Ford Supercar Invades Europe
By Motoring Channel Staff - 30/05/2005
|

Ford GT Invades Europe

New and old Ford GTs share the
racetrack with the Ford Fiesta ST
|
Ford's supercar, the Ford GT, will be officially imported
to Europe, where the American road rocket will do battle with
Ferraris, Porsches and Lamborghinis on the motorways of Britain,
Italy and Germany.
Ford says that the first fully-homologated production Ford
GT supercar to be officially imported by Ford Motor Company
into Europe is to remain in the company's ownership and become
part of its Essex-based Ford Heritage Collection of historically
significant vehicles.
There it joins two original Ford GT40s, both of which have
been owned by Ford since they were built in 1964 and 1969.
"Only 101 Ford GTs are being imported officially by
Ford to Europe and, of these, only 28 are destined for UK
customers," explained Ford of Britain chairman, Roger
Putnam.
"Given Ford's proud and successful motorsport heritage
over the past 102 years, it is entirely appropriate that the
first of these new supercars joins the Ford Heritage Collection.
"There it takes its rightful place alongside our original
GT40s, plus some other historically important cars, including
the Ford Escort in which Hannu Mikkola and Gunnar Palm won
the London-Mexico World Cup Rally in 1970," added Putnam.
Built at Ford Motor Company's Wixom plant in Michigan, USA,
the 2005 Ford GT owes much of its design concept to those
original cars.
And with 404kW, or 550hp, on tap from its 5.4-litre supercharged
V8 engine, the Ford GT has a top speed of 330km/h (205mph),
making it the fastest standard production car ever built by
Ford.
Although some almost 40 year old race-tuned GT40s were capable
of exceeding that figure, road-going versions would achieve
a maximum speed of around 260km/h (160mph).
Those early cars were never officially named GT40 by Ford.
They too were known as Ford GTs until the day someone realised
that they stood only 40 inches tall hence they were
nicknamed GT40. And that nickname stuck.
Today's Ford GT costs £120,900 and though it is taller
than the original cars, measuring 44 inches tall, it is still
some 12 inches shorter than a current generation Ford Fiesta,
which puts things in perspective.
In 1968 a new road-going version of the Ford GT40 cost £7,540
the equivalent then of five Ford Escorts plus three
Cortina estates plus a Corsair 2000. The official Ford advert
for the GT40 at that time described boot space as "laughable"
and petrol consumption as "wicked".
When Ford announced in 2003 that it was to make 101 examples
of the new Ford GT cars available for sale officially in the
European market, that number was not chosen at random. It
was the same number of GT40s originally built in the UK by
Ford in the 1960s.
Within weeks, the company was inundated with enquiries from
potential customers. In the UK alone, some 800 people were
noted as serious intended purchasers for the new supercar.
A little later this month the first of the batch of 28 UK
cars will be delivered to their owners. From the production
plant in the USA, officially imported European cars are shipped
to Bremerhaven in Germany and from there to a homologation
centre established by Ford and engineering partner Roush at
the Nürburgring where the changes necessary to meet European
legislation are made to the cars. Each car is extensively
road and track-appraised by a dedicated team before being
delivered.
The new Ford GT joins the significant Ford Heritage Collection
which contains around 85 vehicles and items of Ford memorabilia.
The oldest car in the collection is a 1910 Model T, built
in the USA. The collection also features Trafford Park, Manchester-built
Model Ts and several significant pre and post-war Dagenham-built
models as well as vehicles produced at Halewood on Merseyside,
Langley in Berkshire and Southampton in Hampshire.
Milestone vehicles include the oldest-surviving Transit van
from 1965 and the very last models produced of the Cortina,
Capri, Sierra Cosworth, RS200 and Escort ranges. Plus the
first Ford Racing Puma and first Focus RS.
Unusual items of memorabilia include a Merlin V12 aero engine,
one of 33,000 built by Ford for the Air Ministry during World
War Two at a specially-established factory at Urmston in Manchester.
These engines were fitted to a variety of wartime aeroplanes
including the Lancaster and Mosquito.
|