Express & Star

Unregistered Ferrari 430 Scuderia heading to auction

The 2009 supercar has covered just 70 miles

Published

A Ferrari 430 Scuderia that has never been registered is set to go under the hammer.

The supercar, which was delivered to Hong Kong in 2009, has never worn number plates either and is one of only 279 right-hand-drive examples that were made.

The Scuderia was the most extreme version of Ferrari’s mid-2000s F430 supercar, and received a number of changes to set it apart from the ‘standard’ model. Power from its mid-engine V8 was hiked to 503bhp, while it was 85kg lighter than the standard F430 and used a lightning-fast gearbox similar to the ones in Ferrari’s F1 cars at the time.

Painted in Bianco Avus (white) with a black Alcantara interior, the model also gets the desirable carbon-fibre exterior trim. Since being delivered to Hong Kong in 2009, it’s said to have been dry-stored correctly in a temperature- and humidity-controlled facility and shows just 112km (70 miles) on its odometer.

The Scuderia has now been imported into the UK on a ‘temporary admission’ basis. As such, it can be registered here or exported to another country. A Hong Kong-specification car is also said to be identical to a UK model with the exception of the metric instruments.

Going under the hammer at Silverstone Auctions’ sale at the Race Retro Show at Stoneleigh Park, Warwickshire, on February 25, the Ferrari 430 Scuderia has an estimate of £150,000 to £180,000.

The supercar has covered just 70 miles. (Ferrari)

Other lots at the sale include a Ford Jeep used to transport King George VI in 1942 and a 1953 Land Rover Series I supplied to the Royal Family in 1954 and used by them around the Balmoral estate until 1966.

Sorry, we are not accepting comments on this article.