Weight is everything when it comes to sports cars. Reducing weight allows manufacturers to produce cars that handle better, accelerate quicker, and stop faster. Weight (or a lack thereof) is what allows vehicles like the Caterham 7 and Ariel Atom to outperform and embarrass much more powerful and costly cars, despite their significantly smaller and less powerful engines. This is why many brands make such a big deal out of putting their top cars on diets, such as the Porsche 911 GT3-RS, BMW M3 CSL and the new Lamborghini Gallardo Superleggera.
Ferrari too has participated in this practice, producing lightweight versions of its street cars, most recently with the mid-engined F360 Modena. The Challenge Stradale, named after the one-make, one-model racing series of which it participated in, offered improved performance by cutting out mass wherever possible. This raw, racer-like experience happened to make it one of the most sought after versions of the car built. Logically, with the launch of the F430 Challenge race series, we’ve been expecting Ferrari to introduce a roadgoing version. Now they finally have, but the car will have a new name, “Scuderia”.
The F430 Scuderia takes weight reduction to extremes. The already lightweight sports car has 100 kg (220 lbs) worth of insulation and unnecessary luxuries taken out of what was previously a regular version, but that’s not where the difference ends. The new car sees the astonishing 4.3-litre V8 churn out 510 horsepower, a gain of 27 horsepower over the standard version, with the added bonus of a sky-high redline of 8,500 rpm.
To go with the enhanced engine is an upgraded version of the famed Ferrari F1 6-speed sequential paddle-shift transmission. Thanks to new software, the gearbox is now capable of punching through the gears at an unprecedented 60 ms per interval, which is an improvement over the 150 ms shift capability of the standard F430, and 100 ms of the Ferrari 599 Fiorano, plus it outclasses the SMG transmission used on the BMW M5 and M6. It still trails the twin-clutch DSG/S tronic transmission offered by Volkswagen and Audi, which is capable of upshifting at 8 ms. Other mechanical enhancements include the integration of the F1-Trac traction control system with the E-Diff electronic differential for better response and balance.
Performance figures for the F430 Scuderia have yet to be released, but we know it’s going to be quicker from 0-100 km/h than the stock car, and significantly quicker in gear and at higher speeds. After all, what would you expect from a car that has a mere 2.45 kg (5.4 lbs) to move for each horsepower produced? Because of its track-oriented nature, the Scuderia features a tuned suspension, plus new lightweight wheels made from magnesium, and modified bodywork to increase downforce at speed.
To ice the cake at the Scuderia’s upcoming Frankfurt auto show launch, Michael Schumacher, Ferrari’s ex-F1 superstar will be introducing it to the media on September 11th.
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