Some recent AI restomod pictures I came across:
Monday, 20 April 2026
Friday, 17 April 2026
For sale : 1989 Ferrari 412 Manual with only 8,400 km
Very likely the best examplar available in the market:
A heads up for this group that I'm looking to sell my beautiful 412 manual after 13 years ownership.1989 Ferrari 412 manual #80194 with only 8,400 km. Blu Medio Metallizzato FE95/589, an attractive metallic mid-blue, with Crema Connolly Autolux 3997 leather interior, together with a dark blue leather dashboard (Connolly 3282) and light blue carpets. It was one of the last 30 produced out of 246 left hand drive 412 manuals. It entered production on 25 January 1989 and was completed on 22 February 1989. On 14 April 1989 it was sold by Sa.Mo.Car. S.p.A., the Rome distributor, to the late Luigi Bruzio, the owner of the official Ferrari dealer Gentry Lane Motors, Toronto, Canada. It was bought from Gentry Lane by a European businessman in 1990 and spent the next 21 years in storage in Poland. It was recommissioned in 2011 at 2,937 km and first registered in Poland in 2012. I bought it in 2013 at 5,050 km and brought it to Sweden. I am effectively the second, private owner. Its complete history is documented.Well maintained with over €20,000 recently spent at authorised Classiche Ferrari workshop. All books, tools, matching numbers, tailored Ferrari covers (including front seats and steering wheel). Extremely rare, if not unique, in this condition. It still has original plastic carpet protectors and the clock tag. I am looking for €130,000.
This owner can be contacted via email: david@kreativitetskonsult.se
FERRARI 400 La più elegante di Maranello
Magazine article from ACS 2016 ( l’Automobile Club Svizzero).
Now available in the download archive or click the link below:
https://circuitocampione.com/ferrari-400-la-piu-elegante-di-maranello-sul-magazine-di-acs/
Wednesday, 15 April 2026
Reproduction Toolkit Holder
This former owner of a Ferrari 400 and specialist in car fibre constructions is making a reproduction of the toolkit holder used in the Ferrari 365GT4 2+2, 400 and 400i phase 1.
It's an item that often is missing (and the toolkit as well) in these cars.
As per FB post, he's making one now, see the first promosing results below. He's also going to use the `velvet fabric` as used in the original. It´s all in the detail.
He can be contacted via Facebook:
https://www.facebook.com/groups/8727831092/posts/10164842095381093/
Or via Ferrarichat:
https://www.ferrarichat.com/forum/threads/support-malette-dans-roue-de-secours.716318/
Alternatively I can get you in contact with him via email if you're not on the forementioned media.
Final prize is € 335,- (excluding shipping).
Note: the velvet fabric used is €95 per square meter.
Octane Japan : Still unaware of its true value? | The Ferrari 412 chosen by a rock star
Via: https://octane.jp/articles/detail/11452/1/1/1
Or if you don't master Japanese, hereby the English translated article:
Effectively the English magazine article is available in my archive as per blog:
https://erwin400.blogspot.com/2025/09/octane-magazine-ferrari-412-rockstars.html
Tuesday, 14 April 2026
Sunday, 5 April 2026
Thursday, 2 April 2026
The day I met Enzo Ferrari - May 1973
You get 3 free articles to read on their website.
Enzo Ferrari reached across his desk and pressed a button on a little control panel. Instantly his office door opened and his attendant scurried in. Ferrari spoke gruffly, turned back to me and continued talking.The attendant shot out and returned carrying something. It wasn’t right. Ferrari snapped at him. When he came back, Ferrari snatched the thing and passed it to me. He saw my surprise – I wasn’t expecting a gift – and a faint smile creased his rugged face. The object was a polystyrene box containing a big yellow ashtray with that rampant black horse in its centre.It was May 1973 and I was in Enzo’s office at the end of my first visit to Maranello. At 6.30pm, while I was in the racing department watching earnest mechanics poring over the (miserable) 312 B3 F1 racers and (brilliant) 312 PB sports cars, Dottore Franco Gozzi, Ferrari’s right-hand man, beckoned and said: ‘We must hurry now – Mr Ferrari is waiting to see you.’In the drab admin block near the main gate we stepped through the attendant’s antechamber into a long, sparse room. Enzo’s big black desk was on the left. Nothing adorned the dull blue walls except a portrait of Alfredo – Dino – Ferrari’s son who’d died at 24 of muscular dystrophy in 1956. It faced his father’s desk, permanently lit by three lamps: green, red and white.As I neared, Enzo rose, still a big man at 75, with an elegant bearing despite, now, a slight stoop. He grasped my hand with a steely grip. His high forehead and pushed-back white hair made him seem as if he were sitting high in an open car, going fast. The craggy features, with the jutting nose, were drawn and frail after recent illness. But his unnerving eyes were untouched and peered through the celebrated dark glasses. He indicated the chair on the left, with Franco to the right, ready to translate.
