RE: England's best roads by F355 | My Dream Drive
RE: England's best roads by F355 | My Dream Drive
Saturday 14th October 2023

England's best roads by F355 | My Dream Drive

A lot's changed since PH launched in 1998; the Ferrari F355 being absolutely wonderful ain't one of them...


Back in 1998, when PistonHeads was in its first lines of code, the technicians down in Maranello were putting the final touches on a Ferrari F355 Spider. This one would be a right-hand-drive manual in Grigio Titanio over Bordeaux leather interior - and now it's mine for a few days, specifically for a blast around England’s best roads.

The excuse to make this trip was a meetup with a contingent of our northern PH members, and we needed a decent ride. The plan was to meet around Wolsingham, County Durham and take in some of the great passes: mainly the Hartside Pass and Buttertubs Pass. But first was getting familiar with a personal dream car and a 200-mile drive north on a Friday night ahead of a bank holiday - in the rain.

In the 1990s, Ferrari was still very much about form over function, and that's telling when settling into the leather seats. The front wheel arch encroaches into the footwell, leaving the pedals the only spot free, offset to the left. The steering wheel sits perpendicular to the column in that classic Ferrari fashion, the top of the wheel trying to escape away from your clutches. Despite being one of the first Ferraris designed to be more user friendly (thank you, Honda NSX), it's clear ergonomics have come an awfully long way since the 1990s.

That said, setting aside potential chiropractic appointments, the rest of the interior is pretty pleasant. The switchgear is simple and well placed, and the instrument panel, surrounded by warning lights reminiscent of War Games or other early 90s sci-fi films, makes total sense. It is all such functional efficiency: three pedals, a gear lever, no driver aids or setup screens to work through - just apply, or not, the softer suspension if you feel inclined, and away you go.

The car we borrowed from our finance partners Charles & Dean had two additional features: a factory option 'Challenge' rear engine grille, and a marvelous stainless-steel Capristo exhaust system that served as an aural amplifier. Turning the key for the first time I was immediately greeted by that oh-so-recognisable flat-plane Ferrari sound. One that sits a little higher in the octave range than other manufacturers’ V8s and with the exhaust bringing even more drama, burbling like it's ready for Le Mans rather than the A1.

Immediately we're struggling, the car idling at unusually high revs and the expected engine braking absent. I give the right foot a blip on a downshift to see if it settles down, only to have it idling even higher; time to hook my left foot under the throttle to try and pull it back, which calms the car down. Thoughts of a sticking pedal or throttle body, trying to manage this in driving rain, or at worst an early end to a dream drive flash through my mind so I seek out the first fuel stop (of many) to diagnose the issue.

This particular car is beautifully presented, but 25 years later there are some elements that are a little tired around the edges; as I stick my head in the footwell to see what the pedal is doing, I notice the mat has slipped down from its anchors and is pushing against the throttle. I pull it back to its rightful position and start again; the idling returns to where I would expect, the problem is solved - time to start enjoying this experience.

The trundle up the A1 is pretty uneventful. The car quietly cruises along in sixth, sitting steadily at dual carriageway speeds without feeling like a slight adjustment on the throttle will cause large engine braking nor feeling like you are trying to restrain something eager to be off the leash. I reach Harrogate and fill up ready for the morning, 44 litres over the 183 miles - just shy of 19mpg.

A dream drive for me comprises three key elements that need to be just right: a perfect car, challenging roads in beautiful scenery, and great company. The latter requirement came in the form of PHer scottos (who you might remember from his BMW 2002 Tii vid) and his fellow car friends, and being local to the Pennines they knew where to go to fulfill the tri factor.

The first route takes us up the B6278, past High Force Falls, across the B6277 and onto the A686 for the first stunning view, both of landscape and road. The Hartside Pass falls down from the upper car park, smooth-ish tarmac clinging to the edge of the last Pennine as you head west, setup for spectators better than any man-made stadium track ever could. Under skies stretching to the Lake District in one direction and the borders of Scotland to the right, it is a perfect place to stretch the F355's legs.

The route down tests the brakes, but with several hours experience I am feeling more confident. The F355 advanced suspension rewards more deliberate inputs, the weight feeling superbly balanced from the mid-engined layout. With gentler inputs the front can seem like it is trying to push forward, but roll your sleeves up, get stuck in, and it feels much more positive.

Coming back up and the engine is singing; a few horses may have bolted through the years, but with very nearly 9,000rpm to play with - and a sound to die for - this V8 remains captivating. To have a glorious open-gated manual to click-clack around really is the cherry on top. The orchestral crescendo really is one I had to experience outside, too, positioned on the mountain top; close your eyes as the F355 screams past and you could be on the Mulsanne straight with such an evocative sound. It's a masterpiece of a powertrain. 

