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Ferrari Testarossa

August 27th, 2015 Leave a comment Go to comments

Very small model of the original 1984 Ferrari Testarossa. Features drive, steering system utilizing virtual pivots, and lights. Update: instructions for the steering system now available.

Datasheet:

Completion date: 27/08/2015
Power: electric (Power Functions)
Dimensions: length 37 studs / width 15 studs / height 11 studs
Weight: 0.68 kg
Suspension: none
Propulsion: 1 x PF L motor geared 1:3
Motors: 1 x PF L motor, 1 x PF Servo motor

This extremely simple, small and ugly model was built as a result of Lego releasing the 10248 Ferrari F40 set. There has been much talk about making this set RC, which given its small size required rebuilding the entire chassis from a scratch in my opinion. So, after some consideration I decided that rather than use the F40 to build another F40 I would use parts from this set to build the only Ferrari that really mattered in the 80’s: the classic 1984 Testarossa, made timeless by the equally classic Miami Vice TV series.

F40? What F40?

Ferrari_Testarossa_Miami_Vice_Monogram_2756_24th

 

The primary reason to build this car were F40’s unique wheel covers that only appeared on few Ferrari models in early 80’s, Testarossa included. They were the reason I decided to scale the Testarossa down to these wheels, resulting in a model actually even smaller than the original F40 set. I wanted to see if I can make a car this small fully RC, and if I can make a steering system that will work with F40’s very tight front wheel arches. In the end I have succeeded on both accounts, but at the cost of the model looking very, very bad.

On the technical side, the model was built around one central module filling the space between rear axle and front windshield, which combined the PF 8448 battery, a PF L motor and a PF Servo motor. The battery alone took almost half of the cabin and was the reason why the roof was too tall and disconnected from C-pillars. The PF L motor was driving the rear differential using 1:3 gearing, with the gear wheels located behind the rear axle to save some room. The PF Servo motor was controlling a push rod that would activate a complex linkage making the front wheel steer with virtual pivots. It was not a perfect steering system, it had plenty of backlash, weird geometry, it made it difficult for the Servo motor to return to center and it made driving perfectly straight difficult, but it achieved its primary goal: it made the front wheels fit under the wheel arches, sometimes literally a hair’s breadth away.

The look of the model was completely wrong, from the hood that was too tall because of the steering system, to the roof that had to cover the battery. I completely hated the look of this car, even though a number of complex building techniques went into creating it. These included, among others, interlocked tiles on hinges on the sides, as well as creating a body that was 14 studs wide in front and 15 studs wide in the back.  In the end it was clear that at this scale, with mechanical and electrical components filling the interior so completely, I simply could not do the original car the justice. The only thing I liked was the single side view mirror, unique for the original 1984 Testarossa. Rumor has it that this single, oddly highly-placed side mirror was a result of updates to safety regulations that confused Ferrari engineers. The later editions of the Testarossa were all equipped with two standard side mirrors. They were also restyled and modified, and they completely lacked the rough 80’s charm of the original Ferrari Testarossa.

Note: the video is best viewed from VHS while combing your mullet.

Update: instructions for the steering system are now available in the Downloads section.

Photos:

01.jpg dsc03182.jpg dsc03191.jpg dsc03200.jpg dsc03203.jpg dsc03206.jpg dsc03215.jpg dsc03225.jpg dsc03229.jpg original1.gif original2.png

Video:

Media coverage:

The Lego Car Blog

Categories: Cars Tags: ,
  1. lostcontinent
    February 24th, 2016 at 19:59 | #1

    hi Sariel,
    first of all: your book “the unofficial Lego technic builders guide” is my LEGO technic bible. Really great.
    I just tried to motorize the F40. I took a L-Motor and a 24/8 transmission (no differential, not nessesary with this width), a Servo for steering.

    It really required rebuilding the entire chassis from a scratch… I changed everything except the doors.
    Here is a short video:
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVezNnCYDk0

    Steering at 2:05

    best regards,
    LC

  2. DroidekaOne
    October 18th, 2015 at 19:25 | #2

    @Sariel
    OK thanks anyway!

  3. Sariel
    October 16th, 2015 at 11:59 | #3

    @DroidekaOne
    I’m glad, but I still don’t have instructions.

  4. DroidekaOne
    October 16th, 2015 at 00:41 | #4

    Your book inspired me to be a technic builder just a few months ago. I don’t have a lot of modern pieces

  5. DroidekaOne
    October 16th, 2015 at 00:22 | #5

    Not really. I’m pretty inexperienced. I build from instructions to get the technique.

  6. Sariel
    October 15th, 2015 at 01:23 | #6

    @DroidekaOne
    I took it apart already. But come on, it’s so small and simple, I’m sure you can build it from the photos.

  7. DroidekaOne
    October 15th, 2015 at 00:37 | #7

    @Sariel
    No, I mean instructions for the whole thing.

  8. Sariel
    October 15th, 2015 at 00:34 | #8

    @DroidekaOne
    Yeah, I’ve made instructions for the steering system available.

  9. DroidekaOne
    October 15th, 2015 at 00:25 | #9

    It does not look crappy! Could you please make some instructions available?

  10. Sariel
    September 28th, 2015 at 13:34 | #10

    @ArdiTechnicfans
    It’s just some free YouTube music.

  11. Anonymouse
    September 3rd, 2015 at 16:47 | #11

    @Ev3fan
    Sariel has already made a steering solution very similar to that. It is called “virtual pivot”

  12. J0rtikka
    September 1st, 2015 at 13:38 | #12

    @J0rtikka
    here is 2.nd version https://tinkercad.com/things/6yZ6toy8bSl
    this is the last post about this subject.

    S:J

  13. Sariel
    August 29th, 2015 at 23:57 | #13

    @J0rtikka
    I don’t know, that depends on what you need. Lego has equivalents of both variants, and both are useful.

  14. J0rtikka
    August 29th, 2015 at 22:18 | #14

    Hello and sorry for contacting this way.
    I’m in a 3d printing class and I was thinking of make 7×7 liftarm; https://tinkercad.com/things/2pyT9E6vQsr
    for diff and diff lock, my question is this: should I make it one end open or make it 7×9?

    Sincerily
    J

  15. Sariel
    August 29th, 2015 at 00:28 | #15

    @alex
    That game is the classic Outrun and that model should be ready inside a month from now.

  16. Flyingcar
    August 28th, 2015 at 14:16 | #16

    @Sariel
    Ok, thanks.

  17. Sariel
    August 28th, 2015 at 13:32 | #17

    @Flyingcar
    I did – for the steering system, which is the only complex part. The rest is dead simple and you should be able to build it from the photos. Just be creative.

  18. Flyingcar
    August 28th, 2015 at 10:39 | #18

    Hi,

    Can you publish the instructions, please ?

    Best regards,
    Flyingcar.

  19. Ev3fan
    August 27th, 2015 at 21:29 | #19

    : 0 the 8×8 at the End I want to see that! Btw I felt sorry for the Ferrari 😉

  20. Ev3fan
    August 27th, 2015 at 21:26 | #20

    Oh come on IMO the model doesn’t look too bad and the steering system is just incredible I had to watch the video three times just to understand which lever does what. Isogawa Yoshihito (he wrote three technic books which I have) has developed a steering system also fit for tight spaces a while ago I’ll just leave you a link to the youtube video you might find it useful ( I assume you don’t know this already because you didn’t use it here I’m sorry if I am wrong) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCYbrQwr11s

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