Where to start? The prototype 365 GT/4 Berlinetta Boxer was outside, just back from a test run. Mindful of legislation we thought then would kill off fast cars, I asked how frustrated he was that perhaps he could never make a faster one.His tone conveyed his disdain for the American-led regulations. They were killing enjoyable motoring and inspirational engineering, he said. Anti-pollution and safety rules would just mean bigger engines and cars that were tanks. With the BB, he said with an angry flourish, he’d ignored the US laws, and if Americans weren’t able to drive it, then that was too bad for them.We got onto racing. The 1973 F1 season was disastrous – in 15 Grands Prix, the Scuderia wouldn’t once even trouble the podium let alone its top step. ‘Yes,’ he said, ‘it hasn’t been going well. But we must measure our performance against the victories of 27 years. Failure is a temporary thing and will not endure. Our work and experience will see to that.’Drivers? Only one matched Tazio Nuvolari’s supreme skill and bravery – Stirling Moss, the most complete driver he’d ever seen. Anyone else coming along? ‘Perhaps,’ he said, ‘the fiery South African Jody Scheckter… if he doesn’t let his ambition kill him.’
Something crossed his mind. He pressed the button. The attendant hurried back in, Ferrari again spoke brusquely, and he returned with a yellow book titled ‘Enzo Ferrari, Ie briglie del successo‘ – the reins of success. I watched, awed, as he signed its fly page in the legendary purple ink. He smiled as he saw my delight. He knew full-well the effect of his action.How did he feel about the Targa Florio’s discontinuation? Ah, he said, rocking back and grinning – what a race! He first drove the 44 miles through the Sicilian mountains, and came ninth, in 1919. In the book he described driving his CMN racer the 900 miles to Sicily. ‘In a blizzard in the Abruzzi mountains we were chased by wolves! They were put to flight by shots from the revolver I kept under the seat.’ He was born of tough times.I’d witnessed the ’73 Targa two weeks earlier, and Ferrari laughed as I recounted watching his 460bhp prototypes roaring past the donkeys, chickens and peasants in practice. Still grinning, he fetched Autosprint from his drawer and flicked to its Targa report. We leaned over it with him as he chuckled at photos of the Porsche Carrera RSRs, Alfa Romeo Type 33TTs and his 312PBs storming through cheering crowds mere feet away. ‘The authorities must have a fit when they see that – not a barrier in sight,’ he said. ‘It’s the only proper race left in Italy.’
A photograph of him, please? No; and Franco signalled that it was time to leave. I picked up my things. Ferrari came up out of his high-backed chair, extended his big firm hand and said arrivederci.But something must have clicked. Perhaps it was because I’d come 13,000 miles from Australia to see the Targa and visit Maranello on my way to London. Whenever I returned, regularly while I was editing CAR and then at Autocar, he’d summon me at day’s end. What did I think of his latest car? I’d tell of stirring blasts through the hills, and he’d lean back in that big chair and grin. In five minutes it’d be over, ended when he buzzed the attendant who’d enter with a gift. A tie, a briefcase, a paper weight, another book to be signed with a flourish. This was how he flattered visitors.Fixed in my mind now is his mix of warmth and chilling brusqueness, his plain-speaking, his pride and utter confidence. He was kind to me but my visits were inconsequential. Those who worked for or dealt with him spoke of his autocracy, ferocious assertiveness, gritty resolve, ruthlessness, explosive temper, foibles, and cunning. ‘I am,’ he said, ‘an agitator of men.’ I saw him last in 1987 at the Ferrari 40th anniversary lunch. When I returned in 1988 to drive the F40, a car that embodied his spirit and touched his soul, he was ill; ten months later, at 90, he was gone. Few have left such a legacy.









































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