McLaren F1 was $1,000,000 and the Enzo was about $660,000 without markup. Street prices are more.
2007-02-15 07:37:56
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answer #1
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answered by Linkin 7
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Either the Enzo or the Mclaren will run about $1 million dollars if you can find one for sale. The Enzo in particular may be hard to get as the same of these cars from the factory came with restrictions (since purchasers had to be invited by the factory to buy one) and many of the cars may still be under these restrictions that could limit resale. Given the very limited and high profile nature of these cars, it's unlikely that there will be much change in pricing for quite awhile.
Now, just to add a little about the Corvette comments, which for some reason seem to pop up every single time someone asks a question about a performance car (come on, are Corvette fans so insecure they much echo out their choice in every topic even when it's not relevent?). The Corvette offers alot of performance for a good price, and many of the aftermarket options can deliver something great. But let's look at this from a couple angles:
That ___ Corvette performs better. No dount that throwing forced induction on a huge engine will give lots of horsepower. Yet, despite this, the Enzo is still going to be a couple hundred pounds lighter, develop a significantly greater amount of mechanical grip, a little more aero grip, and have a chasis that is light years ahead of most production cars (the Corvette included). And if it is just about performance/cost, then something like a $50k Formula Mazda would destroy both of them (even though it only has about 240hp).
Cost: Ok, so for $75k you can purchase a Corvette with 775hp. In ten years, assuming you've managed to keep this up, and there are not substanially better offerings available on the market, you could turn around and sell the car for $40k (probably less, but let's stay with a high figure). So the car cost you $35k! Not too bad.
The Ferrari has an entry price about $1 million dollars, and will likely have a resale price very close to the same in ten years. Possibly even going up at the same rate as, or even higher than, inflation. Making the Ferrari less expensive than the Corvette.
It's great that people like Corvettes - and while I do have some very specific complaints about them myself that would preclude my ever buying one, I like them and like most things about them. And while the Corvette enthusiast community at large seem to be great people, there is this subset that can't help screaming about them every chance you get. Corvettes are good, but they are not the end all be all of cars!
2007-02-15 19:10:48
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answer #2
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answered by Paul S 7
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the enzo is $1,000,000 with 660 horsepower
while the mclaren is about $450,000 with 616 horsepower
a limited edition 2003 corvette lingenfelter is about $75,000 with 740 horsepower, the enzo is an overpriced hunk of junk
2007-02-14 00:17:59
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answer #3
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answered by l.miller91 2
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Enzo= about $620,000 USD.
McLaren= about $420,000 USD.
2007-02-16 14:56:53
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answer #4
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answered by Busta 5
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if yer hafta ask yer can't afford it. Anyway fast fiats are junk.
2007-02-14 05:11:27
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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way too much. get a z06.
2007-02-13 23:39:47
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answer #6
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answered by Tony O 2
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$1,000,000 if you can find one for sale.
2007-02-13 23:35:02
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answer #7
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answered by eaglefox200 5
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If you have to ask, it really doesn't matter.
2007-02-14 06:19:20
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answer #8
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answered by Bostonian In MO 7
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if u have to ask, u cant afford it.
2007-02-13 23:36:23
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answer #9
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answered by robert s 5
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