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Everyone has their unicorn. You know, the item they’ve lusted after their whole life yet never had the chance to sample: one of Elijah Craig’s “Old” bourbons, a PRS Private Stock Super Eagle guitar, a steel Patek Philippe Nautilus. For yours truly, it’s less a single product than a very thin category of them: the front-engined, V12 Ferrari sports car. From the day I spotted the 550 Maranello on the cover of a dog-eared copy of Motor Trend in the middle school library, well, that was it; it had me. I read that magazine over and over again for a year. Some guys taped pictures of girls to their Ti-83+ graphing calculators in high school; I had one of the Ferrari 575M. When I moved to New York for college, I walked past the Ferrari showroom on Park Avenue every week, waiting for a 599 GTB to nest there. I checked FerrariChat four times a day in the months leading up to the F12berlinetta‘s 2012 reveal, scanning for any leaked detail or spy photo.
Then, in September 2019, after a decade of writing about cars for a living and a quarter-century of lusting after Ferrari’s wares…the unicorn finally showed up at my doorstep in the form of the Ferrari 812 Superfast.
Say Hello to the 812 Superfast
In casual conversation, it quickly becomes habit to drop the awkward numbers that make up this stallion’s middle name. It’s not only more succinct, it makes the point with brutal simplicity; My car? It’s a Ferrari Superfast.
Those numbers, however, signify real stats: the 12 signifies the number of pistons pumping away in the bow, while the 8 stands for how many hundreds of horses that motor develops at full whack. Of course, those are metric ponies, each of which is worth just 0.986 of an American one; in imperial units, the 812 Superfast is rated at 789 horsepower.
That figure, by the way, is achieved without any steroidal supercharging or hybridized juicing; the Ferrari’s engine is naturally aspirated, just like almost every 12-cylinder Prancing Horse production car to gallop out of Maranello since 1952. But likely not like any will be again, though; even Ferrari can’t escape the automotive world’s push towards earth-friendlier powerplants. Whenever the 812 goes gently into that good night, its successor will all but certainly come with an electric motor tacked between engine and wheels.