And it is at "NO RESERVE"
I remember a real LM used to show up at the Virginia City Hillclimb many years ago, late '80's. I always got a thrill watching it take off from the line. I have some photos of it some where. It was owned by a doctor and he drove it to the event. The good old days.
Yellow? Then probably Lou Sellyei. If I remember correctly he is/was from the Reno area so it wasn't far. 5909 was driven from the Bay Area at least once. Jeff
Yes, that was the owner and it was yellow. I believe he had some other nice cars also. Someday I'll drag out my old photos and scan them. There was a real CA Spyder there along with the LM one year.
Dear Ferrarichatters, I don't own a Ferrari...but I was noised from the legal protection of the brand "Ferrari" they made around all take this name. I'm a modeler and the price was higher than in the past because only the autorized factory may produce a model! What about real cars, real repro cars, sold at those high prices, and noising the vintage real market? Why the Ferrari don't act again this kind of things? Ferrari doesn't like modelers? refards, Alessandro
Slightly OT, but I gotta say...that LM Stradale is maybe the best looking F car ever. I know the owner is on Fchat- mroz?
Wow, I can't believe that we're all getting so positively excited over a replica. Agreed, a very nice one, still with (as mentioned) its' faults, but nevertheless a very nice car indeed. I'd also like to see more details and descriptions. I suspect they left the sparewheel in the car with the engine-bay photo to hide the transaxle... I also find some of the photos to be shot from 'strange' angles, and hope that RM will show the car from the more usual angles when they publish a little more information.
Personally I don't find any of these cars hard to drive or scary. They are fragile and one should keep that in mind before you do something stupid. On the street I've found mufflers, electric cooling fans, better alternators and a good battery help. I really don't think you could build a "Clone" for what you can buy a replica for. If you're interested in this one talk to and call Shelby Meyer at RM. He's a good guy. I'd also have DK help you with a PPI and sort should you buy it. Talk to David. Feel free to mention my name to those guys.
Oh please please don't wait. Drag out those pics now and give us a look see. thanks just one man's opinion tongascrew
Yes, Lou Sellyei ran the yellow LM for years at many events. Sorry, it was so common (!)that I didn't take pix, but here are a few of the California at V.C. 1975. S/N 3293, I think. Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
So if you tried to drive this car in Italy would they impound and crush it?? I wonder what Ferrari's views on a replica being advertised as a Ferrari are...... It does look like a beautiful car.
They most certainly would; thereby rightly (IMO) and legally destroying an unauthorized fake. In Italy, thank God and the Italian legislators, there are no Ferrari collections riddled with fakes passed as authentic. When you see a great car, you now it's real. In Switzerland, on the other hand...
A great looking car, and the owner had the brilliant idea to add an extra Ferrari script on the nose. This avoids confusion and kindly reminds us which automotive brand the prancing horse stands for.
Jeff, I don't remember making that comment about Phil. He might spin once in a new car but it would never happen again unless there was a mechanical failure. He was always aware of a vehicle's vices and the reason he never drew blood in a race car was his deep rooted sense of self preservation. I might have said to keep your foot in it if the tail came out but could steer with the throttle and it didn't take much to break it loose. It was better behaved on faster bends. They look great. Someone here thought the LM was a better handling car than the GTO. They were faster as each new generation is almost always an improvement. I've had the good fortune to put many miles on both and there is no comparison. It's not for nothing that GTOs are at the $28M mark. I can't remember but LMs are in the $4.5/5M for a good reason. Regards, Chuck
Chuck, Yes, your comment to me was a warning on how to keep me from doing anything too stupid with the car and not about Phil. Jeff
I think better handling is not the right term. More traditional or more forgiving handling might be a better term. GTO's are more expensive because any old fool can drive one (heck even I could ) and there are many, many classic events thery can be used in, from wine tours to track events. Pete
What is the stainless steel cylinder in the engine bay of the California Spyder? Also, it looks like he chromed the heat shields over the headers. Owner definately liked a bit of bling.
UPDATE: My mistake, an LM (5845) went for $7,035,600 at RM's Ferrari Leggenda Passione on May 18, 2008 in Maranello. CQ