Re: Spec-ing Our A New Ferrari Order [Ferrari Digest, Vol 26, Issue 37] | <– Date –> <– Thread –> |
From: Steve Jenkins (steve![]() |
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Date: Sun, 21 Sep 2008 19:10:19 -0700 (PDT) |
Ok - here's my two cents, Adam: 1) If you don't care about depreciation, then just get EXACTLY what you want, with no regard to what anyone else (especially a future owner) will like. A few have already said this, and I agree. 2) To minimize deprecation, here's want you want: -Rosso Corsa (aka "Resale Red") - Tan interior (or black, if you must) - F1 Transmission - Shields - Carbon brakes - Red brake calipers - As many carbon fiber trim pieces as they will put on it - Racing seats? Your call. They won't make much difference one way or the other. - Spider or coupe? Again - your call. They are different cars. Get the one you want. So you may want to go somewhere in the middle of these two extremes. Regardless of what you do, when it arrives, DRIVE IT and enjoy in good health! SJ -----Original Message----- From: Adam [mailto:flatcrank [at] gmail.com] Sent: Sunday, September 21, 2008 6:24 PM To: Steve Jenkins Cc: The FerrariList Subject: Re: [Ferrari] Spec-ing Our A New Ferrari Order [Ferrari Digest,Vol 26, Issue 37] On Sep 21, 2008, at 12:59 PM, BRIGANDBAR [at] aol.com wrote: > Adam: > > The quick and dirty of it is you are making a significant cash > outflow on > the car anyway you look at it and I would suggest that you figure > out whatever > makes you happy and equip it exactly that way. I know there are a > lot of > experts who can advise you on which options will reward you with > the best payback, > but IMNSHO shopping for a niche car, as Ferraris are and most > probably > always will be (at least if the factory can make it work that way, > I understand > that they like to produce ~5k cars/yr. but also are concerned about > keeping the > in-line time to ~2 yrs. so as to not discourage potential new car > buyers and > cause them to divert to something such as a Lamborghini), and as I > believe > it was Clyde said, the dealers always love to have the buyer take > an in-stock > used (e.g. trade in from another new car buyer) car to drive in the > interim > until their newly positioned order is filled). I guess that's the long and the short of it! If I run the numbers and examine the real cost too closely, well, I'd probably just drive my Prius ... but I have a pretty clear picture of the consequences of spending $200K on a car and the lease burden or the cost of opportunity in having cash parked in a Ferrari are manageable, the one thing I'd like to get away from is the depreciation curve. At least to stay higher on the curve. As noted, Ferraris, especially the 360's and 430's, have become somewhat numerous and the upside of recent production has been quality and lower operating costs. From my last three cars, I know my mileage habits have changed a lot in the last few years, so I feel I'm finally in a position to have a car that I don't expect to rack up the 10K+ miles per year I was tending to drive as recently as about five years ago. I floated the "let's go to the selection of used cars you have or know you can acquire and pick out something" but it just didn't seem to matter in the grand scheme. This particular dealer is much more concerned about selling the new cars and the only "sweetener" might be a Maserati or the California (both of which I'm prepared to mix into the deal, but again, it's only a sweetener, it doesn't help me get any closer to car like a Scuderia, where the number of "deserving" customers far outnumbers the available production.) I hope this first F430 takes me towards the "next" Scuderia -- that's about all I can expect at this point. No complaints there. > > I would add that given the size of the investment, why not just > consider a > trip to the factory before the due date for bespoking (bespeaking?) > the car and > examine things from a close-up perspective? I think that the trip > may be the > best investment you can make in terms of getting exactly what you > want, and > seeing what is available. I don't know how the Ferrari dealers feel > about > this, but colleague (who married into far more wealth than I shall > ever see) is > in the process of ordering a new Phantom and was encouraged to make > a trip to > Greenwood before finalizing the bespoke order on that car. This way > you can > see exactly how each of the options look and feel, and can get the > answer as > to whether you exact requests can be fulfilled or if a compromise > that also > makes you happy can be had. This is a great idea -- visiting the factory ahead of the order. I tried to get into one of the driving schools, but that's strictly for owners and I was told the factory visits are also restricted, but with an order in the system and my deposit on the books, a factory visit might not be out of the question. Thanks for the idea -- I don't know why I didn't think of it, but I'll pursue this with the dealer this week and see what's possible. Cheers, _________________________________________________________________ To unsubscribe or modify your subscription options, please visit: http://lists.ferrarilist.com/mailman/options/ferrari/steve%40stevejenkins.co m Sponsored by BooyahMedia.com and F1 Headlines http://www.F1Headlines.com/
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Re: Spec-ing Our A New Ferrari Order [Ferrari Digest, Vol 26, Issue 37] BRIGANDBAR, September 21 2008
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Re: Spec-ing Our A New Ferrari Order [Ferrari Digest, Vol 26, Issue 37] Adam, September 21 2008
- Re: Spec-ing Our A New Ferrari Order [Ferrari Digest, Vol 26, Issue 37] Steve Jenkins, September 21 2008
- Re: Spec-ing Our A New Ferrari Order [Ferrari Digest, Vol 26, Issue 37] Adam, September 21 2008
- Re: Spec-ing Our A New Ferrari Order [Ferrari Digest, Vol 26, Issue 37] clyderomero, September 22 2008
- Re: Spec-ing Our A New Ferrari Order [Ferrari Digest, Vol 26, Issue 37] Adam, September 22 2008
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Re: Spec-ing Our A New Ferrari Order [Ferrari Digest, Vol 26, Issue 37] Adam, September 21 2008
- Re: Spec-ing Our A New Ferrari Order [Ferrari Digest, Vol 26, Issue 37] Charles Perry, September 22 2008
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