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Used 2010 Ferrari California for SaleNationwide

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33 vehicles found

Year:
2010
Make:
Ferrari
Model:
California
Body type:
Convertible
Doors:
2 doors
Drivetrain:
Rear-Wheel Drive
Engine:
460 hp 4.3L V8
Exterior color:
Blue
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Transmission:
7-Speed Manual
Mileage:
19,074
Stock #:
I9776C
VIN:
ZFF65LJA8A0169335
Blue 2010 Ferrari California Convertible Rear-Wheel Drive 7-Speed Manual
New arrival

 

2010 Ferrari California

GT Convertible

19,074 mi

Parsippany-Troy Hills, NJ
Fair Deal

$94,985

Year:
2011
Make:
Ferrari
Model:
California
Body type:
Convertible
Doors:
2 doors
Drivetrain:
Rear-Wheel Drive
Engine:
460 hp 4.3L V8
Exterior color:
Gray
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Interior color:
Black
Transmission:
Manual
Mileage:
21,659
Stock #:
TP4000
VIN:
ZFF65LJA5B0179502
Gray 2011 Ferrari California Convertible Rear-Wheel Drive Manual

 

2011 Ferrari California

Roadster

21,659 mi

Silver Spring, MD
Fair Deal

$92,784

About 2010 Ferrari California
I don’t understand the California. Financially at least, I understand what Ferrari was trying to achieve. It needs to boost sales, so it's aiming for a new demographic. In this case: women. But this is where it loses me and logic seems to have left Maranello. Apparently women are less forgiving of a pure sports car, so Ferrari fitted the California with a useable trunk or its version of one. But they’ve also decided the California should be a convertible with a retractable hard top, a decision that costs the platform 3.5 of its already scant 12 cubic feet of trunk space. Then they decided to make the California a 2+2 arrangement. Again, this I understand. 4-passenger cars sell better than 2-passenger cars, regardless of history and tradition and purpose. But why bother including 2 extra seats when they’re unusable as anything other than for a child seat or as a small storage shelf? In fact, most customers opt to exchange the rear seats for a “rear parcel shelf,” a free – and much better – option anyway, and children small enough for car seats soon grow out of them. If carrying children is a selling point, Ferrari will lose its customers as soon as little legs grow. So what’s the point? I have no doubt Ferrari can build a car that can comfortably carry 4 passengers, but this I don’t understand, especially when the California manages to do so many other things so well. Yes, the top-down profile seems to mimic a knocked-over bowling pin, but the front looks tight and tidy, and the overall shape sports a 0.32 drag coefficient, making it the slipperiest production Ferrari ever. Yes, there’s never been a front-engine V8 Ferrari before, but there is nothing to complain about here. This is no American V8, slow to rev and sounding like a boat at idle. This has a flatplane crankshaft, just like you expect in a Ferrari, and the engine barks and leaps up and down the rev range. 460 hp and 485 lb-ft of torque certainly sound in Ferrari's range, too. Besides, it’s fast enough to hit 60 in the same time as an F430 – under 4 seconds. The 7-speed dual-clutch transmission is claimed to change gears faster than the F430 Scuderia, too, so you’d have to be a very meticulous picker of nits to find issue there. Okay, the throttle doesn’t blip at all during gear changes, and that’s a cool feature that other systems do have. But really, it’s just trying to make what is essentially an automatic transmission seem more like a manual. If I really want that – and I do - I’ll just have an actual three-pedal manual, please and thank you. Ferrari fanatics complain that it’s softer than its stablemates, easier to drive. But it’s still one of the best-handling cars out there, and only a few Ferraris can outdo it. There’s so much right with the California, but way too much wrong. The rear end really is obese and ugly. Ferrari promised a traditional 6-speed manual as an option, but it’s been mysteriously absent so far. Perhaps worst of all is the Chrysler-sourced touchscreen navigation and entertainment system. Paying Ferrari dollars and getting Chrysler tech is known to cause nausea in consumers, and this is simply the wrong way to attract new buyers. And yet the California has been sold out since its introduction, increasing Ferrari’s overall production by 50%, so people must like it. It’s certainly done its job of attracting new blood to the Ferrari brand, with 60% of buyers being first-time Ferrari owners. Maybe Ferrari’s been doing things wrong all these years, despite what the fanatics say. The one thing that is truly Ferrari is its racing pedigree, and Ferrari likes to win. It set itself a goal with the California, and no one can argue the company hasn’t reached it. Does that make the California a real Ferrari? I don’t care, it’s still ugly.

 

Year:
2010
Make:
Ferrari
Model:
California
Body type:
Convertible
Doors:
2 doors
Drivetrain:
Rear-Wheel Drive
Engine:
460 hp 4.3L V8
Exterior color:
Black
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Interior color:
Black
Transmission:
7-Speed Automatic
Mileage:
21,584
Stock #:
169547
VIN:
ZFF65LJA1A0169547
Black 2010 Ferrari California Convertible Rear-Wheel Drive 7-Speed Automatic

 

2010 Ferrari California

GT Convertible

21,584 mi

West Palm Beach, FL
Fair Deal

$88,695

Year:
2010
Make:
Ferrari
Model:
California
Body type:
Convertible
Doors:
2 doors
Drivetrain:
Rear-Wheel Drive
Engine:
460 hp 4.3L V8
Exterior color:
Black
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Interior color:
Black
Transmission:
7-Speed Manual
Mileage:
31,673
Stock #:
2606043
VIN:
ZFF65LJA1A0172786
Vehicle photo unavailable

Preparing for a close up...

