Driven! The 2025 Ferrari 12 Cilindri Is One of the Wildest Front-Engine Ferraris Ever!
This Italian shape shifter looks like a GT but drives like a super sports car.Red lights march across the top of the steering wheel rim in lockstep with the ever more intense howl from the big V-12 engine 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 2025 Ferrari 12 Cilindri is awful fast in a straight line.
0:00 / 0:00
What Is It?
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.
The Hardware
Gianmaria Fulgenzi, the Italian company’s product development chief, says the 2025 Ferrari 12 Cilindri is a Ferrari “for the few.” What he means is—apart from the fact the 12 Cilindri coupé will start at $464,000 (including destination) when it arrives in the U.S. in the first quarter of 2025, so few of us will be able to afford one—is that it’s a car designed for Ferrari afficionados who lust after Maranello’s front-engine V-12s.
The front-engine V-12 is, of course, Ferrari’s most famous vehicle format. Ferrari’s first road cars in 1947 were front-engine V-12s, though their engines displaced a mere 1.5 liters. Ironically, the new 12 Cilindri’s engine, codenamed F140HD, is an evolution of the 65-degree V-12 originally designed for the mid-engine Ferrari Enzo of the early 2000s. Although Ferrari engineers describe it as a comprehensive rework of the F140HC used in the 812 Superfast, many of the F140HD’s performance-enhancing components and technologies were previewed two years ago in the high-revving V-12 that powered Ferrari’s extraordinary, limited edition, mid-engine SP3 Daytona and subsequently used in the 812 Competizione.
Those enhancers include titanium connecting rods that are 40 percent lighter than equivalent steel items, new pistons that are 2 percent lighter, and a rebalanced crankshaft that’s 3 percent lighter, according to Ferrari. The sliding-finger cam followers actuating the engine’s 48 valves are another key performance enabler, a low-mass, low-friction technology borrowed from Ferrari’s Formula 1 engines. Fuel is pumped into the combustion chambers via a high-pressure direct-injection system running at 350 bar, and a new exhaust system features equal-length headers that feed into the ceramic catalytic converters and particulate filters that help the engine meet emissions regulations in the U.S., Europe, and China beyond 2026.
Drive is sent to the rear wheels via a new eight-speed dual-clutch transaxle transmission. This gives the 2025 Ferrari 12 Cilindri an extra gear beyond the 812 models, which allowed Ferrari to change the transmission’s ratios—they are the same as those used in the SF90, the 296 GTB, and the Purosangue—and increase the torque transmitted to the rear wheels by 12 percent while reducing shift times by 30 percent.
The new transmission, combined with the revised final-drive ratio in the e-differential that’s carried over from the 812, means the 12 Cilindri’s gearing is 5 percent shorter than that of the Superfast in the lower gears, despite it rolling on 21-inch wheels shod with either Michelin Pilot Sport S5 or Goodyear Eagle F1 Supersport tires, the first time Ferrari has offered a Goodyear as original equipment on one of its cars in more than 30 years. The tire sizes are staggered, of course, measuring 275/35 R21 at the front and 315/35 R21 at the rear.
The 12 Cilindri has rear-wheel steering, but each wheel can be steered independently of the other. Although the 12 Cilindri shares much of its suspension and braking hardware with the 812, the chassis, made up of aluminum extrusions and castings, is all new, with a wheelbase that’s 0.78 inch shorter and delivers 15 percent better torsional rigidity.
The 12 Cilindri’s chassis hardware is overseen by the latest iteration of Ferrari’s innovative vehicle dynamics control system, Side Slip Control (SSC) 8.0, key elements of which include a six-axis vehicle-motion sensor, plus the brake-by-wire ABS Evo system that made its debut on the 296 GTB and what Ferrari calls Version 2.0 of the 296 GTB’s grip estimation system, which enables the car to figure out grip levels, even on wheels that are being steered, 10 percent quicker than before.




