RE: Ferrari 550 Maranello Prodrive book | PH Review

RE: Ferrari 550 Maranello Prodrive book | PH Review

Tuesday 5th December 2023

Ferrari 550 Maranello Prodrive book | PH Review

'The Last V12 Ferrari to Win at Le Mans' might be the most expensive car book you'll own - but it'll also be the best


For fans of V12 racing Ferraris - of which there must be plenty on PH - there would never be a bad time for a glorious deep dive on the Prodrive 550 Maranello. With the 499P’s triumphant return to Le Mans this summer, however, this stunning book - a collaborative effort between Girardo and Co. and DK Engineering, authored by Keith Bluemel - holds even greater appeal. There’s not much more romantic in motorsport than a red Ferrari winning at Le Mans, and this two-volume tome covers the tale of the Prodrive 550 - a story that arguably doesn’t receive enough attention - in sumptuous detail. 

‘The Last V12 Ferrari to Win at Le Mans’ is not a book to pick up and put down casually. Merely unwrapping is an event in itself, admiring the 550 Maranello wrapping paper and the beautiful presentation case. There’s a sense of eagerness and anticipation about getting stuck in that never materialises with a video, film, or reading on a device. In an increasingly time poor society, there’s something quite liberating (and hugely enjoyable) about setting aside some time, pouring a nice drink and clearing the table for these mighty treatise to fully geek out on one of the great modern motorsport achievements. 

The Ferrari 550 Maranello was never meant to be a race car. It’s important to stress, in fact, that this was not a factory backed effort, which makes what Prodrive achieved with the iconic V12 even more remarkable. To cut a long story short (and not spoil the book), sportscar racing needed a boost in the late 1990s; the GT1-spec Mercedes CLKs had decimated all before them, so the other manufacturers left. Without competition, so did Mercedes. Stephane Ratel, founder of the SRO, which organised the FIA GT Championship, is quoted in the book saying: “I was a desperate motorsport promoter who had a dying championship that only had Chrysler Vipers and Turbo Porsches. It did not interest anybody.” Ouch. Ratel was sufficiently influential (and the allure of Ferrari so great) that homologation rules were changed and a 550 Maranello could be made into a race car. 

The first ones weren’t great. Built by Italtecnia and called the 550 Millennio, it was first seen in 2000 but wasn’t reliable enough to compete. Frederic Dor was a Millennio customer, and was so determined to see it race that he took his car to Prodrive (having rallied their cars in previous years) to have it sorted. It was decided to abandon the Italtecnica car and begin again with a standard 550 Maranello road car bought from a dealership. Just 15 weeks later, the first Prodrive 550 - with a Care Racing Developments chassis number, as that was Dor’s company - was complete. 

From there the Prodrive cars (10 chassis were built in total, all extensively detailed in the book) embarked on a period of genuinely incredible dominance. Of course, it’s the GTS class win at Le Mans in 2003 that’s most famously recalled, though the 550 was far from a one hit wonder. It raced in the United States, Japan and all over Europe; between 2001 and 2008 across 343 races, it notched up 60 pole positions, 151 podiums and 69 victories. Even when cars like the Maserati MC12 arrived in GT1 racing, a car explicitly designed to make the most of the regulations, the old front-engined Ferrari remained competitive.

Volume two is dedicated to every race the 550s entered, with a record of each result, drive lineup and location. With some glorious photography as well; there’s little more evocative to fans of this GT era than seeing the Ferraris up against Vipers and Lister Storms in the early days, then cars like the Aston Martin DBR9 later on. Girardo describes the book as ‘lavishly illustrated’, with 830 pictures for 592 pages - they aren’t exaggerating. Once more, there’s something immensely gratifying about poring over printed images that can never be replicated by pinching to zoom.

Though volume two is interesting, it’s the first part of the book that’s most captivating. It focuses on the development and history of the Prodrive 550s, explaining where it fits in the pantheon of great Maranello V12s and how this extraordinary racing car came to be. There are contributions from all the key people involved, from Prodrive engineers to racing drivers, providing fascinating insight into what it took to win in the first front-engined Ferrari V12 for a quarter of a century. The book also includes correspondence with the factory, the homologation papers, the Ferrari Classiche certification - everything. It’s an obsessive study of a wonderful car that’s very hard to be torn away from. The images of a Maranello in its component parts are pure art. They belong in a gallery somewhere, next to the race liveries. 

Of course, it’s easy to look more favourably on a book when its subject matter is one of your favourite Ferraris in a memorable era for one of your favourite motorsports. But in truth, such is the level of detail here, the against-all-odds nature of the story and the stunning photography on offer (including some previously unseen images), even more casual enthusiasts will appreciate The Last V12 Ferrari to Win at Le Mans. You wouldn't even need look between the covers to be impressed. 

Now, it’s an expensive book - even those who’ve been really, really good this year will be fortunate to receive one from Santa. There will be just 550 individually numbered copies made, each costing - appropriately enough - £550. Transporting both volumes in my Mini added a significant amount to its overall value, which was sobering. So this isn’t really for the average enthusiast, unless they’re willing to sacrifice something else. What it is, however, is absolutely brilliant, accessible yet absorbing and a fitting tribute to what was, by all accounts, an amazing racing car. Those that can afford it, with a coffee table strong enough to hold it, will not be disappointed. 


