Hello Chris,
Size is relative

The Ilford No14 coating machine is capable of both coating paper and film and is not on the scale of the machines of Kodak. I suspect it is around the size Ferrania will match, at least in width.
the size differences are not so big as lots of people think. The coating machines of the major manufacturers have a comparable coating width.
According to Robert Shanebrooks excellent book "Making Kodak Film" the net coating width of the coating machine in Building 38 is 54" (about 1,35 meter). The master rolls are up to 11,000 feet long.
The net coating width of the Ilford coating machine is 1,42 meter. The length of the "parent rolls" (that is the term Ilford use) is up to 2500 meters.
The coating machines at Agfa (Leverkusen and Mortsel) and Ferrania ("big boy") have (had) similar widths.
One of the big coating machines from the Agfa Leverkusen factory in Germany is now working at InovisCoat in Monheim, Germany.
This machine was modernised and a bit scaled down. Now it has a coating width of net 1,08 meters.
It is used for both BW and colour, and both film and paper.
Without having the details from Ferrania and relying on the movies posted their machine is not only wider but has considerably more "downstream" drying and post coating steps, and again without being an expert I suspect this is related to the production of colour materials.
The main difference between the Ilford coating machine, and Ferranias big coating machine is that Ilford has five slots (five layers can be coated in one coating run), and the Ferrania coating machine has nine slots.
Five slots are enough for high-quality BW, but not enough for high-quality colour film.
Best regards,
Henning