Try GOLD - Free

WILD THING

Motor Trend

|

Spring 2025

FERRARI'S 12 CILINDRI IS ONE OF THE GREATEST FRONT- ENGINE CARS MARANELLO HAS EVER CREATED

- WORDS ANGUS MACKENZIE

WILD THING

Red lights march across the top of the steering wheel rim in lockstep with the ever more intense howl from the big V-12 and an endless surge of acceleration. Then it’s one-two blues and a quick snap of the right-hand paddle to avoid kissing the 9,500-rpm rev limiter. There's a crack from the exhaust as the dual-clutch transmission engages the next gear, and the V-12's howl momentarily changes pitch. But that seemingly endless surge of acceleration continues unabated. We flash past the braking marker at 180 mph. Yeah, the Ferrari 12 Cilindri is awful fast in a straight line.

The speed is hardly surprising, perhaps, given the new 12 Cilindri packs the most powerful V-12 ever installed in a factory-built front-engine Ferrari, a febrile naturally aspirated rev monster that displaces 6.5 liters and produces 818 hp at an almost unimaginable 9,250 rpm, with 500 lb-ft of torque on tap at 7,250 rpm. What is surprising, however, is just how fast this front-engine Ferrari is through the corners. It has the long-hood, cab-rear proportions of classic Ferrari gran turismos such as the 365 GTB/4 Daytona, but it will demolish a winding two-lane road with the sure-footed elan of the mid-engine 296 GTB. Indeed, the Ferrari 12 Cilindri looks like a GT, but it drives like a sports car.

imageGianmaria Fulgenzi, the Italian company's product development chief, says the 12 Cilindri is a Ferrari “for the few.” What he means—apart from the starting price of $464,000 when it arrives in the U.S. this year, ensuring few people will be able to afford one—is it’s a car designed for Ferrari afficionados who lust after Maranello's front-engine V-12s.

MORE STORIES FROM Motor Trend

Motor Trend

Motor Trend

IT MIGHT BE TIME FOR EV CHARGING STATIONS TO OFFER QUICK-TIME BATTERY SWAPS

John and Jane Public aren't warming to electric cars at the rate many in the automotive industry thought they would, and that's mostly because EVs still can't match the cost and convenience of gasoline-powered alternatives.

time to read

5 mins

Fall 2025

Motor Trend

Motor Trend

The F80's Technology Is Wild. Here's How It Works.

Planning for the F80 began in 2018 along with the 499P endurance racer, a car that just won its third consecutive 24 Hours of Le Mans in June.

time to read

4 mins

Fall 2025

Motor Trend

Motor Trend

DESTINATION DAWN

How best to evaluate the Black Badge Spectre, the most powerful Rolls-Royce series-production motorcar ever built by the factory? This was our conundrum when the sleek, 659-hp electric coupe glided into MotorTrend HQ.

time to read

10 mins

Fall 2025

Motor Trend

Motor Trend

FUTURE CARS

“The future is now” has been used for decades to describe advancements in myriad walks of life, industry, and technology, but the phrase feels more accurate today than ever before.

time to read

10 mins

Fall 2025

Motor Trend

Motor Trend

THE PURE MICHIGAN SUV COMPARISON TEST

Comparison tests don't get more Pure Michigan than this one. These luxury SUVs were all primarily designed and developed in southeast Michigan by the Detroit Three.

time to read

9 mins

Fall 2025

Motor Trend

Motor Trend

SMOOTH BUT GLITCHY

We're less than a year away from seeing “millions” of autonomous Teslas roaming the globe, if Elon Musk’s April earnings call prognostications hold true. How’s Full Self-Driving Unsupervised going? To find out, we flew to the first test market, Austin, Texas, and caught seven rides in the initial Model Y Robotaxi. (Austin is unique among American cities in offering a choice of autonomous ride-hailing services, as Waymo has a fleet of its Jaguar I-Pace cars available via the Uber app. So we resolved to attempt a comparison, beginning on page 86.) Note Tesla’s Robotaxi is not to be confused with its two-door Cybercab; rather, it’s based on a long-range dual-motor 2026 Model Y Juniper.

time to read

6 mins

Fall 2025

Motor Trend

Motor Trend

More Than a Charging Station, More Than a Fast-Food Joint, the Tesla Diner Might Just Be Crazy Enough to Work

In case you need the reminder, car companies don't own and operate restaurants. Then again, they don't own and operate gas stations, either, and Tesla has proven owning and operating its own charging network was a brilliant business decision. The Tesla Diner, though, is uncharted territory. Will history repeat itself?

time to read

3 mins

Fall 2025

Motor Trend

Motor Trend

NOT WHAT YOU

IT'S PATENTLY ABSURD, BUT THE 1,064-HP CORVETTE ZR1 ISN'T AN OUT-OF-CONTROL WIDOWMAKER

time to read

10 mins

Fall 2025

Motor Trend

Motor Trend

Think Hard If You Really Want A 2023 Kia Sorento PHEV

We won't pretend this is your average family SUV. The handsome yet unassuming Sorento PHEV we drove for a year occupies an area in the market as gray as its paint.

time to read

3 mins

Fall 2025

Motor Trend

Motor Trend

JUST, WOW

FERRARI'S LATEST SUPERCAR EMBODIES EVERYTHING THE ITALIAN RACING AND SPORTS CAR COMPANY HAS LEARNED IN 80 YEARS

time to read

7 mins

Fall 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size