It's reliable because you drive it. Good for you Dude! I have 2 Alfas from that era. Drive it. Drive it hard and often. If you let it sit it will hate you and then you will hate it. Drive it!!!
His comments really resonate with me. I own a carby 308 and can't walk away from it without looking back. I also daily it..rain hail or shine. You hear..smell..feel everything. Typical Ferrari..deceptively simple. I love it.
Man, I came looking for my weekly dose of "I don't own the car, I'm just the caretaker, a steward, if you will..." and the obligatory Montana license plate tax dodge. I was PLEASANTLY disappointed! This guys seems extra cool and appears to wear modest wealth very comfortably and presentably. Many thumbs up! I know cool cars don't necessarily come with cool owners, but I do appreciate these productions soo much more with a likeable human story.
@@1954telecaster This car is actually the same magic to drive as the old Fender guitars are to play. You have to adapt and it will adapt to you - if you want to feel the vibe - if you don't, don't even bother. If you are a guitarist you know what I am talking about. If you are not, then you shouldn't have your channel's name telecaster in the first place.
Idk why but I feel really proud of this dude... I dont even know the guy but the fact that he drives the Ferrari like it's meant to makes me feel really proud of him.
This guy gets it!! I have a 92 348 and totally understand, and love, the visceral experience of driving it. Nothing beats the whir of the cams right behind you, the clack of the gated shifter, the exhaust bark, and the non-assisted steering telling you exactly what the tires are doing.
Massive respect for driving this as much as he does. No point of having a car like this to let it sit!! Loved the comment about the windshield wipers, that's awesome
I too am a cartoonist who lost my classic Porsche daily driver in an accident. I've been saving for my next classic, though not a Ferrari. This is an inspiring story.
Love the 308 - not the fastest, most expensive, or most exclusive Ferrari, but instantly recognizable and FUN! Yours is a stunner, in black - glad to hear that it’s your daily driver, not a garage-queen! Enzo himself was known to state that his cars were meant to be driven, not to be kept under glass. Bravo!
Another petrolicious masterpiece of filming and putting this beautiful 308 GTB into scene. And yes, definitely a big regular investment to maintain the baby.
Why oh why did I go all 'suburbanised' and sell my beautiful 964. She had all those wonderful quirky qualities, just a different badge. She was my daily driver too and never let me down - other than that $5k oil leak, the $3k engine tune, the $8k clutch... :-) How I loved her. Another wonderful car experience from you guys. Many thanks and cheers from Sydney - Dave
It's true, owning a Ferrari is a relationship no doubt...I don't really know what it is, the history, the legend, or that there seems to be a supernatural presence in the car's DNA. I like to think of it as, the spirit of Enzo. Michael Schumacher once said, when he jumped in to the Ferrari F1, something magical happened and the car seemed to drive itself. Buy a classic Ferrari, drive it, work on it and live it, and you'll know what I mean. Whenever I drive mine, I always feel like I'm part of something just a little bit special. I admit it, I do talk to my car sometimes, it seems to run better. Forza Ferrari !
When people ask me what it's like living with a Ferrari, I tell them, "It's like living with an Italian super model: She's very beautiful and everyone looks at her. She doesn't always feel well and she's almost always moody; you can't rush her. When things do go bad, they really go bad. But when things are good . . . they're very, very good!" Forza Ferrari!
Leonardo Fioravanti was a genius. He's the father of the 308, 512BB, 365 DAYTONA and others. Just like Marcello gandini (Lamborghini countach and Miura) he left a fingerprint that will stand for eternity in the automotive history.
I've always loved Ferrari for as long as I can remember, and the fact that this example is from the year of my birth - is certainly deserving of a thumbs up...
The best thing my dad did to this exact year Ferrari was gut the muffler. We shoved a 70 SS 350 Camaro exhaust within the existing muffler shell. It made a massive difference. On Ferrari track days before, the 12 cylinders would pull away on the straights from him. Afterwards, he kept up just fine. Even sounded better.
Thank you guys this is a great video, and Steve and his 308 are brilliant material! I have a 328 GTB (so not dissimilar at all just a few years younger) and this really resonates with me, the thrill of driving a car made to just drive with no modern day gadgets is a wonderful thing. Love the fact Steve uses regularly but clearly cares for it. The old school sound is just fabulous! :-)
Steve's car is the best-looking version of the 308-328 series: Berlinetta, Euro bumpers, small front spoiler, no rear wing. As the owner of a 328 GTS, I know exactly how he feels. I will also drive mine in the rain (though mine used galvanized steel, which his didn't) and I also don't work on the car myself. But I average 4000 miles a year, and the car likes that! Enzo himself said, "My cars were meant to be driven!"
