This article was first published in 2005.
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Ferraris have a reputation for speed. Pure, simple speed. But when Tony X
pulls alongside you’d better be prepared to witness something totally
dumbfounding. The speed of this prancing horse will challenge your grasp of
physics!
You’re looking at a regularly street driven Ferrari that punches out 450kW at
the back wheels and can howl down the quarter mile in 10.9 seconds - on street
tyres!
Step aside McLaren F1!
Tony is no stranger to performance. He’s owned a Ferrari 348 Spider, various
Porsches (including a low 11 second 944 Turbo) and he also owns a drag racer - a Camaro Top
Door Slammer. His F355 Spider was purchased brand new back in 1996 and was the
second to arrive in the country (it was originally flown in for the 1996
Brisbane Motor Show).
The F355 is powered by a 283kW (380hp) 3.5 litre V8 running
5-valve-per-cylinder heads, individual throttle bodies and lightweight titanium
rods. It’s also one of the first models to bring full under-car aerodynamics
into production. Tony says the F355 was a great machine back in the late ‘90s
but he soon grew blasé about its standard performance. This was made worse by
the fact that emerging performance cars (such as HSV LS1s) were offering
performance scarily close to the mighty Ferrari.
Time to fix that situation!
Tony says he investigated turbo and supercharger kits from all over the world
but the high cost - and the fact that the car would need to be shipped overseas
- were major turn-offs. It was local tuning workshop – Nizpro - that got the job
of breathing boost into the Italian Stallion.
Turbocharging a Ferrari was a project that Simon of Nizpro grabbed with both
hands. We’re told that the conversion was pretty straight-forward - the only
out-of-the-ordinary step was the requirement to fabricate a custom muffler to
suit the available space.
Simon’s initial assessment of the project was “it’ll be a piece of piss.”
The 11.5:1 compression ratio engine was to remain intact which means mild
boost pressure and careful engine mapping were essential. Simon used a pair of
modified HKS 25/30 turbochargers that are mounted on custom manifolds. He
chose to mount the turbochargers at the rear of the engine compartment about one
metre away from the exhaust ports. This seems less than ideal from a turbo lag
point of view but we’re assured the engine is very responsive. The exhaust
manifolds use 1 ½ inch primaries leading into 1 3/4 inch pipes to the turbos. A
single Turbosmart 48mm external wastegate is also integrated into the new
manifold arrangement. An oil feed for the turbos was inserted into a
distribution block that branches out to the factory oil cooler.
Due to limited space beneath the turbos, Nizpro fabricated a custom muffler
which comprises inlets in the centre topside of the muffler body and outlets at
each end on the bottom. It’s a straight-through design to give maximum gas
flow.
Induction air is filtered by a pair of K&N filters mounted on the turbo
compressor mouths while boosted air is flung through a pair of custom side-mount
intercoolers. These intercoolers are fed cooling air from the F355’s side
intakes while electric fans draw air through the cores to maintain cool
charge-temps in traffic. Twin Bosch blow-off valves (ex Ford XR6 Turbo) route
air back to the compressor inlets on gear changes.
Fuel delivery is provided by 60lb Siemens injectors, a stock Ferrari
regulator and a Bosch Motorsport fuel pump. The upgraded injectors and pump are
required to maintain a 12.8:1 air-fuel ratio at the engine’s current power
output. Fuel and (standard) ignition are controlled by a top-line MoTeC M800 ECU.
The M800 is also used to activate the intercooler fans above a preset intake air
temperature and limits engine speed to 9500 rpm. It seems that the engine will
happily keep making power beyond 10,000 rpm - but nobody wants to pick up the
pieces when the mechanical limits are found...
With boost pressure set to 14 psi and tuned to run pump 98 RON fuel, the F355
TT has spat out 450kW at the wheels on Nizpro’s DynoLog chassis dyno. The top
section of this dyno printout shows the power curve while the lower section
shows the boost curve. As you can see, full boost is achieve at just over 5000
rpm and holds steady to beyond 8000 rpm. With the rev limit set to 9500 rpm
there’s a healthy 4500 rpm operating range under full boost.
Despite the monumental increase in torque, Tony uses an original Ferrari
clutch – it has done 8000km of service with the turbos (83,000km in total) and
shows no sign of dying. Tony says retaining the original clutch puts less strain
on the 6-speed manual gearbox - he’d much rather fit a new clutch than a new
Ferrari ‘box...
Grip is enhanced with huge 295/35 Pirelli Corsa semi-track tyres fitted at
the rear while the standard 225/40 Pirelli P-Zeros are used at the front. Tony
says the previous Pirellis (which were three years old) were getting fried with
the turbo grunt but, still, they helped him along to a best quarter mile time of
10.92 seconds at 132 mph. We’re told that the new Corsa tyres should improve
times considerably.
Tony isn’t big on circuit racing but he has upgraded the brakes to 355mm
drilled disc and 4-pot Brembo caliper kit from overseas. A powerful set of
anchors is essential with the speed this horse can run to.
And how much speed are we talking?
Well, Simon has driven this twin-turbo beast off the clock - in Simon’s
words, “the speedo needle was touching the horse’s arse...” And that, readers,
is well beyond 320 km/h! It’s no wonder Tony has annihilated a Suzuki Hayabusa
from a 100 km/h rolling start. Tony also points out that the car is deceptively
fast and stable - at 280 km/h it feels like 170 km/h.
Except for the glorious engine noise...
Simon says the Ferrari engine is very well suited to forced induction. It
doesn’t need a lot of ignition timing retard on boost (which is indicative of a
very efficient combustion chamber) and no previously hidden weaknesses have been found. In
fact, Simon is so happy with the final product he’s now offering a Ferrari
twin-turbo kit using all the same parts as Tony’s car. Total cost for the kit is
around AUD$40,000 depending on your required power output.
For now, Tony is more than happy to leave the car pretty well as is. However,
he does plan to retune the engine for race fuel and bump up the boost for
another quarter mile attack. He’d like to fit some bigger rear tyres but,
unfortunately, the rear wheel arches don’t leave much extra space.
“Simon feels there’s 800hp (600kW) waiting there and it’d be nice to see if
we can take it a bit faster,” says Tony.
Any chance this will become the world’s first Ferrari Door Slammer?!