RudyP
Cleared for Takeoff
I certainly have a general dislike for anything hugely common (which should come as no surprise to anyone on here), so certainly the commonality does play a role for me.
Comparing your F355's 3.5L V8 vs. your old school Porsche 3.6L flat 6 I think provides an interesting exercise that illustrates the point well, though. In those two cars you have engines that are both in the 10-20% deviation range from the "optimal" displacement per cylinder. Both are sporty engines, but I bet they are both interesting and have different visceral characteristics - the Ferrari being something that loves to rev and the Porsche also still liking revs (maybe not quite as high) but also having a strong visceral feel from the torque pulses. They may make similar horsepower and torque (I actually don't know, having not looked up), but they "feel" different in how they do it, and both satisfying but just in different ways.
You’re right on the qualitative differences but the output gap is significant. The Ferrari motors puts out over 100hp more than its Porsche contemporary despite smaller displacement. But Ferrari has always been a terrific engine shop with a car building business attached to it. That 30 year old design was (and is) pretty impressive - 110 hp per liter naturally aspirated, flat plane crank, 5 valves per (tiny) cylinder, 8500 rpm redline and quite the screamer at the top.
That said I really enjoy the air cooled flat 6 as well, especially at relaxed speeds and partial throttle where the Ferrari is just not really enjoying itself. They have vastly different personalities and I can’t really pick a favorite (at least when you wrap the rest of the car around the engine - on a pure engine to engine basis, it’s hard not to give it to the Ferrari)
Anyway, I’m reminded of how much I enjoy these old lumps as I drive my dad’s Taycan Turbo S around here in Florida this weekend. It’s way faster than any car I own but mine have a lot more personality and character.