While DeLorean is famed for its time-travelling sports car, Ford
aims to
bridge a half-century of history with the GT, unveiled at the Detroit
auto show on 12 January.
June 2016 will mark 50 years since Ford prevailed against the Ferrari juggernaut in the premier Le Mans endurance-race category.
To
commemorate that feat, the company will build a new, 600-plus
horsepower GT road car and race it at the legendary French event in
2016.
This road-going, carbon-fibre wonder features a race-rated
version of the company's signature EcoBoost turbocharged engine
technology, with a mid-mounted 3.5-litre V6 matched to a seven-speed
dual-clutch automated transmission driving the rear wheels.
For the company's 100th anniversary in 2003, it introduced a GT whose
styling was a tribute to that of the '60s racer. This new car, however,
looks resolutely forward, with contemporary styling that eschews
so-called retro-futurism, a design language championed by J Mays, Ford’s
former chief designer.
The bodywork looks shrink-wrapped over the
cockpit and powertrain in the manner of the latest sports prototype
racers, lending it a focused, track-ready look.
As the car that
proved Ford’s ability against the world's established sports car
companies the GT holds a special place in Ford history.
"For students of racing, this seems to me the coolest story to come
along in years," said AJ Baime, author of Go Like Hell, an account of
Ford's attack on Le Mans, in a telephone interview. "It's got everything
in it: history, a hugely important brand, American pride and the most
important sports car race on earth, all wrapped up in a new car. The
stakes are huge."
The original Ford GT enjoyed association with
drivers who are icons of the sport. "The Ford GT at Le Mans in the 1960s
is the story of Henry Ford II, Carroll Shelby, Bruce McLaren, Lee
Iacocca, Mario Andretti and AJ Foyt, among so many others," Baime added,
noting just some of the drivers and craftsmen who helped stoke the
car’s legend. "This new programme will be the impetus to celebrate it
all again, on the 50th anniversary of Ford's first Le Mans victory."
Source:BBC
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