The Ferrari Roma Is A €200k GT Missile With 612bhp

After teasing us with some initial details and images, Ferrari has revealed all about its newest family member
The Ferrari Roma Is A €200k GT Missile With 612bhp

Say hello to the latest member of the Ferrari family - the Roma. After dropping some key details and a smattering of images yesterday, Maranello has now given its new coupe the full reveal treatment.

Although its wheelbase matches the Portofino drop-top and the footprint is near enough the same, Ferrari says the Roma sits on an all-new modular platform which will form the basis of multiple future models. Around 70 per cent of the car is new.

The Ferrari Roma Is A €200k GT Missile With 612bhp

The 3.9-litre twin-turbo V8 isn’t entirely fresh, but it has been given some new bits - there’s a reworked exhaust system (which includes gasoline particulate filters) and new camshafts with a higher valve lift. The changes bump the power up to 612bhp, which arrives at 7500rpm. Peak torque of 560lb ft is developed from 3000 to 5750rpm.

Power is sent to the rear wheels exclusively, via an eight-speed dual-clutch gearbox shared with the SF90 hybrid hypercar. It shifts faster than Ferrari’s older seven-speed DCT, and weighs 7kg less.

The Ferrari Roma Is A €200k GT Missile With 612bhp

The Roma is good for a 0-62mph time of 3.4 seconds, while 0-124mph takes just 9.3sec. Those are improvements of a tenth and 1.5sec on the Portofino respectively. We don’t know the top speed just yet, but it should be over 200mph.

Depending on how thoroughly you’d like to send it, there are five different driver settings available via the steering wheel-mounted ‘manettino’. The Roma is the first Ferrari GT to get Side Slip Control 6.0, making heroic-looking drifting disarmingly easy.

The Ferrari Roma Is A €200k GT Missile With 612bhp

The Roma does have a set of rear seats, but from what we saw at the reveal even in Rome, they’re only really fit for kids. It’s not clear at this stage if they’ll be fitted as standard or only available as an optional extra. With the seats up the Roma has 272 litres of boot space, expanding to 345 litres when they’re folded down.

Moving to the more important bit of the cabin, you’ll find a dashboard design unlike anything else used in the current Ferrari lineup. It features a new 8.4-inch portrait infotainment screen, and a 16-inch digital instrument cluster. The latter display and the steering wheel join the gearbox as hand-me-downs from the SF90.

The Ferrari Roma Is A €200k GT Missile With 612bhp

The exterior is described as a “clean design” that’s supposed to exhibit “formal minimalism”. Compared to some of the fussy, outlandish stuff we’ve seen a lot of manufacturers come up with lately (we’re looking at you, BMW), the Roma is a breath of fresh air. That’s not to say Ferrari hasn’t abandoned function completely - the rear windscreen has an integrated active spoiler which pops out at higher speeds to increase downforce, disappearing when not needed to ensure the Roma’s elegant lines aren’t disrupted.

Like what you see? We don’t know how much it’ll cost you in the UK just yet, although judging by its €200,000 pricetag in the Eurozone, we suspect it’ll be £180,000 - £190,000.

Comments

Freddie Skeates

This and a new Dino (mid-ship V6 turbo, ~1300kg, £120-150k) would make up for Ferrari’s impending SUV

11/14/2019 - 14:46 |
38 | 0
Chewbacca_buddy (McLaren squad)(VW GTI Clubsport)(McLaren 60

In reply to by Freddie Skeates

I get that Ferrari wants to print money with the Purosange, but realistically buyers should get a Lusso for a practical Fezza. Lamborghini I understand though because they have no front engine cars or anything that resembles practical, so it’s logical they’d make the Urus, but Ferrari already has practical front engine cars

11/15/2019 - 11:43 |
4 | 0
🎺🎺thank mr skeltal

It’s a great looking car, but the color is definetly not doing it justice. I don’t understand why Ferrari decides to present such a gorgeous car in literally the most boring color any car can have.

11/14/2019 - 14:48 |
16 | 4

Haha I agree. A nice deep candy red or even a blue would have been lovely. And if they wanted to go semi-boring, a nice shiny silver would’ve been cool too

11/14/2019 - 16:12 |
6 | 0

Honestly I don’t mind about the color as long as it’s not pink. But rosso corsa would look great on this.

11/14/2019 - 16:58 |
8 | 0

True, but if you look at the perspective of “minimalist” design. This choice of color goes along with that theme. Probably save the outstanding color for a more crazy design later.

11/14/2019 - 18:06 |
2 | 0

If a car looks great in a sh!tty colour, then you know the designers did a great job.

11/14/2019 - 19:47 |
12 | 2

Agreed, apart from on the second photo, in whinch it looks rather good imo

11/15/2019 - 07:03 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

When the ‘official images’ came out, I really wasn’t sure if I liked the styling.

However, pictures of the actual metal have sort of convinced me. I still reserve judgement but I’ve been swayed.

11/15/2019 - 09:52 |
2 | 2
Anonymous

Stunning looking car.

11/15/2019 - 10:26 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

If some one make a top 10 good looking cars of the 2010’s video or blog post, this should be a good candidate

11/16/2019 - 15:13 |
0 | 0
MrUpshift

All these new models look awful

01/26/2020 - 21:34 |
0 | 0

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