Enzo
The Ferrari Enzo, produced from 2002 to 2004 with 400 units (399 for customers plus one donated to the Vatican), represents Ferrari Formula 1 technology translated to road-going hypercar. Designed by Ken Okuyama at Pininfarina and announced at 2002 Paris Motor Show, the Enzo features Ferrari F140B naturally aspirated 65-degree V12 engine with 5,998.80 cc displacement generating 660 PS (651 hp/485 kW) at 7,800 rpm and 657 Nm (485 lb-ft) at 5,500 rpm. Weighing 1,365 kg (3,009 lbs), the Enzo achieves 0-60 mph in 3.1 seconds and top speed of 218 mph, utilizing Formula 1-derived technology including carbon-fiber body, F1-style automated-shift manual transmission, and carbon fiber-reinforced silicon carbide ceramic composite disc brakes.
The Enzo was developed in 2002 incorporating direct F1 technology transfer, celebrating Ferrari dominance in Formula 1 and paying homage to founder Enzo Ferrari. The carbon-fiber monocoque construction, active aerodynamics, and race-derived electronics created a road car with genuine F1 DNA. The Enzo represented the pinnacle of naturally aspirated V12 Ferrari hypercar development, preceding the hybrid LaFerrari. The combination of limited production (400 units), F1 technology, Pininfarina design, and association with Ferrari founder makes the Enzo one of the most iconic and collectible modern Ferraris, establishing the template for limited-production Ferrari hypercars and demonstrating the brand capability to translate racing success into road-going excellence.