Design Designed by Pininfarina in collaboration with
Frank Stephenson (Director of Ferrari-Maserati Concept Design and Development), the body styling of the F430 was revised from its predecessor, the 360, to improve its aerodynamic efficiency. Although the drag coefficient remained the same, the downforce was greatly enhanced. Despite sharing the same basic
Alcoa Aluminium chassis, roofline, doors, and glass, the car looked significantly different from the 360. A great extent of Ferrari heritage was included in the exterior design. At the rear, the
Enzo's tail lights and engine cover vents were added. The car's name was etched on the
Testarossa-styled driver's side mirror.
Engine The F430 features a
V8 engine of the
"Ferrari-Maserati" F136 family. This new power plant was a significant change for Ferrari, as all previous Ferrari V8's were descendants of the
Dino racing program of the 1950s. This fifty-year development cycle came to an end with the entirely new engine used in the F430, the architecture of which replaced the Dino-derived
V12 in most other Ferrari cars. The engine's output specifications are: , at 8,500 rpm and of torque at 5,250 rpm, 80% of which is available below 3,500 rpm. Despite a 20% increase in displacement, engine weight grew by only along with a decrease in diameter for easier packaging. The connecting rods, pistons and crankshaft were all entirely new, while the
4-valve cylinder head, valves and intake trumpets were directly retained from Formula 1 engines, for ideal volumetric efficiency. The F430 has a top speed in excess of and can accelerate from 0 to in 3.6 seconds, 0.6 seconds quicker than the old model.
Brakes The brakes on the F430 were developed in close cooperation with
Brembo and
Bosch, resulting in a new cast-iron alloy for the discs. The new alloy includes
molybdenum which has a better heat dissipation performance. The F430 was also available with the optional
Carbon fibre-reinforced Silicon Carbide (C/SiC)
ceramic composite brake package. Ferrari claimed the carbon ceramic brakes will not fade even after 300-360 laps at their test track.
Features The F430 featured the
E-Diff, a computer-controlled
limited slip active differential which can vary the distribution of torque based on inputs such as steering angle and lateral acceleration. Other notable features include the first application of Ferrari's
manettino steering wheel-mounted control knob. In the US, the company requested an exemption from the airbag design requirements, which was eventually granted, allowing the car to continue to be sold in the US. ==Variants==