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Author Topic: Ferrari Enzo crash in California  (Read 5227 times)
Chris24
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« on: February 22, 2006, 01:51:51 am »

Check this story and videos out from California this morning.

Enzo meets power pole at up to 200 mph. Shocked

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-022106crash_lat,0,3727466.story?coll=la-home-headlines
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Paddy_NL
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« Reply #1 on: February 22, 2006, 02:00:12 am »

nobody told the driver the car had breaks too?
or should have had breaks, you never know with Italian cars Undecided
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chop456
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« Reply #2 on: February 22, 2006, 07:43:04 am »

Can Prince Naseem prove his whereabouts at the time of the accident?
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Fran
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« Reply #3 on: February 22, 2006, 08:43:36 am »


"You pay a million bucks for a car, you expect safety," Brooks said.

Well i guess on the basis he only had minor injuries (or walked away depending on who you believe) after crashing at 150 mph - he got safety!!!! regardless of the car falling to bits......... Roll Eyes
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knetter
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« Reply #4 on: February 22, 2006, 10:21:36 am »

Doesn't look like an enzo to me!! Isn't that made from composite material, it should have shattered into a million pieces!
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« Reply #5 on: February 22, 2006, 10:24:27 am »


Listen to the video, according to that it was doing 200mph, just shows how what you read and what can be reported can be totally different.

I doubt that there would be a survivor at 200mph.
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mgmark
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« Reply #6 on: February 22, 2006, 11:30:45 pm »

Quote
"We get some speed violations, but nothing over 70 mph," Brooks said.

Yeah right - guess that one was a tad over 70mph to rip the rear engine and frame away from the monocoque........Interesting to note that despite all that kinetic energy, the pole is still standing tolerably upright.....

MG Mark

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chop456
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« Reply #7 on: February 23, 2006, 07:07:28 pm »

More....

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/l...-home-headlines

Ferrari Owner Had Other 'Crash'
Stefan Eriksson, whose $1-million car was totaled in Malibu, had been a top executive of a video game system maker that flamed out.
By Richard Winton and David Pierson
Times Staff Writers

February 23, 2006

Stefan Eriksson had hoped that millions of video gamers would experience the thrill of street racing on a hand-held device he helped develop. But then Eriksson's $1-million Ferrari was totaled, an accident that gamers around the world may see as a cruel metaphor for the collapse of the portable console company.

Eriksson was a top executive for Gizmondo, a European video game system maker that two years ago garnered international headlines by challenging Sony and Nintendo with its own PSP-like device.

Eriksson received a $100,000 car allowance from the firm, according to records from the Securities and Exchange Commission, and drove in Le Mans, the famous French motor race, in a Ferrari plastered with Gizmondo signs.

The game company launched last year with a gala in London that included a performance by the pop star Sting. One of the firm's games, Chicane, involved exotic car racing.

But on the eve of Gizmondo's U.S. launch last fall, Eriksson resigned from the firm while in Los Angeles to market the device. His resignation came days before a Swedish newspaper alleged that Eriksson had been convicted of counterfeiting in the Scandinavian country in the early 1990s.

The company quickly collapsed, unable to sell enough devices to justify to game makers that they should supply more titles for the Gizmondo format. Loans could not be repaid, and the company incurred net losses exceeding $100 million, according to the SEC records.

The company's name is now a synonym for hubris in the game world, which was enrapt Wednesday with the news that Eriksson's lavish Italian sports car had been wrecked.

"The Gizmondo was bad enough but now this?" wrote one reader on the electronic game website gamespot.com.

"And you wonder why they went bankrupt," another gamer wrote.

Eriksson, 44, declined to be interviewed Wednesday, according to a security officer posted in front of his gated Bel-Air mansion.

But he had told authorities that he was a passenger in the car driven by a mysterious German man whom he knew only as Dietrich when the Ferrari Enzo lost control and crashed Tuesday on Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu. He said Dietrich fled on foot up a canyon and disappeared.

But detectives are skeptical of that explanation and said Wednesday that they were going to re-interview Eriksson. Witnesses told detectives the Ferrari was drag racing with a Mercedes-Benz SLR.

"His story has inconsistencies that need to be cleared up," Sheriff's Sgt. Phillip Brooks said.

The investigation has also centered on exactly how the Enzo got into the United States and how Eriksson came to possess it, Brooks said.

"We have quite a few new leads on that," Brooks said, but he declined to elaborate.

The crash occurred about 6 a.m. west of Decker Road when the Ferrari, traveling at 120 mph in the northbound lane, crested a hill and slammed into a power pole.

The car split in two, sending the engine flying and creating a 1,200-foot trail of debris, sheriff's deputies said.

The power pole was snapped about halfway up and suspended by power lines like a half-chopped corn stalk.