My Hubbie not only drives his 77 '308 GT4 in the rain, he drove it from Toronto, Canada to College Station Texas, and home again, for the unveiling of the Ferrari F40 in the 90's. It was late in the year with very cold roads making for a harder ride then usual. He watched the Speedometer roll past 99,999 miles and start all over again. At the College Station track he road his car hard for 3 days. Luckily they only used part of the oval and had a portion with twisty infield. The long wheelbase makes this car a sleeper on the curves. But only after removing the A/C and adding 5 gal dry sump instead. He also has a sunroof which helps on those hot days.!
A wonderful man with an goddess of a car. One have to respect and love that. And once again Petrolicious, you make amazing conent and please never stop captureing stories like this
Great car the 308. I drove 128,000 miles in mine without a single breakdown and having warned it up carefully, I thrashed the ass off it every single day like it was one of my bikes. Most reliable car I have ever owned.
My first love, 308, 328, anytime. And yes grew up watching Magnum PI, always want to get a glimpse of that red car with Tom Selleck's head sticking out of his GTS, lol.
nice snarly exhaust note! love the story and it doesn't matter that you aren't doing the mechanical work yourself. glad to see one driven for pure enjoyment ... I opted for an NA1 NSX because I was afraid of the 308, but applaud you for living out your dream. well done!
In an effort to drive the costs of survivor '77 308 GTB fiberglass Ferrari's up, in the '80's we bought one and chopped it up making a full race GT-2 racer out of it. The engine and transmission work was done by the legendary Bob Wallace here in Phoenix. All other work was done locally and we campaigned it with some success for a couple of years. In full race form it was a formidable adversary in the GT-2 field. We had the pleasure of racing at Riverside prior to its 1989 closure. What a time it was. What a car it was. And the sound. Magnificent.
Another great therapy video from petrolicious and as others have said, no pretentious look at me vibe. Engine overrun sounds amazing! Loads of toggle switches and dials too, what a great interior with the Ferrari gated gear selector. I think that's where restomods have it over new cars, same reliability and performance but more dials and switches. But still there's a charm to the unmolested classic where the boot smells of engine oil and you still have to keep an eye on that temp gauge........however you wouldn't leave that car outside in the UK, unless you like moss growing in your window tracks.
The Ferrari GTB is like the Rolex Submariner, it a must have if you are a car enthusiast. It's not the best, but it says Ferrari all over it, totally beautiful. My respects to this man and his desire to USE the car, deffinitely a wise and tasteful man. Also, the right tail light doesn't work propperly ;-)
Early 308's are not only some of the most underappreciated Ferrari's, but underappreciated sports cars in general. Not only great to look at but vastly underrated for it's driving characteristics. Not necessarily fast or great on the brakes, but the overall package works really well. And like the owner says, its somewhat of a time capsule. Unmistakably "1977," but most of us know this was not a high point in car design (esp in America.) However the 308 is one of a handful of cars of the era that are aesthetically fantastic. Great car, great owner and great video!
There’s no shame in not being able to work on your own car. Not everyone knows how. It doesn’t make you less of a car guy. Beautiful car and I’m happy he drives it regularly, which is how all sports cars should be treated.
The great appeal of cars, to me, is the total combination - the design, the engineering, the sound. Looks AND function, if you take away one of them it’s no longer a car. Without drivning they’re pure pieces of art, sculptures. Which is fine. I like sculptures, but I love cars... That’s also why I have trouble getting excited about pre-war, or even 40-50’s cars often - you can’t really use them, which is half the allure... This guy certainly uses his Ferrari - good for him!
The best-kept secret in cool-looking, fun-to-drive, affordable cares are the Ferrari 308s and Mondials. You can pick one up for $30 to $80K, they perform reasonably well (given that they are 30+ years old) and maintenance costs are modest, because they are analog cars, and by today's standard, not particularly complicated.
I’m glad he’s enjoying his car and drives it. I’ve had a series of 328s, and most certainly enjoyed them as well although never drove them in the rain. It seemed like he was inferring that it wasn’t garaged? He “left it outside”? If so, that’s worth discussion. In any event, a nice 👍 for sharing his car with us. I will say that the back pressure from the exhaust system (older Borlas maybe?) does not quite seem right. Surprised no comments about that. Back pressure is not good long term for the motor.