We leave behind the A686, often dubbed the ‘Roof of England’, to start our way down the spine of the country and towards the Yorkshire Dales. The rugged hills of the Pennines start to be replaced by craggy hilltops, with sheep polka-dotted on the lush green hills (and sometimes in the middle of the road, too). I quickly conclude that if the road number begins with B627, it's guaranteed to be a stunner. From B6277 to B6276 to B6270, we continue across to the Buttertubs Pass. As the scenery gets less rugged the roads do the opposite, with the tarmac of the Dales a little narrower and rougher; equally stunning, but a trickier environment to really enjoy the F355.

As the sun starts to drop and the remaining shadows that peak in between showers shade the valleys, we reach our last stop of the day, the Ribblehead Viaduct. This is a place I have always wanted to visit, awed and fascinated by the people, the engineering, and the determination to place a railway across such extreme rugged terrain. A fitting end to one of my dream drives, an engineering marvel that you can't help but stop and stare longingly at - rather like that wonderful Ferrari.

Follow the route here

Footnote: Turning a dream into a permanent reality

After spending five days with the F355, I fell in love with it. However, the practical voice in my head kept reminding me of, y'know, paying the mortgage and feeding the children - now really isn't the time for impulsive purchases. That being said... The one we drove here is up for sale at £80k; a quick look at historical values of F355 Spiders across the last five years of PH data shows a comparable car was about £63k in 2018.

So let's apply some man maths to this dream. Total amount payable through C&D, including interest and deposit, will be £97k if you keep the agreement for the full 36 month term (see the calculator for full spec). So take that £80k purchase price plus £17k (potential) future appreciation based on historical data so that, in theory, it could eventually be sold for £97k… Three years cost free motoring in a Ferrari - It's certainly quite a persuasive argument.  After 750 mechanically issue-free miles on this dream drive, let’s hope for a similarly fault-free few years to make the maths really work!

Author
Discussion

SydneyBridge

Original Poster:

10,483 posts

176 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
Excellent piece and lovely Ferrari

Grrbang

755 posts

89 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
Looks stunning, and thanks for sharing the route. I recently crossed the Pennines via the a66 and was blown away at being able to see the Lake District mountains from the top of the pass.

The roads slightly further north, in Northumberland, set the benchmark for me. Much better for making progress than say the Scottish highlands, because the roads were virtually empty and full of overtaking points.

BeastieBoy73

747 posts

130 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
Great article and great Ferrari.

I do love a road trip.

Completed the NC500 last week, just not in a Ferrari.

Ace fun regardless (though the east side is cack).

sticks090460

1,117 posts

176 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
How huge does that Boxster look in comparison in the shot where it’s parked behind the Ferrari!

LotusOmega375D

8,961 posts

171 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
Not sure the footnote advice is terribly wise. Expecting any car to appreciate £17k in 3 years to pay off your sponsor’s interest is very risky. The value of my old Ferrari has barely changed since I bought it 6 years ago.

TheMilkyBarKid

781 posts

47 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
sticks090460 said:
How huge does that Boxster look in comparison in the shot where it’s parked behind the Ferrari!
That immediately struck me too, and it’s not like the Boxster is a big car by modern standards. Cars in general have grown hugely over the last 25 years - certainly much quicker than parking spaces have. Back to the thread, a great route in a great car, love a good road trip, even a mini one on the right roads.

plenty

5,033 posts

204 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
Evocative writeup. Having driven all of those roads and most of the UK's best roads in a variety of cars over the years I've concluded that low-slung sports cars aren't the right tools for the job. You want a hot hatch or Impreza/Evo with lots of ground clearance, suspension travel and at least 40 section tyres to cope with the UK's broken road surfaces, undulations and cambers.

Curious though as to whether an F355 being of a vintage when people valued sidewall over stance might handle these roads better than its latter-day equivalent.

Glenn63

3,606 posts

102 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
I don’t know why Buttertubs always gets such high praise, it’s bumpy, fairly crap surface, slow and single track at the end. More of a supermoto bike road not my idea of a supercar road. Some nice views though.

RyCliff

60 posts

140 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
Shame the route doesn't actually go to Wolsingham as the article says. My in-laws lived in the village for the first 10 years I knew them and it was a treat driving my Caterham on the A689 from Alston down to there for it's winter storage with them. They've moved to near Barnard Castle and the road up to Tan Hill Inn just south of the A66 is a good one from there. As others have said, so many good roads in that area.

samoht

6,735 posts

164 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
Is that an orange 918 in the lead pic?


The F355 looks beautiful, the grey suits it and it works at least as well as a Spider as a coupe visually, wheels are spot-on too. Nice photos smile

Personally I wouldn't buy on the basis of presumed continued appreciation in value covering costs, especially in these uncertain times. If you're buying from and selling to a dealer you've got to account for £10-20k in their margins, too. Plus, even if a 25 year old Ferrari continues to be "perfectly reliable" and nothing goes wrong, that doesn't equate to an absence of cost; AIUI you'll need to budget for inter alia one cambelt change in a three year ownership span.

