presentation.
Well done video, thank you. Great explanations, and the engine sound was wonderful.
I'm pretty sure the wheelbase of the 365GTB4 is round about 10cm shorter than the later 512BB/BBi.
And the later ones had a chromed prancing horse on the center console.
And different covers for the loudspeakers in the door cards.
Actually the wheel base is the same. The added length is all in the rear lid after the wheel arch. Note that on the 365, the rear lid shut line on sides below the sill line - is is vertical. On the 512's that line is angled forward to kind of mimic the door shut line. Just Sayin'
It's somewhat of a misconception that fuel injection was because of American emissions laws. First of all, the Boxer was never imported to the US and secondly Formula 1 had ditched carburetors somewhere around about 1967. It was simply the evolution of progress. I know there is a retro-fetish over carbs these days and there's nothing wrong with that, just don't believe the hype that they are somehow slam-dunk better than fuel injection because they aren't. Nicely done Boxer overview, thanks.
Very impressive. Thanks for sharing.
Great vid Ian .Thanks .Always wondered what the subtle differences were .
Hells bells that blue one is gorgeous! What fuel do you recommend?
The addition of fuel injection was not related to the American market because Boxers were never imported by Ferrari into the USA. Only grey market sales of Boxers were done in the states.
Excellent video! Million thanks!!!!
BB512 is my Favorite car as well as the 80s GTO.
With respect to the large orange front indicators: don't some of the Berlinetta Boxer's have clear indicators instead? If so, is there any rhyme or reason to which cars had orange versus which had clear?
Some countries in Europe had different rules for the colour of the turn signals. For example many Boxers (and Ferrari 308 and 400, and the Porsche 914) for the Italien market had "clear" lenses/covers for the front turn signals.
What a fantastic video! Thanks you!
Nice review
wonderful, excelent video
Excellent job!
This is gold.
Fantastic vid!! Great info
Yep you should go on mastermind, great videos, thanks👍👍
Curious...at about 25:38 shift from 3rd to 5th? Why skip 4th?
He rode 3rd gear up to the speed limit - his desired cruising speed - so that’s the time for 5th. He was in the right gear for what he wanted to do at each moment - first making some noise, then cruising, without an intermediate stage. No rule says you have to go through them sequentially.
I might ride 2nd up to the redline for giggles, which is past the speed limit, then immediately back off, shift to 5th and cruise. Works fine.
What a pleasure to see my favourite car of all time and in each of the three forms it came in. I still want three!
what you tell at 2:06? 1991 to 1994 - at that time the BB area has been gone already. you wanted to say 1981 to 1984 I think
Great video!
The owners manual reads "berlinetta boxer" as the name of the car.
The owners manual says "flat 12", not V12
The owners manual does not say "boxer engine"
....
The layout of an engine is given by the angle and arrangement of the cylinders in the block, not the crankshaft.
My FAVORITE Ferrari
512BBi was the pinacle of cool
Great, thanks
They sound like a Detroit Diesel V12 2-stroke. Uncanny.
XWX Michelin tires are 70% aspect ratio high profile performance tire with only a V speed rating good up to 149 mph. They were consider lower profile tires. They were the performance sport tire of the 1970s. I wondered why anybody would still have XWX tires on a current car which I saw on a 512 BB at Mecum classic car auction 2024 summer Indianapolis Indiana. I thought they must be old tires, but didn't bother to check the date code. They did still have a V speed rating on them only good up to 149 mph. My 1998 V6 Honda Accord has V speed rated tires, with car having been to 132 mph and likely able to do 140+ mph. It's not a fast speed rating for a high performance sports car.
In 1981 People in the Potomac Porsche Club of America were switching out their 911's XWX Michelins for Pirelli P7 low profile tires. I got some used XWX Michelins from a 911 owner. Had them retread by a performance aircraft retreater entering the road course performance tire retreat market or rather making it, for the medium 12,000 mile tread life and put them onto my 914.
