Ferrari is set to offer the thrill of a manual gearbox again after a 14-year hiatus.
The 12Cilindri Manuale is the first Ferrari fitted with a clutch pedal – as well as the famous ‘canceletto’ open-gate shifter – since the California and is the first manual V12 from Maranello since the 599 GTB.
It will be limited to 1499 examples and, at €590,000 (£508k), costs 50% more than the regular 12Cilindri.
Departing Ferrari commercial chief Enrico Galliera said a manual gearbox has been the number one request from the firm’s client base in recent years.
Describing the Manuale as a car that “brings incredible performance and incredible emotion”, he said Ferrari had waited until it could offer something not just rewarding but also innovative and “without compromise”.
The innovation refers to the most unconventional element of the new Manuale: it has no linkage between the gearlever and the gearbox slung across the back axle. Indeed, the car is homologated as an automatic.

But while the eight-speed dual-clutch ’box (DCT) of the regular 12Cilindri is retained, here it can be controlled by-wire through inputs the driver makes with the clutch pedal and gearlever.
The potential genius of the system is that the position of the clutch pedal informs the level of engagement of the clutch packs in the gearbox. It means the system is able to replicate everything from languid clutch-riding, if you are babying the 819bhp 12Cilindri Manuale off the mark, to brutal clutch-kicking to initiate slides.
It is even possible to stall the car, though authenticity is not pursued to the extent that the system will accept an errant downshift – the driver cannot send valvetrain shards to the heavens by inadvertently slotting first instead of third.
“The DCT remains but we have built up on top a new layer of interaction for the driver, to bring back the legacy experience,” said project lead Valentin Marguet. “Whatever goes through your hand on the lever or your foot on the clutch is built on mechanics. There is no artifice and the electronics are there only to communicate to the car.”
It means the Manuale can also be driven in full-automatic mode, which Ferrari expects many owners to revert to in stop-start traffic.




