So, a fun and interesting day. Drove to an executive airport, where the Ferrari folks had two helicopters waiting. There were about six people in our group, plus a couple of guests. The helicopter ride was surprisingly smooth and fun (I’ve never been in one before).
The cars were waiting:
The Portofino is a big improvement on the California, they’ve cleaned up the rear end, and overall the car (which is completely new, shares no body parts with the old Cali) is lovely.
We did some driving on some country roads. The car has a great ride—firm but comfortable even in sport mode. The engine is insane—torque everywhere in every gear, and of course a wonderful exhaust note. Jury is out on the steering, which is electronic. I was spoiled by the manual steering on the Lotus, and the Aston is hydraulic, not electronic. I’d need more time with it, but initial reaction is it’s quite good, but doesn’t have the feel of a non-electronic rack, or even as good a feel as the electronic rack on my Panamera. Would that stop me from buying it? No. Quality, fit and finish were impeccable, although it has a different vibe than the Aston.
We then got taken to a private airstrip, where they had cordoned off one of the runways. We each got to go up to a set of cones and floor it, keeping it floored (if the person was willing, which of course I was) until another set of cones, at which time you lifted and started braking. Even without using launch control and letting the dual clutch tranny (which felt as good as the Porsche’s PDK), the thing was insanely quick. I saw an indicated 125 mph before I had to lift, and the car wasn’t breaking a sweat.
Would I buy one? Yes, far more practical and less overtly over the top than a 488 or a McClaren 720s, less gadgetry, and 50% less money.
Of course, it’s most likely an academic exercise, but it sure was fun.
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