The pedals, meanwhile, are taken from the current Ferrari F8 Tributo, the tyres are made by Pirelli, and the wire wheels are 12 inches in size and are handmade (authentic copies of the original wheels made by Borrani are available on request). The original Testa Rosa's drum brakes haven't been carried over though, instead the J gets Brembo disc brakes and a hydraulic handbrake.
Even the suspension is as you'd find on a real car. Made by Bilstein, the Testa Rosa J has coilover dampers and custom springs which were fine-tuned and signed off by Ferrari’s test divers at the firm's Fiorano test track in Maranello.
Under the bonnet lies three batteries powering an electric motor, giving a 56-mile range. The car is charged up via a charging port hidden under a replica petrol filler cap.
A ‘Manettino’ dial gives four driving modes. 'Novice' gives 1kW of power, 'Comfort' gives 4kW while 'Sport' and 'Race' unlocks all the power and allows the car to reach over 37mph.
At 3,100mm long, 1,100 wide and 700mm tall, it's a 75% scale replica but that doesn't mean it's small – in fact, it's longer than a Smart Fortwo EQ.
There's even an online car configurator allowing customers to personalise their Testa Rosa Js, with 14 historical liveries and 53 body colours available.
The price? £95,000. While that is expensive for a toy, it's a good deal cheaper than the original. Only 34 were ever made with the most expensive selling at auction for £9m in 2011.
Testa Rossa J is pricy but it's £8,905,000 cheaper than the original