Click the tiny machined aluminum dial on the steering wheel to Track mode, and something startling happens. The carbon-bodied Ford GT drops to the pavement with a thud, hoisting its rear spoiler to full mast. Where most modern supercars prepare for the track by stiffening up their suspension settings, the GT goes all out, transforming into a hunkered-down cruise missile, ready for launch. Welcome to the machine.
Before you can appreciate the all-new GT, the $445,000 supercar Ford makes you apply to buy, you need a quick history lesson. In the early 1960s, Ford tried to buy Ferrari, a move to give the American giant some European flair and help the racing-focused Italians bulk up production. When Enzo Ferrari flaked on the deal, Henry Ford II sought revenge on the track.
The result was the GT40, three of which stormed to a stunning 1-2-3 victory at the 1966 24 Hours of Le Mans—a race Ferrari had dominated for years. After follow-up wins in 1967, 1968, and 1969, Ford, having made its point, left endurance racing.
With the 50th anniversary of the triple win looming a few years back, Ford brass planned a return to Le Mans. They hoped to send a race-prepped version of the Mustang to France, but after a year of work concluded the pony car lacked the horsepower and aerodynamics to win. And so a small team of engineers and designers gathered in a Dearborn basement and started on a secret mission to reclaim the brand’s former racing glory.
Three months later, the skunkworks team presented a scale clay model to then CEO Alan Mulally, executive chairman Bill Ford, Edsel Ford II, and Mark Fields (who took the CEO job in 2014). The avant-garde shape paid homage to the original GT40, tipped a hat to the road-going GT model from 2005, and convinced the bigwigs to OK the parallel development of race and street-legal versions of the GT.
In June 2016, four GTs clad in red, white, and blue challenged the world at Le Mans, taking first, third, and fourth place in their class. And now, the consumer-ready version of the race car is ready for the street.
The new GT pays homage to the GT40, but with half a century of technological advances built in. Extensive use of carbon fiber and aluminum keep it to just more than 3,000 pounds, including an integrated roll cage that just might save your spine if you hit that corner too hard. Active aerodynamics divert airflow across the body to aid high speed control. A rear wing automatically not only adjusts height and position but changes shape to fine-tune how it produces downforce. Under hard braking, it acts as an airbrake. The front end is balanced by active flaps.
The GT’s doors swing up and out to reveal a cockpit whose sleek design lives up to the exterior’s angular silhouette. This is high tech, simplified: The GT’s seats are anchored to the floor while the dial- and button-covered steering wheel tilts and telescopes to meet the driver. A spring-loaded pedal box adjusts via a nylon release strap.
