You ever drive something so fast it messes with your sense of reality? That’s the 296 GTS for you—a hybrid monster with 819 horses under the hood. And no, I didn’t just read the brochure. I took this Italian beast through California’s desert, where the roads are empty and the heat could fry an egg on the hood. Spoiler: it was insane. Here’s the unfiltered take.
Okay, technically the engine’s behind you—Ferrari stuff, you know? It’s a 2.9L twin-turbo V6 with an electric motor playing wingman. Together? 819 hp and 546 lb-ft of torque. Numbers sound crazy until you floor it—0-60 in 2.6 seconds, top speed of 205 mph. Let me put it this way: your stomach will hit the back seat before your brain processes what’s happening.
Ferrari nailed the design—aggressive but elegant, like a tailored suit with a switchblade hidden in the pocket. The roof? Gone in 14 seconds flat, even if you’re crawling at 28 mph. And those aero bits aren’t just for show. At stupid speeds, they glue the car to the road like it’s on rails.
Simple. No cops, no traffic, just you and the car’s limits. I checked the tires, topped off fluids, and mentally prepared for what was coming. This wasn’t some Sunday drive to brunch.
Hitting max RPM in this thing is borderline spiritual. The V6 screams like it’s straight off an F1 track—electric motor filling in the gaps before you even notice. Taking corners at 120 mph? No sweat. The chassis stays planted, steering so sharp it feels telepathic. And the hybrid system? Never once hiccuped, even when I was basically abusing it.
Turbo lag? Doesn’t exist here. Stomp the pedal and the electric motor shoves you back in your seat before the turbos even spool up. Gas to electric and back? So smooth you’d think it’s witchcraft. Even the brakes recharge the battery—fancy, right?
Drive it hard and you’ll see 15 mpg on a good day. But here’s the kicker—it can do 15 miles on electric alone. Not that you’ll ever use that mode once you hear the engine.
Slip inside and it’s all carbon fiber, Alcantara, and screens feeding you every bit of data you could want. The infotainment’s nice, but come on—you’re not buying this car to play with the touchscreen.
Comfort mode? Surprisingly decent for a supercar. But flip it to Race and the whole car tightens up—exhaust gets louder, suspension firms up, and suddenly you’re in a track weapon. Noise levels? Yeah, it’s loud. The kind of loud that makes you grin like an idiot.
Put it next to a McLaren Artura or Porsche 911 Turbo S and the Ferrari just has… something. The Artura might be slightly sharper on track, the 911 more practical, but neither gives you that full-body adrenaline rush.
The 296 GTS isn’t just transportation—it’s automotive heroin. Addictive, expensive, and totally worth it if you can swing it. Just don’t blame me when you start eyeing your house as a down payment.
Source: Dow Jones – Lifestyle
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