Great Vid...I just got a 1982 308 GTSi (yours sounds waaaay better with the Carbs!).....luv it, except its like my ex wife....High Maintenance! I like you drive it, track it enjoy the hell out of it...Just wish I can drive it on the roads in California Like you!!! Good on You!! You live as much as you can, you only die once, and you can't take it with you! ;)
Another great video of a great car and a great owner loving and enjoying his car. My only plea is for Mr. Bolton to at least build a carport for his baby.
These are suprisingly practical. I used mine to pass my test, use as a daily - even in snow, pizza delivery and even a house move (all but the furniture!). Even comfortable on 400+ miles round trips
what a great car - and presentation! got mine (gts though) some weeks ago. but - wow. great footge and speaking out of my mind. drive - yes. rain -yes. just live it - yes!
In 1990 at the Italia a Zandvoort event , I outcornered these 308s with my Alfa GTV 2.0 ! Can you imagine how great I felt in my humble Alfa ? Okay , at the end of the straight at the Tarzancurve they catched up on power , but then the fun started all over again ! Happy days !
As a fellow owner (admittedly of the less desirable fuel-injected version), I loved seeing this video on one of my favorite cars ever. I did kind of wonder though why they showed the A/C controls right at the moment he said that the car has no A/C. :-)
i owned a 1981 gtsi for 5 years i put 22000 miles it was red i loved it the attention was over the top somebody screamed Magnum at me every time i drove it what it lacked in power made up in beauty and handling the car gave me a special feeling i have yet to get from any other car and i have had many since sold it in 2004 for $35,500
I have quite a bit of seat time (4k+ miles) in a 308GTSi. I spent a lot of time splitting between a 1998 Diablo, a 1986 Testarossa and the 308. In that trio, you'd think the 308 may be a disappointment, but frankly speaking, I highly enjoyed the 308. It's true...it's not fast, by todays standards, but the car is a real classic feeling, Italian machine...very mechanical, very simple and frankly...less attention getting which was good in my opinion. The Diablo and the Testarossa was constant interruption in your day at gas stations or wherever...but the 308 allowed you to live with the car uninterrupted. Aside from the occasional enthusiast...it was the car easiest to live with. That being said...if I could have any of them back, it'd be the Testarossa.
Made me laugh about putting anything in the trunk. It’s exactly what will happen in mine.. Super heated and smell like gas... Although any passenger that’s been with me, is having a great time..well, except my wife!! Can attest to everything you said. Great video I was waiting for this
I really respect people who aren't afraid to drive their exotic cars!!
When they don't, it's called idle worship.
Tbh that’s not even exotic that’s a damn piece
Can hardly call a car you can buy cheaper than an Accord an exotic.
Will Mac Check recent 308 values....
@@pappyodanial From searching the internet. The lowest price I saw is 5 figures. At 43k GBP. Now, please show me an Accord that beats that price.
It's reliable because you drive it. Good for you Dude! I have 2 Alfas from that era. Drive it. Drive it hard and often. If you let it sit it will hate you and then you will hate it. Drive it!!!
Amen!!
Damien Mills Alfas!👍
Absolutely right, good call!
Very well said!
I don't know who you are, but I like you.
This video is perfect, the sound, the car, the owner, the roads, the presentation. Very top notch
His comments really resonate with me. I own a carby 308 and can't walk away from it without looking back. I also daily it..rain hail or shine. You hear..smell..feel everything. Typical Ferrari..deceptively simple. I love it.
Typical pre 80s Ferrari. After that, the cheese grater aesthetic took over and the cars just got more complex, heavier and powerful.
buzzedo1 do those thing pass a Smog test?
@@bngr_bngr I'm in Australia so I could not say in other countries. Although it had cats even back in late 70s in the USA.
I you have to look back at it every time you park it, you definitely bought the right car.
They made the Ferrari 308 in 10 years they built em until 1985 and being replaced to the 328 1986-1989 and also replaced to the 348 in 1989.
Man, I came looking for my weekly dose of "I don't own the car, I'm just the caretaker, a steward, if you will..." and the obligatory Montana license plate tax dodge. I was PLEASANTLY disappointed! This guys seems extra cool and appears to wear modest wealth very comfortably and presentably. Many thumbs up! I know cool cars don't necessarily come with cool owners, but I do appreciate these productions soo much more with a likeable human story.