The retreat XWX tires were great high speed braking tires. At the January 1982 refrigerator bowl at Summit Point at 3°F I was allowed to stay out on the track for 40 laps or more over an hour because nobody else wanted to be. I pushed the car incrementally more and more thinking any moment they were going to call me in, but they didn't.
The extreme cold temperatures allowed the 914's stock disk brakes to stay useable "at the limit" modulated race braking use for the whole hour with metallic pads, dropping 65 mph from 105 mph to 40 mph in about 2-1/2 seconds! That calculates out to 38.22 ft/s^2 or 1.2 G. It was like hitting a wall for 2-1/2 seconds. Aircraft retreat tread is designed for braking. This long track season gave me invaluable experience at high G, high speed braking control.
My favorite sports car of the late 1970s was the 512 BB. I prefer the looks of it over the later Testarossa. It not a fast accelerating car compared to those of the last 20 years.
Great review of my favourite 70's twelve cylinder Ferrari in the guise of the 365 and one of my three grail car - the 512 BB carburettor verion with a midnight blue 💙 body and cteam coloured seats and interior.
1985 Australian Car Show: -
My grail car, the midnight blue with cream interior 1977 512 BB carburettor version, was there.
There was a 1984 red Lamborghini Countach that was not a quattravalvole edition.
I spoke to the owner.
The owner, unbelievably, had had enough of his Countach.
He was my height.
He hated the Countach for all the reasons that most people over 45 have repeatedly heard.
Lamborghini Countach
A very uncomfortable ride which is slow. Even when warmed up the Countach was slow.
The 0 - 63 mph in 10 seconds is true.
The 512 BB's, Testarossa and even the 308 pre-1980 GTB Ferrari's were ALL quicker than the Countach.
NOTE - Butt hurt Countach fan boys will not accept the reality that Lamborghini's were notoriously slow before the Quattrovalvole versions.
The Countach owner had just purchased the Rhd midnight blue 512 BB at the Car Show.
He had driven the 512 BB on the weekend and loved it.
He was my height and could easily get into the Ferrari Berlinetta Boxer. He loved the engine and told me that once the engine was warmed up, yhe the Ferrari 512 BB was the fastest road going sports car in the world.
Remember, this was 1985 and the Diablo, Jaguar XJ 220 and F 50 did not exist yet.
My all time favourite the 288 GTO did exist but owners weren't openly discussing how fast these twin turbo V8's were.
NOTE -: A few Ferrari 288 GTO owners discretely admitted that they had reached speeds of 303 mph on their respective car.
What a legendary car that beat the Lambo!
There's no such thing as a Berlinetta Boxer. BB never stood for that, as it doesn't have a boxer engine
My favourite is the 'geniuses' who refer to the 512 BB engine as
'the flat V12 Boxer engine. '
I tried to tell one these said geniuses that a flat V12 makes no sense, hence the word 'flat'as to differentiate the from a V engine.
It was like talking to the proverbial brick wall.
Lol
BB stands for berlinetta boxer
It is written in the owners manual.
Also 180 degrees V-engine does not exist. It's called a flat engine.
@@RoverWaters Actually not correct. Mauro Forghieri was interviewed in 2016 and was the chief Ferrari engineer and he said that Enzo named the car and that the BB stood for "Bialbero" or twincam in English. The journlists "mistakenly" called it Berlinetta Boxer and then the name stuck, but the name is wrong and as Mauro said the engine is not a Boxer engine also.
I am of course referring to the original 365 BB when it was launched.
@@cbca6567 The owners manual says "flat 12", not V12
The owners manual does not say "boxer engine"
Enzo had no involvement, it was a FIAT project.
Boxer???? Berlinetta Bialbero! 180°V
storage space for a pack of cigarettes
Ferraris are glorified go karts that sound like cement mixers.
Prove me wrong?
Sorry, but the B means bialbero and not boxer...try to study ferrari history