markp wrote:majicmeow wrote:With the 458, the fires generally started due to overheated adhesives in the area of the exhaust. The adhesive would drip/run onto the hot exhaust and cause a fire.
I suspect that tight packaging, hot engines and insufficient cooling of not only the engine, but the engine bay are the biggest contributors to supercar fires.
Also, because it comes from Italy
Beautiful and fast but not very reliable
Ah of course as it's from Italy...Toyota being ultra reliable Japanese never had the biggest recall in automotive history with sticking throttles or the British. The British have no major car companies of their own as they produced the most unreliable cars in history. British Leyland a stain on the myth of British engineering. All other British brands are foreign owned and better for it. TVR anyone?. Porsche engines have a small bearing issue on 996 engines and Boxster engines. Please do not bring nationality into it. If you have to at least go after the biggest reliability culprits The Beitish. Theres a reason they have nothing of their own left.
Sorry cannot let this run.
Of course all nations building cars have had reliability issues and recalls and the British motor industry suffered a large number, mainly from union created bad practice and the inability of government to run car companies.
Italy has had many similar problems over the years.
Ferrari however has had fire problems with its cars both road and race throughout its history.
It is not an easy problem to fully solve but you would have thought they would have come close by now.
One problem IMO is the power train concept in Le Ferrari which reminds me of a horizontal block of flats crammed into a very small space, a fire waiting to happen.