Enzo [2002-2004] Rare T-Top Enzo destroyed in high-speed crash


The Ferrari Enzo (Type F140), officially marketed as Enzo Ferrari, is a mid-engine sports car named after the company's founder, Enzo Ferrari. It was developed in 2002 using Formula One technology, such as a carbon-fibre body, Formula One-style automated-shift manual transmission, and carbon fibre-reinforced silicon carbide (C/SiC) ceramic composite disc brakes, as well as technologies not allowed in Formula One, such as active aerodynamics. The Enzo's F140 B V12 engine was also the first of a new generation for Ferrari.

Alx

Tire Trailblazer
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Remember the T-Top Ferrari Enzo owned by Richard Losee we featured awhile back? In a recent issue of Road and Track we read a piece penned by Losee himself describing how he cracked 200 mph in his ultra-rare Enzo. That was probably one of the last high-speed runs the Enzo experienced, as we've learned that Losee crashed his Enzo yesterday during the Utah Fast Pass Road Rally near Milfor, Utah. The accident occurred while Losee was traveling about 100 mph, and while the Enzo is completely destroyed, Losee appears to have suffered only fractured bones.

The Utah Fast Pass Road Rally involves the Utah Highway Patrol shutting down a 15-mile stretch of State Route 257 so 25 to 30 supercars can drop the hammer. Car owners pay $5,000 for the privelage of opening their cars up on public roads, and the money goes to the Honoring Heroes Foundation that supports families of UHP troopers who have fallen in the line of duty.

With Ferrari having limited the Enzo's production to only about 400 units, we've seen at least three destroyed in high speed crashes (1st, 2nd) and another one used turned into a P4/5. If you're in the market, get your Enzo now cause they're going fast.
 
No it hasnt that post you placed is from 6/26/06, this is from two days ago, or yesterday rather.
 
I'm glad it was this Enzo that got destroyed and not one that had not been messed with. Nice to hear that the owner survived, though.
 
AlxAmg said:
No it hasnt that post you placed is from 6/26/06, this is from two days ago, or yesterday rather.


no look down the 2nd page at Yaz AMG's post...thats the one I was talking about...sorry if i wasn't clear. Oh well doesn't matter no need to make a big deal out of it.
 
Audi4Life said:
no look down the 2nd page at Yaz AMG's post...thats the one I was talking about...sorry if i wasn't clear. Oh well doesn't matter no need to make a big deal out of it.

No problem, new crash, new thread!!! An Enzo at least deserves that, btw get one while you can, the way its going there wont be many left in a couple of years. :D
 
Wow- The team I race with is there for the fast pass and for the HSR race at Miller Motorsports Park this weekend. I was considering sending the 914-6 out for the race and the GT3 for the fast pass, but cancelled those plans when I learned it would be $4k per car to get them out there and back. Now I'm glad I did not go. I can't let my wife know about this!
 
drronh said:
Wow- The team I race with is there for the fast pass and for the HSR race at Miller Motorsports Park this weekend. I was considering sending the 914-6 out for the race and the GT3 for the fast pass, but cancelled those plans when I learned it would be $4k per car to get them out there and back. Now I'm glad I did not go. I can't let my wife know about this!

Things surely happen, glad your wife watches out for you like that!!!

Good choice btw, skipping the race.
 
Just got this in email today:

I have put the some of the Utah fast pass and Miller Motorsports photos on the web site. Hartmut and Ron have now joined the 200 mph club, as they were clocked by Utah Police at 200 mph. The red Ferrari crashed at over 200 mph ! The driver is ok, the car is not. I will try to send of photo of it from the newspaper article.


Million-dollar sports car totaled in rally for charity

Mark Havnes and Lisa Rosetta The Salt Lake Tribune
Crashed Ferrari on State Road 257, near Delta. The Utah Highway Patrol closed a 15 mile section of the highway as part of the four-day Utah Fast Pass charity event so those participating in the event could "open up" their cars. MILFORD - Utah Highway Patrol troopers had blocked off part of a remote Millard County highway Wednesday so owners of exotic sports cars could slam on the gas pedal and leave those 65 mph speed limit signs in the dust.