The Enzo is one of the most exclusive cars in the world, with only 400 ever made. Eriksson, who suffered only a bloody face and was seen walking about after the crash, was probably saved by the car's tough carbon composite compartment and seat that were designed to keep occupants in place. The compartment is also designed to absorb the impact of a crash to protect the occupants.

The accident comes amid a tough period for Gizmondo. This fall, a court in London ordered its parent company, the Jacksonville, Fla.-based Tiger Telematics, to liquidate its assets in Europe. Calls to Tiger Telematics were not returned.

The Financial Times reported Tuesday that a chestnut colt named Gizmondo was one of the first company-owned properties to be auctioned off. A trainer told the paper the animal is of "modest ability" and bids were beginning at $1,046.

When the pebble-shaped Gizmondo hand-held device was unveiled at the 2004 Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas, it was the only one on the market that offered video-games, text messaging, music, movie clips, a digital camera and a global positioning system, known as GPS.

Michael Pachter, an analyst with Wedbush Morgan Securities in Los Angeles, described Gizmondo as an "interesting idea that was grossly undercapitalized."

The company, he said, hoped that the GPS would make the user's location a draw for advertisers. The technology, Pachter said, delivered real-time ads that would allow paid advertisers to offer special incentives to Gizmondo owners who were near their businesses. A Gizmondo owner in Los Angeles, for example, could receive a 25% discount from a restaurant a couple of blocks of away.

"The idea, I think, was brilliant," Pachter said. "But they faced a huge obstacle, which was getting people to purchase and carry these devices."

Because few people owned Gizmondos, few video game publishers signed up to make games for the system, Pachter said. A robust selection of games is crucial for a hand-held device such as Gizmondo to succeed in the $10.5-billion U.S. video game industry because of the importance gamers place on software.

"Without unique, compelling games, you'd basically have to be an idiot to pick one up," said Geoff Keighley, a host on G4, a cable channel devoted to video games.

Despite all the hype, Gizmondo flamed out and is now considered an Edsel in game circles.

Eriksson was executive director of Gizmondo and helped oversee its European launch. But his career at the company ended just as a leading Swedish newspaper linked him to a group of alleged counterfeiters operating out of a small city 80 miles north of Stockholm in the early 1990s, well before he joined the firm. The paper, Aftonbladet, reported that he was convicted and went to prison.

The Gizmondo story is not over. Some creditors have filed suit alleging they were not paid by the firm.

In Los Angeles, detectives said they are trying to learn everything they can about Eriksson but are not sure when their investigation will be completed. Brooks said they are examining his work with Gizmondo and his background in Sweden.

Eriksson had a blood-alcohol level of 0.09% after Tuesday's crash, over the legal limit, but that would not be an issue if he was indeed the passenger in the car, Brooks said.

As for the mysterious Dietrich, officials said they are not searching for the alleged driver.
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chop456
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« Reply #8 on: March 27, 2007, 02:57:41 pm »

Scratch another one.  Grin

Quote
IRWINDALE, California (AP) -- Eddie Griffin crashed a rare Ferrari Enzo worth $1.5 million into a concrete barrier while practicing at a racetrack Monday, destroying the car but escaping uninjured.

The comedian was practicing for a charity race to promote his upcoming film, "Redline," when he drove too fast around a curve at the Irwindale Speedway. Video footage showed the red sports car screeching before it ricocheted off the barrier with heavy damage to its front.

"Undercover Brother's good at karate and all the rest of that, but the brother can't drive," Griffin, referring to one his past films, said after the accident.

The film's publicist, Wendy Zocks, said Griffin was "doing OK."

"He walked away completely unscratched, but probably a little shaken," Zocks said.

The Enzo, valued at around $1.5 million, was owned by the executive producer of "Redline," Daniel Sadek, whose exotic car collection is featured in the movie.

Sadek said that the car was damaged beyond repair and that he had "mixed feelings" about the wreck.

"I'm glad Eddie came out of the crash OK, but my dream car got destroyed," Sadek said. "I went to my trailer for about 15 minutes and I thought, there's people dying every day. A lot of worse things are happening in the world."

Only 400 Ferrari Enzos were ever produced, all between 2002 and 2004.

Griffin's credits include the comedies "Undercover Brother"; "Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo" and its sequel; "Date Movie"; and "Norbit."

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Boorish Grobian
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« Reply #9 on: March 27, 2007, 05:10:14 pm »

I know this is a worn out phrase, but if the shoe fits....More money than sense!
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Dave H
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« Reply #10 on: March 27, 2007, 07:04:59 pm »

http://cbs2.com/topstories/local_story_085210942.html
if you haven't seen it.  That thing gets some serious air.

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nickliv
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« Reply #11 on: March 27, 2007, 07:26:25 pm »

I know this is a worn out phrase, but if the shoe fits....More money than sense!
Fax

Thing is, the shoe in question was made of lead.
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