Bloomberg
The main thing Ferrari will tell you about the 2021 Ferrari SF90 Stradale is how much of a bargain it is.
The arithmetic requires some squinting around the edges of elitism and a healthy injection of relative logic. It goes like this: The two-door coupe is the second hybrid from Modena, Italy’s crown jewel, the first being the La Ferrari of 2013. That car, which had 950 horsepower, cost more than $1.2 million when it debuted, and examples sell for $4 million (and an additional million for the convertible version). The new SF90 Stradale, with 986 horsepower, starts at the breezy bargain basement price of $507,300.
The SF90 Stradale has a 4.0-liter, twin-turbocharged V8 engine that generates 769 horsepower, while three electric motors provide an additional 217 horsepower. This is the first two-seat Ferrari to be equipped with four wheel drive.
And while the La Ferrari was limited to 499 units sold, plus one auctioned for charity, the SF90 is a veritable car for the masses, with no production limit set at all.
If you buy the SF90 Stradale, expect it to split your friends between those who offend you with blunt comments and those who lie to your face. It is a polarising car, which has everything to do with how it looks—not about the powerplant.
Post a photo on social media, or plow through Beverly Hills traffic, and you may be told that it looks just like everything from the Alfa Romeo 8C to a generic Lotus —or even just that it stole McLaren’s headlights and a Lamborghini nose. And then there will be a host of smart alecs who find themselves duty bound to grace you with their totally original and really brilliant observation that it looks like the Chevrolet Corvette C8.
This car is extreme in every way, so of course that’s reflected in its styling. Eat this: With 1000cv and at a dry weight of 3,461 pounds, it has a weight-to-power ratio of 1.57 kg/cv and produces 390 kg of downforce at 250 km/h—which, for the first time ever at Ferrari, puts a V8 engine, not a V12, at the most powerful and fastest of the production model range. It adds an eighth gear to the dual-clutch automatic transmission and adds 20% torque over its predecessor, but the gearbox still weighs 10kg less. It has brand-new actuation hydraulics that cut clutch times to 200 ms. (Compare that to the 488 Pista’s 300 ms.)
Meanwhile, a high-performance Li-ion battery provides power to all three motors and guarantees a 25 kilometer range in all-electric mode, using just the front axle. Top speed is 211mph; it can go to 62mph in 2.5 seconds. The push to such great speeds feels instant; thank the electric motor gods for that.
The SF90 offers a six-speaker sound system, Bluetooth phone and streaming audio, real-time traffic, and an integrated navigation system with a voice
activation feature.
The split nose and upturned grin of the hood, the dorsal fin on the roof, the unique placement of the rear air vents, and the big lip on the rear assist its spaceship-like speeds. The fan-like blades of the aluminum wheels work to cool the brake calipers while looking … cool.
On the downside, the track package does not offer the lift system that raises the nose of the car infinitesimally to help ease it over driveway dips and the like, which is a big reason not to buy the $56,240 extra required to have the package. The cost to replace scraped facia on the SF90 will easily crest multiple thousands of dollars, but the biggest expense will be the time lost while the car sits in the shop.
The new ignition key has the same design as the Roma’s, which is gradually being implemented across the range. Thanks to a special compartment in the central tunnel between the front seats, it looks good as part of the interior design of the car.
And since this is a bargain car suitable almost as a daily driver for some customers, while the truly special Ferraris sit in the garage, we might as well forgo upgrades that cost money while adding inconveniences.
Ferrari has added a “Human-Machine Interface†that is a complete departure from previous models; you will be forced to use a tiny square touchpad on the steering wheel and a series of haptic buttons to control virtually every aspect of the car—with your thumbs.
The dude Ferrari has paired me with for the purposes of this drive tries to explain it as an “eyes on the road, hands on the wheel†approach. But you can have eyes on the road, hands on the wheel without making drivers repeatedly jam their digits harder and harder on a screen to activate some minute pixel in order to change the radio station.
Even the start process for the SF90 Stradale takes some adjusting; it requires touching an icon on the steering wheel once, then twice. Since the car is so quiet when it starts, it can be confusing to know after the first touch whether it has started or not. This results in more tapping, then a push—and before you know it, the car has turned itself off.
Adjusting the side mirrors via a touchscreen implanted on the side of the steering wheel. Throwing the car in reverse via a tiny “What is this thing, made for ants?!†strip of metal meant to resemble an old-school gated shifter in the center console. These are not fun things.
Thankfully, the “Manettino†dial on the steering wheel is still knob-oriented, though it has been half digitized as it scrolls through electric vehicle dynamics modes—and is now supposed to be called the “eManettino,†says Ferrari.
There are also four driving modes in the SF90 Stradale—EV, Hybrid, Performance, and Qualify, which bring us to the place where this car excels: driving. Because you are going to want to really drive this hybrid sucker and keep driving it for a long time to come.
The visibility from the drivers’ seat exceeded that of many supercars of the same caliber; cabin noise was appropriately loud but not deafening. Don’t plan on storing anything in this car, ever. There’s really no room.
The sheer power of the car makes it fast, the Formula 1-derived engineering makes it precise, and the sound and feel of the blasting V8 when it kicks into gear make it a highly emotional experience. But I found that I liked using electric mode best when driving the SF90 in town. Somehow, it seemed more interesting, more progressive, more elegant, and more unique than the dirty old internal combustion engines it had left in the dust on the highway.
With an electric-only mode of 15 miles, it didn’t feel like a pure EV or a real bargain—but it certainly left me looking forward to more.