Ferrari Is Selling Real F1 Engine Parts as Museum-Worthy Collectibles for Rich Gearheads

Ferrari Is Selling Real F1 Engine Parts as Museum-Worthy Collectibles for Rich GearheadsSome folks frame Monet prints. Some buy NFTs. Others bolt a Formula One camshaft to the wall. If you fall into the lattermost camp, Ferrari...

Apr 23, 2025 - 00:16
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Ferrari Is Selling Real F1 Engine Parts as Museum-Worthy Collectibles for Rich Gearheads

Some folks frame Monet prints. Some buy NFTs. Others bolt a Formula One camshaft to the wall. If you fall into the lattermost camp, Ferrari just gave you the ultimate excuse to turn your living room into a shrine for combustion. At Milan Design Week, the Prancing Horse unveiled Ferrari Collectibles – a collection of reimagined engine parts from some of their most legendary machines, now presented as art pieces worthy of both a gallery and a gearhead’s man cave.

Forget abstract sculptures and conceptual installations. Ferrari is literally framing its world-class engineering as sculptural art. That piston? It once fired at 19,000 rpm. That V12? It used to scream down Mugello at full throttle. Each piece tells a story, one that involves titanium alloys, championship battles, and a whole lot of red. While one could justify that form follows function, a lot of these engineering parts also serve as gorgeous art, representative of sheer power, adrenaline, and determination.

Designer: Ferrari

Among the highlights is the Tipo 048B engine from the 1999 F1 season. A naturally aspirated 3.0-liter V10 that made 790 CV – about 780 hp in real-world numbers – and revved to a hair-raising 16,300 rpm. This thing powered Michael Schumacher, Eddie Irvine, and Mika Salo in Ferrari’s victorious Constructors’ Championship run. Now, you can place it next to your record collection and pretend it’s just another conversation piece. Spoiler: it absolutely isn’t.

Then there’s the LaFerrari prototype engine, a 6.3-liter V12 fused with the F1-derived HY-KERS hybrid system. Total output? A staggering 963 hp. This particular power unit came from a development mule – essentially a rolling science experiment with very expensive DNA. Unique doesn’t quite cut it here. This is one-of-one territory, where rarity meets raw power and form follows function into full-blown artistry.

The collection features more obscure but iconic collectible parts too. A camshaft from the F2003-GA, which helped clinch yet another world title. An exhaust pipe from the F60, once fed by the foot of Kimi Räikkönen. A crankshaft from Alonso’s 2010 debut in the F10. These components didn’t just exist – they competed, endured, and occasionally broke under pressure. Now, they’re preserved with reverence, a freeze-frame of motorsport history encased in sleek acrylic and brushed aluminum.

Even the smaller pieces carry emotional heft. A carbon fiber brake disc from the SF71H, a conrod from the F1-2000, and a piston from Schumacher’s dominant F2002 all feature in the lineup. These aren’t replicas. They’re scarred, used, and undeniably authentic – metal that once danced with fire, now quietly telling tales.

Transparent casings, minimalist mounts, and floating frames give each item a sense of weightlessness – until you remember that camshaft probably weighs more than your espresso machine. Pricing? Let’s just say these collectibles aren’t for the faint of wallet. But if you’ve got deep pockets and an even deeper respect for motorsport history, this is as close as you’ll get to owning a piece of Ferrari’s soul, without needing a flatbed truck or a pit crew.

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