Image credit | Girardo archive

 

Author
Discussion

dunnoreally

Original Poster:

1,111 posts

115 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
quotequote all
I hope if I were ever rich enough to pay £550 for an adult picture book, I would still have the restraint not to.

Mark-C

5,817 posts

212 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
quotequote all
I was at Le Mans in 2003 and 2004 and these made a glorious noise. Were beaten by the Vettes in 2004 and they also made a glorious (but different) noise.

I think if I had a 550 then I'd happily buy this book ...

Slowlygettingit

716 posts

48 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
quotequote all
I remember evo magazine doing a few page spread on how the prodrive 550’s came into being many years ago. That changed my whole feeling to the 550 and have quite a lot of want for one now.

And I don’t actually think £550 is that expensive to those that can.
Albeit I’m pretty sure some will be bought, never opened or read and sold on at greatly increased value in the future much to general annoyance of many on here……


Can you get it for a kindle?

Turbobanana

6,740 posts

208 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
quotequote all

pauloroberto

242 posts

158 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
quotequote all
Hopefully the book isn't all written in capitals though!

Seven7

107 posts

14 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
quotequote all
Was there a VERY small run of road cars? Or is my memory deceiving me?

TikTak

1,820 posts

26 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
quotequote all
Looks great as a wideboy that car.

Also a book, finally something I can afford.

nismo48

4,439 posts

214 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
quotequote all
For the money it's probably a future investment for a lucky few.

Gecko1978

10,458 posts

164 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
quotequote all
Seven7 said:
Was there a VERY small run of road cars? Or is my memory deceiving me?
I recall one was driven at the gumball rally or similar event they were called Maranello 550 GTC were they not

MDL111

7,171 posts

184 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
Seven7 said:
Was there a VERY small run of road cars? Or is my memory deceiving me?
I recall one was driven at the gumball rally or similar event they were called Maranello 550 GTC were they not
550 LM I believe. I really wanted one at the time (and still do) - the only one I ever saw any online presence of was the Gumball car. I think it resided in the Netherlands about 5-10 years ago (memory is hazy).

928 GTS

504 posts

102 months

Tuesday 5th December 2023
quotequote all
Thing with these books is that they're collectables like actual cars. Make only 550 copies and price will likely increase once supply runs out. There is few years old book about Lambo Miura which costs 5 times more than when it was new. Its £2000+ today. This 550 piece will sell out fairly quickly and hold its value. It is unlikely any will ever change hands for under £400 other than when dead uncles large book collection full of useless automobilia is sold by relatives as one large lot to used book store. From where it will go straight to eBay with £1000+ start price.

Gecko1978

10,458 posts

164 months

Wednesday 6th December 2023
quotequote all
MDL111 said:
Gecko1978 said:
Seven7 said:
Was there a VERY small run of road cars? Or is my memory deceiving me?
I recall one was driven at the gumball rally or similar event they were called Maranello 550 GTC were they not
550 LM I believe. I really wanted one at the time (and still do) - the only one I ever saw any online presence of was the Gumball car. I think it resided in the Netherlands about 5-10 years ago (memory is hazy).
Could you not buy a 550 and have pro drive convert (if you have the money)

MDL111

7,171 posts

184 months

Wednesday 6th December 2023
quotequote all
Gecko1978 said:
MDL111 said:
Gecko1978 said:
Seven7 said:
Was there a VERY small run of road cars? Or is my memory deceiving me?
I recall one was driven at the gumball rally or similar event they were called Maranello 550 GTC were they not
550 LM I believe. I really wanted one at the time (and still do) - the only one I ever saw any online presence of was the Gumball car. I think it resided in the Netherlands about 5-10 years ago (memory is hazy).
Could you not buy a 550 and have pro drive convert (if you have the money)
from memory it was not done by prodrive, but by 2 other companies (I think the company of the guy who commissioned the initial prodrive car plus one other). I checked online a few years after the initial launch and it did not look like it was still available. I also suspect nowadays it would cost a lot more to do than the 90k GBP in 2003/2004 or whenever the initial Evo article was published [which at the time was still 150% or so of the used value of the base car].

SeekerOfTruthAndPies

266 posts

44 months

Wednesday 6th December 2023
quotequote all
dunnoreally said:
I hope if I were ever rich enough to pay £550 for an adult picture book, I would still have the restraint not to.
Shame it wasn't called the Ferrari £14.99 Maranello Prodrive really

Caterhamfan

317 posts

177 months

Wednesday 6th December 2023
quotequote all
I paid more than that a few years ago for my copy of the Dino Compendium by Matthias Bartz. I don't own, never have and probably never will own a Dino but the book has been worth every penny. cloud9

This book however, looks to be a very different kettle of fish frown

BFleming

3,763 posts

150 months

Wednesday 6th December 2023
quotequote all

chunder

746 posts

253 months

Saturday 9th December 2023
quotequote all
BFleming said:
Stunning car when you see the detail, lots of bespoke fabrication and amazing if Prodrive did that in 15 weeks.