Don’t forget. This car is OVER 40 YEARS OLD.
1954telecaster. The car is actually excellent to drive. I drive mine almost every weekend.
1954telecaster but u can’t afford it😉
@@1954telecaster I drove one for years, they were very easy to drive and pretty reliable.
@@1954telecaster This car is actually the same magic to drive as the old Fender guitars are to play. You have to adapt and it will adapt to you - if you want to feel the vibe - if you don't, don't even bother. If you are a guitarist you know what I am talking about. If you are not, then you shouldn't have your channel's name telecaster in the first place.
Tomoko Kishi does his house not have a garage?
Idk why but I feel really proud of this dude... I dont even know the guy but the fact that he drives the Ferrari like it's meant to makes me feel really proud of him.
I love when he's driving and the hair is in front of his face... but he doesn't care, just enjoying the sweet V8!
I've always really loved the design of Ferraris from the 70s and 80s. I love the shapes and angles. Great film.
This guy gets it!! I have a 92 348 and totally understand, and love, the visceral experience of driving it. Nothing beats the whir of the cams right behind you, the clack of the gated shifter, the exhaust bark, and the non-assisted steering telling you exactly what the tires are doing.
This car is a great example of good design. It looks just as fantastic today as when it was first released. Just gorgeous!
I had a 1978 308 GTS and drove it to work, the gym, the store, and weekend roadtrips. Good times.
Massive respect for driving this as much as he does. No point of having a car like this to let it sit!! Loved the comment about the windshield wipers, that's awesome
Petrolicious always showcase the joy and spirit of driving like no one else. :)
I too am a cartoonist who lost my classic Porsche daily driver in an accident. I've been saving for my next classic, though not a Ferrari. This is an inspiring story.
What car You are planing to buy?
@@jareknowak8712 I have my sights set on a first gen BMW M6.
Love the single slow pop-up headlight and the one broken tail light bulb, just adds to the character :)
I just love these kind of stories. They reach my heart and clean my soul
Love the 308 - not the fastest, most expensive, or most exclusive Ferrari, but instantly recognizable and FUN! Yours is a stunner, in black - glad to hear that it’s your daily driver, not a garage-queen! Enzo himself was known to state that his cars were meant to be driven, not to be kept under glass. Bravo!
"if things go wrong, that's part of the story." MUCH respect from one owner (TR & 328) to another.
Again a perfect movie ... great balance of music , motor sound and images . And a true car guy.
"A car to me should be something you enjoy looking at, driving, it’s something you can get a joy out of by not going anywhere" - Steve Bolton
The new Ferrari's are unrecognizable to me. THE 70's, 80's, and some 90's ones I love.. I'd take a 308,348 in a heartbeat. And I would DRIVE IT!!!
That's what I respect - a man with a real love for his car. And it doesn't matter if it's 106 GTI or 458 Speciale.
Another petrolicious masterpiece of filming and putting this beautiful 308 GTB into scene. And yes, definitely a big regular investment to maintain the baby.
Its not just a car but rather an object of art.
Why oh why did I go all 'suburbanised' and sell my beautiful 964. She had all those wonderful quirky qualities, just a different badge. She was my daily driver too and never let me down - other than that $5k oil leak, the $3k engine tune, the $8k clutch... :-) How I loved her. Another wonderful car experience from you guys. Many thanks and cheers from Sydney - Dave
It's true, owning a Ferrari is a relationship no doubt...I don't really know what it is, the history, the legend, or that there seems to be a supernatural presence in the car's DNA. I like to think of it as, the spirit of Enzo. Michael Schumacher once said, when he jumped in to the Ferrari F1, something magical happened and the car seemed to drive itself. Buy a classic Ferrari, drive it, work on it and live it, and you'll know what I mean. Whenever I drive mine, I always feel like I'm part of something just a little bit special. I admit it, I do talk to my car sometimes, it seems to run better. Forza Ferrari !
When people ask me what it's like living with a Ferrari, I tell them, "It's like living with an Italian super model: She's very beautiful and everyone looks at her. She doesn't always feel well and she's almost always moody; you can't rush her. When things do go bad, they really go bad. But when things are good . . . they're very, very good!" Forza Ferrari!