Mercedes, Jaguars, Vipers, Porches and more were zipping along State Route 257 - all for charity - when the four-day Utah Fast Pass Road Rally took a dangerous turn.

Provo resident Richard Losee lost control of his $1.3 million Ferrari - which had been screaming along at close to 100 mph - and crashed 28 miles north of Milford in southwestern Utah.

Lt. Doug McCleve, a UHP spokesman, said Losee was flown to Utah Valley Regional Medical Center in Provo, where he was admitted with fractured bones.

The road rally, organized by Larry Miller's Miller Motorsports Park for the Honoring Heroes Foundation, raises money to help families of UHP troopers killed or injured in the line of duty. UHP clocks the drivers' speeds and gives them "speeding tickets," the "fines" from which go to charity. Drivers also fork over $5,000 to participate.

Losee's 2003 Enzo Ferrari was torn to pieces in the crash. After veering off SR 257, it lost its transmission and V-12 engine and came to rest off the other side of the road.

McCleve noted the Italian sports car - for safety reasons - is supposed to disintegrate in a high-speed crash.

"The car did exactly what it was designed to do," McCleve said. "Just the chassis and passenger compartment remained."

UHP Lt. Douglas Rawlinson estimated the red Ferrari's worth at $1.3 million.

McCleve said troopers shut down a 20-mile strip of SR 257 for 20-minute intervals Wednesday between Delta and Milford to allow the drivers to have the road to themselves.

Losee's Ferrari was the fourth or fifth car to drive that stretch. When it crashed, the rest of the cars were allowed to continue at the posted speed limit, Rawlinson said.

McCleve noted this was the rally's first year and said he did not know if it will become an annual event.

"Based on the events [Wednesday], we'll have to look at it and see if there will be a number two."

McCleve said UHP was prepared - with an ambulance, medical personnel and a helicopter on hand - in case of an accident.

Utah Fast Pass worked with the Utah Department of Transportation and UHP to obtain permits for the rally, which began Sunday at Miller's Motorsports Park in Tooele County.

The 30 cars, with a UHP escort, then drove to Park City, Duchesne and Price before heading south through Torrey, Escalante and St. George. On Wednesday, the drivers headed north to Salt Lake City, where the cars went on display at the Gallivan Center.

McCleve explained the money raised from the rally and an auction will go to the Honoring Heroes Foundation, which will then give it to families of 14 troopers killed on the job. Families of injured troopers also will get funds.

In addition, the rally assists rural communities and students. The towns of Duchesne, Torrey, Escalante, Price and Delta, along with Tooele County, each received $5,000 for student scholarships and money for civic-improvement projects.

Elliott Pritch, came from Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to show off his red 1995 Ferrari F-50.

"This is a wonderful event and you couldn't ask for greater people than those in Utah," he said.

But Doug Pristine, who brought his midnight-blue Ferrari from California for the rally, noted that clocking high speeds on a highway - with its bumps and dips, dubbed whoop-dee-dos - offers more challenges than a racetrack such as Miller's.

"You have to drive in a safe manner and watch the whoop-dee-dos or at excessive speeds you can nose-dive."


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Ferrari

Ferrari S.p.A. is an Italian luxury sports car manufacturer based in Maranello, Italy. Founded in 1939 by Enzo Ferrari (1898-1988), the company built its first car in 1940, adopted its current name in 1945, and began to produce its current line of road cars in 1947. Ferrari became a public company in 1960, and from 1963 to 2014 it was a subsidiary of Fiat S.p.A. It was spun off from Fiat's successor entity, Fiat Chrysler Automobiles, in 2016.
Official website: Ferrari

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