Photos coming soon

 

2010 Ferrari California

GT Convertible

31,673 mi

Jacksonville, FL
Fair Deal

$85,599

Year:
2011
Make:
Ferrari
Model:
California
Body type:
Convertible
Doors:
2 doors
Drivetrain:
Rear-Wheel Drive
Engine:
460 hp 4.3L V8
Exterior color:
White
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Interior color:
Brown
Transmission:
6-Speed Manual
Mileage:
31,994
Stock #:
2695
VIN:
ZFF65LJA0B0180203
White 2011 Ferrari California Convertible Rear-Wheel Drive 6-Speed Manual

 

2011 Ferrari California

Roadster

31,994 mi

Boca Raton, FL
Fair Deal

$90,599

Year:
2010
Make:
Ferrari
Model:
California
Body type:
Convertible
Doors:
2 doors
Drivetrain:
Rear-Wheel Drive
Engine:
460 hp 4.3L V8
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Transmission:
7-Speed Automatic
Mileage:
26,573
Stock #:
PM25218
VIN:
ZFF65LHA7A0173494
Vehicle photo unavailable

Preparing for a close up...

Photos coming soon

 

2010 Ferrari California

GT Convertible

26,573 mi

Thousand Oaks, CA
No Rating

No Price Listed

Year:
2009
Make:
Ferrari
Model:
California
Body type:
Convertible
Doors:
2 doors
Drivetrain:
Rear-Wheel Drive
Engine:
460 hp 4.3L V8
Exterior color:
Red
Combined gas mileage:
16 MPG
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Transmission:
Automatic
Mileage:
41,346
Stock #:
T66952Z
VIN:
ZFFLJ65A990166952
Vehicle photo unavailable

Preparing for a close up...

Photos coming soon

 

2009 Ferrari California

Roadster

41,346 mi

Tampa, FL
No Rating

No Price Listed

Year:
2010
Make:
Ferrari
Model:
California
Body type:
Convertible
Doors:
2 doors
Drivetrain:
Rear-Wheel Drive
Engine:
460 hp 4.3L V8
Exterior color:
Red
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Interior color:
Brown (Beige/Tan)
Transmission:
7-Speed Automatic
Mileage:
15,980
Stock #:
173442
VIN:
ZFF65LJA7A0173442
Red 2010 Ferrari California Convertible Rear-Wheel Drive 7-Speed Automatic
New arrival

 

2010 Ferrari California

GT Convertible

15,980 mi

Redondo Beach, CA
High Priced

$101,888

Overview

Image Not Available

I don’t understand the California. Financially at least, I understand what Ferrari was trying to achieve. It needs to boost sales, so it's aiming for a new demographic. In this case: women.

But this is where it loses me and logic seems to have left Maranello. Apparently women are less forgiving of a pure sports car, so Ferrari fitted the California with a useable trunk or its version of one. But they’ve also decided the California should be a convertible with a retractable hard top, a decision that costs the platform 3.5 of its already scant 12 cubic feet of trunk space.

Then they decided to make the California a 2+2 arrangement. Again, this I understand. 4-passenger cars sell better than 2-passenger cars, regardless of history and tradition and purpose. But why bother including 2 extra seats when they’re unusable as anything other than for a child seat or as a small storage shelf? In fact, most customers opt to exchange the rear seats for a “rear parcel shelf,” a free – and much better – option anyway, and children small enough for car seats soon grow out of them. If carrying children is a selling point, Ferrari will lose its customers as soon as little legs grow. So what’s the point?

I have no doubt Ferrari can build a car that can comfortably carry 4 passengers, but this I don’t understand, especially when the California manages to do so many other things so well. Yes, the top-down profile seems to mimic a knocked-over bowling pin, but the front looks tight and tidy, and the overall shape sports a 0.32 drag coefficient, making it the slipperiest production Ferrari ever. Yes, there’s never been a front-engine V8 Ferrari before, but there is nothing to complain about here. This is no American V8, slow to rev and sounding like a boat at idle. This has a flatplane crankshaft, just like you expect in a Ferrari, and the engine barks and leaps up and down the rev range. 460 hp and 485 lb-ft of torque certainly sound in Ferrari's range, too. Besides, it’s fast enough to hit 60 in the same time as an F430 – under 4 seconds.

The 7-speed dual-clutch transmission is claimed to change gears faster than the F430 Scuderia, too, so you’d have to be a very meticulous picker of nits to find issue there. Okay, the throttle doesn’t blip at all during gear changes, and that’s a cool feature that other systems do have. But really, it’s just trying to make what is essentially an automatic transmission seem more like a manual. If I really want that – and I do - I’ll just have an actual three-pedal manual, please and thank you.

Ferrari fanatics complain that it’s softer than its stablemates, easier to drive. But it’s still one of the best-handling cars out there, and only a few Ferraris can outdo it.

There’s so much right with the California, but way too much wrong. The rear end really is obese and ugly. Ferrari promised a traditional 6-speed manual as an option, but it’s been mysteriously absent so far. Perhaps worst of all is the Chrysler-sourced touchscreen navigation and entertainment system. Paying Ferrari dollars and getting Chrysler tech is known to cause nausea in consumers, and this is simply the wrong way to attract new buyers.

And yet the California has been sold out since its introduction, increasing Ferrari’s overall production by 50%, so people must like it. It’s certainly done its job of attracting new blood to the Ferrari brand, with 60% of buyers being first-time Ferrari owners. Maybe Ferrari’s been doing things wrong all these years, despite what the fanatics say. The one thing that is truly Ferrari is its racing pedigree, and Ferrari likes to win. It set itself a goal with the California, and no one can argue the company hasn’t reached it. Does that make the California a real Ferrari? I don’t care, it’s still ugly.

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