@@TheRedRocket I'll never be divorcing my supermodel, no matter how bad she treats me.
@@TheRedRocket all italian girls are like this actually haha jk
Good on you.
Ferrari is the greatest name in Motorsport and cars in general a scaled down version of God
Leonardo Fioravanti was a genius. He's the father of the 308, 512BB, 365 DAYTONA and others. Just like Marcello gandini (Lamborghini countach and Miura) he left a fingerprint that will stand for eternity in the automotive history.
Thumbs up to this guy. Exactly how I would feel about and use that beautiful car if I could own it.
One of the most beautiful Ferraris and my preferred one!
I've always loved Ferrari for as long as I can remember, and the fact that this example is from the year of my birth - is certainly deserving of a thumbs up...
One of the most iconic cars, unmistakably Ferrari. Great video
Wow. 308 is in my top 5 of most beautiful designs. Enzo's taste was legendary.
"The most electric thing is the windows. And they work, when they want to" haha
The best thing my dad did to this exact year Ferrari was gut the muffler. We shoved a 70 SS 350 Camaro exhaust within the existing muffler shell. It made a massive difference. On Ferrari track days before, the 12 cylinders would pull away on the straights from him. Afterwards, he kept up just fine. Even sounded better.
It's probably more reliable Because he keeps driving it.
One of my favourite cars out of the 1970's, beautiful example.
Those lines. Timeless beauty.
I’m interested in how many miles the car has. Huge respect to him for not being afraid to get it dirty or drive it in the rain.
It would be too killer if Petro could do a vid in the rain with a car like this
These have aged incredibly well. I remember hating these, and now I’m here looking at for sale ads.
Thank you guys this is a great video, and Steve and his 308 are brilliant material! I have a 328 GTB (so not dissimilar at all just a few years younger) and this really resonates with me, the thrill of driving a car made to just drive with no modern day gadgets is a wonderful thing. Love the fact Steve uses regularly but clearly cares for it. The old school sound is just fabulous! :-)
Steve's car is the best-looking version of the 308-328 series: Berlinetta, Euro bumpers, small front spoiler, no rear wing. As the owner of a 328 GTS, I know exactly how he feels. I will also drive mine in the rain (though mine used galvanized steel, which his didn't) and I also don't work on the car myself. But I average 4000 miles a year, and the car likes that! Enzo himself said, "My cars were meant to be driven!"
One of the best you guys did. And that story about Ferraris in the rain!
Now you KNOW you want to see one driven on that same road in the rain.
Probably one of the best videos I've seen from Petrolicious..Very inspirational
My Hubbie not only drives his 77 '308 GT4 in the rain, he drove it from Toronto, Canada to College Station Texas, and home again, for the unveiling of the Ferrari F40 in the 90's. It was late in the year with very cold roads making for a harder ride then usual. He watched the Speedometer roll past 99,999 miles and start all over again. At the College Station track he road his car hard for 3 days. Luckily they only used part of the oval and had a portion with twisty infield. The long wheelbase makes this car a sleeper on the curves. But only after removing the A/C and adding 5 gal dry sump instead. He also has a sunroof which helps on those hot days.!
A wonderful man with an goddess of a car. One have to respect and love that.
And once again Petrolicious, you make amazing conent and please never stop captureing stories like this
Despite the more 'iconic' or 'special' Ferraris - the 308/328s are still the sweetest shape to me
288 gto
@@xavierortiz2690 yeah but based on the 308
@@karlx19 yes it is
I agree. In fact I believe the 308 and it's predecessor the Dino are the two most beautiful cars ever made.
Great car the 308. I drove 128,000 miles in mine without a single breakdown and having warned it up carefully, I thrashed the ass off it every single day like it was one of my bikes. Most reliable car I have ever owned.
My first love, 308, 328, anytime. And yes grew up watching Magnum PI, always want to get a glimpse of that red car with Tom Selleck's head sticking out of his GTS, lol.
LOVE THIS. My 911 sits outside. Both that and my Lotus get driven hard. Kudos!! And btw, I do love those Bertone 308GT4's too!
Rod Salvador I drive the shit out of my Lotus as well lol
Saw this car twice on the PCH last week, so cool, love to see that its driven often. And zero shame on not wrenching on it yourself....
nice snarly exhaust note! love the story and it doesn't matter that you aren't doing the mechanical work yourself. glad to see one driven for pure enjoyment ... I opted for an NA1 NSX because I was afraid of the 308, but applaud you for living out your dream. well done!
