Ferrari Portofino Waves Goodbye to California in Frankfurt
Hard-top convertible model finds more focus
Ferrari boss Sergio Marchionne admits he didn't know what to make of the California, the V-8 powered GT with the retractable hard top that his predecessor Luca di Montezemolo launched with great fanfare as a car that would make the Prancing Horse more accessible to a whole new group of customers, especially women. "I like the car very much," Marchionne said at the Geneva Show earlier this year, "but it is the one that from an identity standpoint has the hardest time seeing itself as a full-blown Ferrari."
Should the California be more focused, he was asked, with more emphasis on performance? "I'm not sure there is a customer for this," he replied bluntly.
So what, then, are we to make of the 2018 Ferrari Portofino, which goes on sale in the U.S. next summer, priced from about $211,000? The Portofino not only shares some parts and its basic architecture with the California, but it's also conceptually similar, being a front-engine V-8 grand tourer with a retractable hard top. And it's also more performance oriented, with the 3.9-liter twin-turbo V-8 under the hood tweaked to deliver 591 hp at 7,500 rpm—38 more horses than the version that powered the California T.

The Portofino is also 162 pounds lighter than the California T, thanks to a heavy rework of the basic platform. The A-pillar, for example, comprises just two pieces instead of the 21 used in the California. More power and less weight means more performance, and the Portofino's 0-60-mph acceleration time of less than 3.5 seconds is at least a second better than that of the California T, and its top speed is comfortably above 200 mph. Sounds like a more focused California to us ...
And it doesn't stop there. The front springs have been stiffened 15.5 percent and the rears 19 percent, and the latest iteration of Magnaride dampers have been fitted to help better control body motions and reduce roll. The Portofino has also been fitted with Ferrari's third-generation E-Diff, which works in conjunction with the F1-Trac traction control system to improve cornering grip, and joins the 812 Superfast in having electronic power steering. The steering is 7 percent sharper than in the California.
















