stipud wrote:Top left: 288 evoluzione
Bottom left: F40
Top right: FXX (souped Enzo)
Bottom right : F50 GT trim
Front : Enzo
Rear left = 288
I don't know the older ones well enough to tell.
<golf clap> Well done!
If I may be so bold as to take a crack at the others... the lines on the car behind the trailer and to the right of the picture appear to me to resemble a Lancia Stratos

,
and on the left, my gut says is a Maserati Shamal

.
The other on the left... harder... the c-pillars... maybe a Quattro Coupe?
But that's just shooting from the hip...are there any more images from this set that show the other cars?
Tad
PS/FWIW- The standard 288GTO (272 produced) runs about $475k, same as a good, no-stories F40 (1300 produced). You can find beaters

under $400k. A clean 288 GTO evo can bring upwards of a million. F50 (349 produced) are $650-800k with the rare FIA GT cars being nearly double that. Enzos vary, but generally $1.25-1.5 with a few undesirable cars below a million (yellow, stories, David Sadek's car

). The FXX runs in the $2-3m range, but numbers are few and far between, as the factory technically doesn't allow private sale of the car. The new cars are fast (and easy to drive fast, just ask Eddie Griffin!), but personally, I'd like an early, pontoon-fendered Scaglietti-bodied 250TR ($10m, 34 produced) if anyone was looking for a gift idea...