Lovely car and a great owner. I love the way he's kept it original, and that it hasn't been resprayed 'retail red.'
Great video! Having grown up watching Magnum pi i can totally relate. Also my dream Ferrari! Thanks for sharing your experience!!
In an effort to drive the costs of survivor '77 308 GTB fiberglass Ferrari's up, in the '80's we bought one and chopped it up making a full race GT-2 racer out of it. The engine and transmission work was done by the legendary Bob Wallace here in Phoenix. All other work was done locally and we campaigned it with some success for a couple of years. In full race form it was a formidable adversary in the GT-2 field. We had the pleasure of racing at Riverside prior to its 1989 closure. What a time it was. What a car it was. And the sound. Magnificent.
Drove a 328 across the US and I was nearly deaf by the time I got home. Can't imagine the 308 is much different.
Another great therapy video from petrolicious and as others have said, no pretentious look at me vibe.
Engine overrun sounds amazing!
Loads of toggle switches and dials too, what a great interior with the Ferrari gated gear selector.
I think that's where restomods have it over new cars, same reliability and performance but more dials and switches.
But still there's a charm to the unmolested classic where the boot smells of engine oil and you still have to keep an eye on that temp gauge........however you wouldn't leave that car outside in the UK, unless you like moss growing in your window tracks.
The Ferrari GTB is like the Rolex Submariner, it a must have if you are a car enthusiast. It's not the best, but it says Ferrari all over it, totally beautiful. My respects to this man and his desire to USE the car, deffinitely a wise and tasteful man. Also, the right tail light doesn't work propperly ;-)
Early 308's are not only some of the most underappreciated Ferrari's, but underappreciated sports cars in general. Not only great to look at but vastly underrated for it's driving characteristics. Not necessarily fast or great on the brakes, but the overall package works really well. And like the owner says, its somewhat of a time capsule. Unmistakably "1977," but most of us know this was not a high point in car design (esp in America.) However the 308 is one of a handful of cars of the era that are aesthetically fantastic. Great car, great owner and great video!
@American Citizen my Dad took me to school in 1989 Skoda 120L :)
@American Citizen rear engine + rear wheel drive + 900kg (:P)
Lovely car; lovely film. A driver who understands what it's all about.
There’s no shame in not being able to work on your own car. Not everyone knows how. It doesn’t make you less of a car guy. Beautiful car and I’m happy he drives it regularly, which is how all sports cars should be treated.
Carlo Santin agree, although wiper replacement is something my 7 year old grandson does for my wife’s concours Bianchina lol.
American Citizen you might be surprised...Trico sells them and they’re a snap to install.
@@garya3056
It wasn't replacing them so much as getting the parts. He said his mechanic didn't keep them stocked
The great appeal of cars, to me, is the total combination - the design, the engineering, the sound. Looks AND function, if you take away one of them it’s no longer a car. Without drivning they’re pure pieces of art, sculptures. Which is fine. I like sculptures, but I love cars... That’s also why I have trouble getting excited about pre-war, or even 40-50’s cars often - you can’t really use them, which is half the allure... This guy certainly uses his Ferrari - good for him!
The best-kept secret in cool-looking, fun-to-drive, affordable cares are the Ferrari 308s and Mondials. You can pick one up for $30 to $80K, they perform reasonably well (given that they are 30+ years old) and maintenance costs are modest, because they are analog cars, and by today's standard, not particularly complicated.
It's always a pleasure to watch Petrolicious videos.
I’m glad he’s enjoying his car and drives it. I’ve had a series of 328s, and most certainly enjoyed them as well although never drove them in the rain. It seemed like he was inferring that it wasn’t garaged? He “left it outside”? If so, that’s worth discussion. In any event, a nice 👍 for sharing his car with us.
I will say that the back pressure from the exhaust system (older Borlas maybe?) does not quite seem right. Surprised no comments about that. Back pressure is not good long term for the motor.
Early models had glassfiber body?
Jarek Nowak 75-77 models. ✔️
The sound when he lifts off is glorious!
I have a new respect for the 308, looks so sick in black.... Reminds me of the chase in Against All Odds
The car is straight out gorgeous! That spec though... Beautiful camera work from u guys as well :)
Arguably the most beautiful Ferrari of all...
uh lol...
It's #2 for me. 288 GTO👌
Very nice video, love it ! I have a 1976 308 GTB sibling, same colors.
