If you sold your EMIRA what’s next?

I remember when those were “cheap”. One of the best looking cars ever designed.

Then I read about the service requirements, and tried my best to forget about owning the prettiest Ferrari made since the 1960s…
Yes, at 64 yrs old myself, I also remember them as much less expensive within the realm of Ferrari, but never really cheap for its time. Lately, they have appreciated like crazy. IMO, similar to the Emira, the F355 is a timeless design and one I should have bought a long, long time ago. I almost pulled the trigger on one, but somehow, regrettably, didn't. There's no further space in the garage now, but I'm contemplating selling my 911 S and, having been so disillusioned with the direction of the new 911s, who knows, I may want to take a second shot at an F355. As for its service requirements yeah, that just comes with the territory, specially for Ferrari classics, but then again, Porsche servicing costs in Miami aren't that far behind. You only live once, I think...
 
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Yes, at 64 yrs old myself, I also remember them as much less expensive within the realm of Ferrari, but never really cheap for its time. Lately, they have appreciated like crazy. IMO, similar to the Emira, the F355 is a timeless design and one I should have bought a long, long time ago. I almost pulled the trigger on one, but somehow, regrettably, didn't. There's no further space in the garage now, but I'm contemplating selling my 911 S and, having been so disillusioned with the direction of the new 911s, who knows, I may want to take a second shot at an F355. As for its service requirements yeah, that just comes with the territory, specially for Ferrari classics, but then again, Porsche servicing costs in Miami aren't that far behind. You only live once, I think...

I try to do as much work on my own car as I can, even big stuff. Granted, my experience is rather limited to common domestic cars, but in reality they all work pretty much the same. An alternator is an alternator, and a window regulator is a window regulator. BOSCH, Delco, Denso, etc., make most of the unsexy guts of a car anyway, so on the one hand doing work on a Ferrari doesn’t really intimidate me. It would just me sourcing a good complete shop manual for a car, ponying up the bucks for some car-specific tools, and figuring it out.

What bothers me are the service intervals themselves. I’m not sure I’d want to mess with that much involved maintenance on a regular basis, and I would have to, because I put a good number of miles on my cars. I think it would ruin the fun of working on my own car. And then I would end up paying someone else to do it, and then I would resent the labor cost. So, probably not the best car for me!
 

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