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X vs. F
Jun. 12, 2008
By Justin

X Vs. F

Pitting a Sea-Doo RXP-X Against a Ferrari F430


Text and Photography by Tim McKercher

RXP-X vs. F430

Unlike beauty, performance is in the hands of the holder. Overall vehicle performance means different things to different people. For some, performance is simply being the fastest; for others, it’s the ability to corner as if on rails; and to yet others, it’s how strong any particular vehicle can pull from a dead stop when the throttle is stabbed. In this case, the two vehicles lined up side by side on an isolated stretch of a canal serviceway deep in Florida’s wetlands, all of these definitions apply.

Personal Watercraft Illustrated has a certain obligation to the enthusiasts of the world to give everyday insight into the sport and to cover unique, once-in-a-lifetime stories. This “experiment” happens to be one of the latter. We took two of the highest-performance vehicles in their respective categories and ran them head to head to see which came out on top: the new Sea-Doo RXP-X, boasting the highest production horsepower ever in a watercraft, vs. a Ferrari F430, a must-have for the high-performance sports-car aficionado.RXP-X vs. F430It took more than a day of scouring our Google Earth GPS-mapping computer program and driving around southern Florida to find the ideal location, knowing that a drag race of this caliber couldn’t be held just anywhere – certain criteria had to be met. What added to the difficulty of finding such a rare course was that an equally isolated span of straight, level asphalt needed to run directly parallel to an equally untrafficked body of water only two to three feet lower than the road, at most. Obviously, we had our work cut out for us.

There are certainly a lot of roads running next to water in southern Florida, but not too many upon which you can freely and safely open up a Ferrari, and without drawing an undesired crowd. And there aren’t many waterways that are close to a road’s level that are actually able to be safely navigated. It was only after hours of mind-numbing searching that, while heading west on I-75 approaching Alligator Alley, we spotted our test course. Miles of canals used to control the water levels and flow had been dug out for the purpose of supplying the foundation of the roadways through what was swampland not too long ago.

Here in the Everglades, there are numerous access roads that run directly next to a canal. Although we aren’t at liberty to divulge exactly where we ended up running these machines, it is safe to say that we were definitely out in the sticks.

Having found an area that fit our needs perfectly, we decided to prep the course a little before the big day. After a few passes with a lawnmower and commercial weed-eater, the roadside shrubbery was clear, offering an unobstructed view between the road and the water.

The comparisons between the RXP-X and Ferrari are as different as they are curiously similar (if that makes any sense), but the one area in which both could run head to head was in a direct challenge of acceleration – known to speed freaks and street racers as a drag race. From the starting line to the 150-foot mark, the two vehicles were – on paper – a dead-even match. Sure, both rail corners, both are race-inspired, both are two-seaters, both are the premium models among their competitors, but this comparison was an honest-to-goodness apples-to-apples test of what both wicked-from-the-factory vehicles could do.

RXP-X vs. F430

To ensure that both machines were operated at their maximum performance, we invited two of the best racers from the Sunshine State to participate. Since Michael Schumacher wasn’t available that day to pilot the Ferrari, we asked multiple-time World Champion watercraft racer Dustin Farthing to man the prancing pony. While no professional Formula One driver, Farthing does have a fair amount of experience behind the wheel of high-end sports cars (and prides himself on being banned by several rental-car agencies), so we figured if anyone was going to put the Ferrari through its paces, he would be the one. Piloting the Sea-Doo would be veteran Pro racer Eric Lagopoulos, who has extensive experience on the RXP-X, being the literal poster boy for the craft in the 2008 Sea-Doo ad campaign.

With both vehicles in place, and the test course set, each racer took some warm-up runs behind the controls of their respective vehicles. Lagopoulos, warming up the RXP-X, cracked off a couple of high-speed passes down the narrow canal, adjusting the digitally controlled quick trim to his liking. Farthing was testing how quickly he could get the Ferrari F430 to pull off the line, sharply snapping through the synchros, evaluating how the Maserati/Ferrari-built V8 spun in sixth gear at well over 7500 rpm. Both were blurs as they rocketed past us.

RXP-X vs. F430

With the distance measured to the inch and marked with cones on the road and buoys on the water, the two lined up, with Lagopoulos manipulating the reverse to start from a dead stop with his thumb on the quick-trim button, ready to launch. Farthing, revving the V8 to its designated red line, rested his fingers on the electro-hydraulic, F1-inspired transmission’s steering-column-mounted paddle shifters of the Ferrari. Harkening back to the earliest days of country-road grudge racing, we employed the classic use of a flag girl to signal the green. At the drop of her handkerchief, they were off!

RXP-X vs. F430

Less than four seconds later, it was over.

Despite Farthing’s furious shifting skills, the first across the 150-foot-line was the RXP-X. Thinking it a possible bout of luck, we conducted numerous additional runs, all with the same result. The watercraft was simply quicker out of the hole. Estimating that the distance was roughly equivalent to that traversed in a standard zero-to-60-mph test, the RXP-X routinely squeaked past the Ferrari by anywhere between one and three boatlengths. It was a shutout.

RXP-X vs. F430

Now let’s be real about this: The key to successful competitive drag racing is predicated on several factors – most notably power-to-weight ratios, traction, and gearing. While the Sea-Doo doesn’t come equipped with a limited-slip differential or a dual-clutch or semi-automatic transmission, its “gearing” can be found in the boat’s aggressively angled intake grate and prop. Depending on the pitch of the prop’s blades and those of the intake grate, the speed of any particular watercraft can be determined or tuned, just like modifying the gear ratios in automotive differentials.

This arithmetic is most evident after the 150-foot markers, where the Ferrari continued to accelerate, with one run in particular approaching an unofficial speed of 150 mph, proving that the F430 is more comfortable at three-digit speeds than hard-acceleration pulls. But the fact that a watercraft not only held a candle to a Ferrari F430 but beat it in a head-to-head drag race to 150 feet was phenomenal.

Documenting our results, we thought our day to be more or less over. But we still had the Ferrari for a few more hours, so the idea was hatched to see if the other X Series Sea-Doo would produce similar results. Unloading the RXT-X from the trailer, Lagopoulos dismounted the RXP-X and hopped onto the three-seater. Farthing – happy to rack up some additional time in the Ferrari – pulled up to the line one more time. With a drop of the handkerchief, the two sped down the makeshift track once again.

Finally, the outcome ended differently, providing Farthing with his first win. Upon review, it was clear that Lagopoulos didn’t have his trim adjusted properly, as when he hit the throttle, the RXT-X porpoised out of the water, giving Farthing a lead that Lagopoulos couldn’t overcome.

Again, Farthing backed the Ferrari to the starting line while Lagopoulos readied himself in his lane for run number two. Both racers took off again, and again, and again. From zero to 150 feet, the Sea-Doo consistently outran the Ferrari. What does that spell for Sea-Doo? As of right now, BRP’s stellar X Series has the right to claim itself the only craft able to topple the automotive world’s most renowned sports car manufacturer.

RXP-X vs. F430


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