No, I'd embark on ownership on the basis that expecting that it will cost money, but it'll be worth it.


As far as supercars on B-roads go, I've been pleasantly surprised that my 570 manages fine without scraping; as long as the road is wide enough not to have to slow to a crawl when passing oncoming traffic, it's turned out to be a good enough road to enjoy.

Wheelspinning

2,080 posts

48 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
I had 2 F355 spiders over a combined 11 years, and no matter how much rose tint I put onto them glasses, spending a day in someone else's F355 spider and handing it back, is the best possible scenario.

It felt like every drive I was listening for and expecting something to go wrong, hoping the part that had failed was still available and wondering if the roof was going to play ball.

At the time I didn't care as I loved the design, but looking back, ram that.

I fitted a stage 1 Capristo to the last spider I had, a very rare Fiorano Handling pack car, and whist it sounded like an old school F1 car, after less than an hour it just made the journey tiresome.

Sorry to offer an alternative prospective from a previous long term owner, but I would be far happier owning or driving any of the other cars that joined you for that trip.


Baldchap

9,271 posts

110 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
Friend of mine has a LHD 355 with about 80k on it. It isn't a garage ornament and it absolutely gets used. He very kindly let me drive it a while back.

9000RPM from that V8 is just magic. I love the noise our Evora makes and the 355 is on the same level for me. I don't care that a modern Golf is faster to 60, the sense of 'special' is still there with the 355.

Lovely cars.

Mr Whippy

31,713 posts

259 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
Outside, pretty!

Noise, epic.

Inside, uuuuummmm acceptable.

But that steering wheel, and what looks like a weird driving position?


I’d take the 918, must be a very sensible owner going for such a decent colour biggrin

Justin-ow582

536 posts

123 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
sticks090460 said:
How huge does that Boxster look in comparison in the shot where it’s parked behind the Ferrari!
I think that's because the camera is higher than the roofline making the Boxster look taller (and therefore larger) even though it's further away.
(According to the specs the Boxster is only 10cm higher and the 355 is 10cm wider.)


McRors

400 posts

74 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
LotusOmega375D said:
Not sure the footnote advice is terribly wise. Expecting any car to appreciate £17k in 3 years to pay off your sponsor’s interest is very risky. The value of my old Ferrari has barely changed since I bought it 6 years ago.
I couldn't agree more. More and more articles on PH talk about how the car in question will increase in value (Dodge Challenger was the last "Expect used Hellcat values generally to rise as a result.) It's dangerous talk.

Great car, though.

satfinal

2,623 posts

180 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
Article said:
So take that £80k purchase price plus £17k (potential) future appreciation based on historical data so that, in theory, it could eventually be sold for £97k… Three years cost free motoring in a Ferrari - It's certainly quite a persuasive argument.
oh do fk off PH


Justin-ow582

536 posts

123 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
McRors said:
LotusOmega375D said:
Not sure the footnote advice is terribly wise. Expecting any car to appreciate £17k in 3 years to pay off your sponsor’s interest is very risky. The value of my old Ferrari has barely changed since I bought it 6 years ago.
I couldn't agree more. More and more articles on PH talk about how the car in question will increase in value (Dodge Challenger was the last "Expect used Hellcat values generally to rise as a result.) It's dangerous talk.

Great car, though.
Note the following sentence that is before the calculations in the article: "So let's apply some man maths to this dream"

LotusOmega375D

8,961 posts

171 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
That’s not man maths, that’s mad maths.

Frankychops

1,653 posts

27 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
satfinal said:
Article said:
So take that £80k purchase price plus £17k (potential) future appreciation based on historical data so that, in theory, it could eventually be sold for £97k… Three years cost free motoring in a Ferrari - It's certainly quite a persuasive argument.
oh do fk off PH
Agreed, what a load of st.

Take your 355 at £80k. spend a few K per year keeping it in running order, then sell it in the future for £80k if your lucky.

In that time you'd have spent £17k on finance, £2k per year on running it. So you're realistically spending £23,000 to have done a few thousand miles in a 355.


Xenoous

1,913 posts

76 months

Sunday 15th October 2023
quotequote all
What a fantastic read. I long for a trip like this. I really hope to be able to do it next year.

Beautiful Ferrari too. I couldn't think of a better car to take that journey in. My Megane is a close second though, I'm sure wink

Frankychops said:
satfinal said:
Article said:
So take that £80k purchase price plus £17k (potential) future appreciation based on historical data so that, in theory, it could eventually be sold for £97k… Three years cost free motoring in a Ferrari - It's certainly quite a persuasive argument.
oh do fk off PH
Agreed, what a load of st.

Take your 355 at £80k. spend a few K per year keeping it in running order, then sell it in the future for £80k if your lucky.

In that time you'd have spent £17k on finance, £2k per year on running it. So you're realistically spending £23,000 to have done a few thousand miles in a 355.
Just take the footnote out of the article and it's great... It's a sponsored peice, why the shock and horror?