![Crying or Very sad :cry:](./images/smilies/icon_cry.gif)
Here are two cars. Which one would you rather have?
![Image](http://image.motortrend.com/f/wot/serious-money-35-million-1962-ferrari-250-gto-is-worlds-most-expensive-car-213797/59261062/1936-type-57sc-bugatti-atlantic-with-veyron.jpg)
Left one. Right one is beautiful but the other one will deform my face every time i press the happy pedal.MOWOG wrote:Here are two cars. Which one would you rather have?
http://image.motortrend.com/f/wot/serio ... veyron.jpg
So Hitler was right, you can build a car for under £100.SectorOne wrote:Left one. Right one is beautiful but the other one will deform my face every time i press the happy pedal.MOWOG wrote:Here are two cars. Which one would you rather have?
http://image.motortrend.com/f/wot/serio ... veyron.jpg
Maybe this is more up your alley? i have to say i love it.
http://i.imgur.com/K7QPXe4.jpg
And I was thinking it was most powerful and fastest car ever (when it was released) with some interesting innovation like carbon fiber survival cell replacing traditional frame... stupid me!autogyro wrote:This thing is simply a modern cheat stealing from past glory and using brute force to baffle the masses.
The 612 is understandably not popular. It's a 2+2 and those are the Ferraris that no one wants. It's also a huge, bulky car with somewhat awkward design.bhall wrote: ↑07 Mar 2013, 22:34I think the 612 is criminally underrated, and it's easily the most frequent subject of my dream car fantasies. It was never the fastest car in the world or even the fastest Ferrari of its own time. But, it has quiet, understated charisma, a timeless elegance that will never look out of place. I'd feel more at home behind the wheel of a six-speed example of this car than I would in anything subsequently released in its range and above.Pup wrote:[...]
For sheer beauty, I'd probably go for an Aston, or perhaps the no longer produced Ferrari 612.
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It's all highly subjective anyway, and that's what makes cars like this art. I was told by a professor in college that "art is that which exists only to serve itself." In other words, art makes a statement. No one will ever need a supercar. But, there will always be a market for them, because there will always be people who want to make such statements.
I would suggest that Ferrari, specifically, for quite a while now, have not focused on numbers and limits but rather on driving experience.Andres125sx wrote: ↑30 Aug 2014, 20:11I agree some vintage cars are absolutely amazing and unique...
https://inspirationalplusawesome.files. ... -3-mil.jpg
http://www.indiancarsbikes.in/wp-conten ... dster1.jpg
http://www.ultimatecarpage.com/images/l ... 0-P3_3.jpg
http://www.supercars.net/gallery/119513/2446/939994.jpg
But I can´t say modern cars are all similar bricks...
Not at all!![]()
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http://www.imgbase.info/images/safe-wal ... lpaper.jpg
http://ag-spots-2014.o.auroraobjects.eu ... 5544_8.jpg
http://www.rsportscars.com/eng/articles ... 1_1600.jpg
http://www.autopista.es/media/cache/art ... b5d948.jpg
We humans are very prone to glorify past times. Also, when you love a car for some decades, it becomes a myth. Modern cars can´t compete with that... yet
Anycase I agree today they focus too much on perfomance, when 99.99% of people will never test their limits. No sense.
I don't think this can be overstated. All these complaints about "computers doing the designing" and "regulation" are really misunderstanding the nature of capitalist fear of alienating the broadest possible customer base. Cars today look generic because they're designed by focus groups and committees to be manufactured at the highest margin, and have the broadest possible appeal. Ferrari is not innocent in its Try-Hard aesthetic committee trash. 90% of the "aerodynamic" features of these cars are about as useful as the scoops ahead of the rear wheels on the famously front engined Mustangs. I'm absolutely floored by how people buy into all these marketing lines.Pup wrote: ↑07 Mar 2013, 16:52I think you're mistaking marketing hype for actual aerodynamics. McLaren, only for example, go on about form and function, but it's all complete BS, which is why neither of their new cars really grab you like the old F1. They did begin the 12c that way, but the result was bland and they knew it, so they hired Frank Stephenson away from FIAT to give it some bling. Then they unleashed him on the P1. By bland, of course, I don't mean ugly - just not different/new/exciting/etc. I think many would call the final 12c bland as well, crescent shaped everything notwithstanding.autogyro wrote:Aero designs on computer have gone a long way in destroying that art and have done for decades now.
Not that I hate either of those cars - the 12c or the P1 - just that to me they aren't really beautiful, in any respect of the word.
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