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Ferrari's July 4 Surprise May Bring the Manual Transmission Back to the V12

Ferrari's July 4 Surprise May Bring the Manual Transmission Back to the V12

Trademark filings and two patents all point toward a V12 manual, the first since 2007

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Recently speaking at Tekion One 2026, the dealer software company's inaugural conference in Las Vegas, Ferrari CEO Benedetto Vigna hinted that Ferrari is preparing to unveil something that blends heritage with forward-looking technology. According to Autocar U.K, His exact description, a combination of something from the past with an eye toward the future, immediately sparked speculation across the automotive world. 

"In a few weeks, if you can bear with us a little bit, then you will see something new where we put together something from the past with eyes on the future,” he said. Let’s say wait till the fourth of July. It’s really soon." -  Benedetto Vigna, CEO, Ferrari

The comment points toward one possibility that enthusiasts have been waiting nearly two decades to see: the return of a manual transmission in a front-engined Ferrari V12. The last time Ferrari offered that combination was in the 599 GTB Fiorano, where only 30 manual-equipped examples were produced before it quietly disappeared from the lineup.

A private unveiling is expected during the Ferrari Cavalcade, which runs from June 29 through July 6 between Venice and Athens, ahead of a public reveal on July 4, which also marks America's 250th anniversary of independence.

The biggest clue came when duPont REGISTRY reported on Ferrari's 13 trademark filings last month submitted to Italy's UIBM on May 20. , a batch that included the names now tied to this story. The filings included four names: 12 Cylinders MM, 12 Cylinders MM Open, 12Cylinders GTO, and 12Cylinders TG. All appear connected to Ferrari's V12 grand touring family.

The MM is a clear reference to the Mille Miglia, the legendary Italian road race that has inspired Ferrari naming conventions since the 1950s. The MM Open designation is particularly intriguing because it suggests both coupe and open-top variants could be developed in parallel. Then there is the GTO badge to consider as well. Ferrari has reserved those three letters for only a handful of cars: the 250 GTO, the 288 GTO, and the 599 GTO.

But the strongest clues of a manual come from two recent Ferrari patent filings. One, published as US 2026/0160329 A1 (WO 2026/126110), describes a shift-by-wire system centered around a six-speed H-pattern shifter. The concept is similar to the Engage Shift System developed by Koenigsegg for the CC850, where the transmission remains fundamentally automatic while recreating the interaction of a traditional manual gearbox. Drivers can switch between operating modes using dedicated R, N, D, and M controls.

The second patent focuses specifically on simulating the clutch pedal itself. Springs, sensors, and a carefully engineered cam profile work together to simulate the resistance and engagement point of a conventional clutch.

Not everyone will be convinced by an electronic substitute, however well-engineered. For many enthusiasts, a clutch pedal connected through electronics will never fully replace the mechanical connection of a traditional manual transmission.

As for what powers the car, Ferrari has yet to confirm any details, but the most logical candidate remains the 12Cilindri's naturally aspirated 6.5-liter V12, which produces 819 horsepower and 500 pound-feet of torque. Rumors suggest any gated-shifter setup would be offered alongside the existing transmission. If that proves true, availability is expected to be extremely limited, likely reserved for Ferrari's most established clients through a highly selective allocation process.

For now, we have nothing confirmed, beyond Vigna's carefully chosen remarks. Still, the combination of recent trademark filings, detailed patent applications, and the timing of Ferrari's upcoming reveal points toward more than mere speculation.

The evidence increasingly suggests that Maranello is preparing a limited-production V12 flagship that blends the appeal of a traditional gated manual with modern transmission technology, potentially in both coupe and open-top forms. Whether it ultimately wears the MM or GTO badge remains to be seen, but all signs point to one of Ferrari's most significant enthusiast-focused launches in years. Watch this space.

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Images: Ferrari, USPTO

Khris Bharath