Great Vid...I just got a 1982 308 GTSi (yours sounds waaaay better with the Carbs!).....luv it, except its like my ex wife....High Maintenance! I like you drive it, track it enjoy the hell out of it...Just wish I can drive it on the roads in California Like you!!! Good on You!! You live as much as you can, you only die once, and you can't take it with you! ;)
Not a car person, but this is a true thing of beauty!
Living in California and driving a car like that on a quiet road is my dream
+1 here!
These videos are more of a therapy for me, like medidation, calm and peaceful and soothing!
Grazie per avermi regalato queste emozioni! Grazie!
I wish there were a shot of his house. I could tell it was modernist from the couple of shots that were featured.
Brilliant film as usual.
Another great video of a great car and a great owner loving and enjoying his car. My only plea is for Mr. Bolton to at least build a carport for his baby.
Nigel W I couldn’t imagine not keeping that in a garage and keeping it waxed or ceramic coated at all times.
Drive it and enjoy it mate. That’s what these cars were built for. Poor things must be feeling horrible when they are treated as garage queens.
I was fortunate enough to drive a 308 a few times. It’s a bucket list item I didn’t know I had until I drove it.
This guy was born to own this car.
Ahh the Ferrari’s of my youth , such a lovely car. back in the day performance cars had stick shifts the way God intended it to be.
He don´t think it´s a relationship... but plan to keep the car forever? Accept it mister Bolton, you are full in love!
Driving! Not just owning and resale... yes!
These are suprisingly practical. I used mine to pass my test, use as a daily - even in snow, pizza delivery and even a house move (all but the furniture!). Even comfortable on 400+ miles round trips
Awesome! Happy for the guy living his dream !
Thank you for driving this beauty
Amazing sound and style. Dio, è bella!
As a bike rider i can relate to this. The mind wanders, it's difficult to not sound like a hippie when describing parts of the experience.
what a great car - and presentation! got mine (gts though) some weeks ago. but - wow. great footge and speaking out of my mind. drive - yes. rain -yes. just live it - yes!
That clack on red interior is beautiful. Lovely car and lovely film.
After all these years and all the different designs of cars this is still one of the most beautiful looking and sounding cars ever built.
Love the fact that this guy actually drives it. Older cars need to be driven otherwise things tend to brake on them more often.
In 1990 at the Italia a Zandvoort event , I outcornered these 308s with my Alfa GTV 2.0 !
Can you imagine how great I felt in my humble Alfa ?
Okay , at the end of the straight at the Tarzancurve they catched up on power , but then the fun started all over again !
Happy days !
As a fellow owner (admittedly of the less desirable fuel-injected version), I loved seeing this video on one of my favorite cars ever. I did kind of wonder though why they showed the A/C controls right at the moment he said that the car has no A/C. :-)
i owned a 1981 gtsi for 5 years i put 22000 miles it was red i loved it the attention was over the top somebody screamed Magnum at me every time i drove it what it lacked in power made up in beauty and handling the car gave me a special feeling i have yet to get from any other car and i have had many since sold it in 2004 for $35,500
Congrats on owning that. It’s a fine fine example. Looks phenomenal in Black.
That OCD kicking when that rear light just half lit.
I noticed it immediately and I hate it
This guy is living his dream, God bless
I have quite a bit of seat time (4k+ miles) in a 308GTSi. I spent a lot of time splitting between a 1998 Diablo, a 1986 Testarossa and the 308. In that trio, you'd think the 308 may be a disappointment, but frankly speaking, I highly enjoyed the 308. It's true...it's not fast, by todays standards, but the car is a real classic feeling, Italian machine...very mechanical, very simple and frankly...less attention getting which was good in my opinion. The Diablo and the Testarossa was constant interruption in your day at gas stations or wherever...but the 308 allowed you to live with the car uninterrupted. Aside from the occasional enthusiast...it was the car easiest to live with. That being said...if I could have any of them back, it'd be the Testarossa.
Made me laugh about putting anything in the trunk. It’s exactly what will happen in mine..
Super heated and smell like gas...
Although any passenger that’s been with me, is having a great time..well, except my wife!!
Can attest to everything you said.
Great video
I was waiting for this
My Fiat X1/9 (don't laugh) had a rear boot that did exactly the same - we used to call it the pizza oven.
EnglishroG it’s the Italian way of thinking! Gotta love it though