07/08/2026
50 years of 512 BB
Introduced at the 1976 Paris Motor Show, the 512 BB was not the beginning of Ferrari’s mid-engined 12-cylinder road-car era. That distinction belongs to the 365 GT4 BB. Instead, the 512 BB represented the concept’s technical maturation: more displacement, greater flexibility, improved cooling, and a more usable delivery without compromising its uncompromising character.
Its designation was unusually direct: five liters, 12 cylinders. The longitudinally mounted 4,943 cc engine produced 360 horsepower at 6,800 rpm. It featured four overhead camshafts, dry-sump lubrication, a twin-plate clutch, and an architecture more accurately described as a 180-degree V12 than a true boxer, since opposing pistons shared common crankpins.
Compared with the 365 GT4 BB, the larger-capacity engine delivered its power at lower revs, with increased torque and a smoother response. Ferrari claimed a top speed of 188 mph, placing the 512 BB among the fastest road cars of its generation.
The Pininfarina body evolved through functional detail rather than radical redesign. A deeper front spoiler, a wider rear track, NACA ducts ahead of the rear wheels, and a revised rear treatment with four taillights and four exhaust outlets improved both cooling and visual balance.
The initials “BB” officially stood for Berlinetta Boxer (although it is actually a flat-12), but Ferrari history preserves a more playful explanation: within Maranello, the original BB’s sculptural shape was reportedly associated with French icon Brigitte Bardot.
Half a century later, the 512 BB remains one of the purest expressions of Ferrari’s flat-12 lineage: technically complex, visually restrained, and defined by a driving experience that belongs unmistakably to the analog era.