The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Top down from St Andrews to Pitlochry in Ferrari Portofino

- JACK MCKEOWN MOTORING EDITOR jmckeown@thecourier.co.uk

In 13 years as this paper’s motoring writer I’ve never driven a Ferrari. Lamborghin­is, Aston Martins and McLarens yes – but never the most famous supercar maker of all.

That has all changed now, I’m pleased to report. A couple of weeks ago I spent a better-than-acceptable day driving through Fife and Perthshire in the Portofino.

The convertibl­e may be the “entry level” Ferrari but that still means a starting price of £166,000 and a twinturbo 3.9-litre V8 developing 592bhp.

After a hearty breakfast at St Andrews’ Old Course Hotel, we set off. Fortune smiled on us and we were given one of June’s few warm, sunny days – time to get the roof down.

Unlike its rivals, Ferrari has gone for a folding hardtop instead of a fabric roof, claiming the weight difference is minimal. In Scotland, a convertibl­e that effectivel­y turns into a coupe with the roof up certainly makes sense.

Out of St Andrews and on to the back roads above the Tay coast and it’s time to find out what a Ferrari’s all about. Dropping a couple of gears using the paddle shift, I hit the throttle and we road forward. Zero to 62mph takes just

“Nothing makes you feel quite as special as a Ferrari

3.5 seconds, though I do not attempt to match the car’s 199mph top speed.

We head through Crieff, Aberfoyle, and up the A9 to Pitlochry. The Ferrari is glorious to drive – poised, balanced and responsive.

The Portofino is designed to be driven every day, and to be taken on long journeys. There’s a comfort suspension setting that irons out bumps. There are even rear seats, though anyone bigger than a toddler won’t fit – better to think of them as extra luggage space.

Certainly, after two hours in the car, I stepped out in Pitlochry without feeling any twangs of discomfort.

Ferrari’s spokespeop­le are at pains to point out their cars are not expensive to own. Every Ferrari comes with a remarkable seven years’ free servicing, while sky-high resale values mean you’ll lose more in depreciati­on on a Volvo XC90 than a Ferrari Portofino.

That overlooks the small matter of finding £166,000 to buy one. Most owners pay upwards of £200,000 for their cars – you can spend £18,000 just on paint. Ultimately, these are cars for wealthy people. Most owners have at least three Ferraris already.

I loved spending a day in one. They’re beautiful, iconic cars and the driving experience is extraordin­ary. Is it better than other supercars I’ve driven? The McLaren 570S Spider may just pip it, but we’re splitting hairs – and nothing makes you feel quite as special as a Ferrari.

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