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Wednesday, February 18, 2015
The 17 Things You Need to Know About the 2017 Ford GT Supercar | Blue Springs Ford
2017 Ford GT: The facts
Ford's all-new GT supercar was the smash hit of the 2015 Detroit auto show, and although we were given its basic specs, we were hungry for more. So we cornered anyone we could find from Ford to give us the 600-plus-hp sports car's juicier details.
The GT
"concept" Ford put on display in Detroit looks mighty production
ready, suggesting that the skunkworks project has been in motion for
years. In fact, we're told the car has seen just one year of development
work so far—yet the final car is due next year. That's hyperspeed in the
car world.
Ford expects the first
production prototype to be in action this spring. Spy photographers, get
ready.
The in-house low-cost
carbon-fiber development program Ford has fired up in collaboration with
Dow Chemical has little to do with the GT project. In fact, the carbon
fiber in the GT's chassis tub and bodywork will be hand-laid and
production probably will be handled by an outside supplier.
When Ford's global
performance vehicle chief engineer Jamal Hameedi started to tell us how
his team was targeting "the best power-to-weight ratio," we
figured the sentence would end with "in its class." Nope.
Hameedi instead capped off the claim with "of any car on the
market." Ford has yet to reveal the GT's weight, but we're expecting
it to be crazy light. As for the engine, Ford promises more than 600
horsepower.
The GT on Ford's
Detroit show stand rolled on normal aluminum wheels, in contrast to the
Mustang Shelby GT350R sitting nearby; that car has ultra-lightweight
carbon-fiber wheels. Given how fanatical Ford is being about the GT's
weight, you'd think these high-tech and mass-reducing rims would be on the
GT, too. Ford tells us it is looking at the possibility.
The GT's rear
spoiler is full of tricks, including an air-brake function. The wing can
both rise vertically and tilt, its horizontal surface angling upward to
capture extra downforce and drag when needed.
Riding on a what
Ford calls an "active" suspension, the GT can lower itself at
speed for stability and better aerodynamics. In true supercar form, a
button in the cabin can lift the front end when faced with inconsiderately
designed driveway ramps and speed humps.
Front and rear,
the GT features carbon-ceramic Brembo brake rotors and calipers. Just as
the Nürburgring is practically a required stop on any vehicle development
engineer's world tour, so apparently are Brembo's offices.
There's no
question about it: The 2017 GT will be fast. But Ford didn't set out to
grab top-speed records or acceleration honors. Instead, we're told Ford is
chasing "lap times, lap times, lap times" and is seeking
ultimate handling. Oh, and Ford is planning to take the GT to Le Mans in
2016—the street car partially exists for homologation reasons—and is
putting Ferrari in its crosshairs. The 1960s are back, baby.
As you probably
already ascertained, this is the front of the Ford GT. It doesn't have
anything in it—well, besides a radiator, some cool heat-exhausting vents, and
the pushrod-actuated front suspension. There is no electric motor powering
the front axle, as there is in Porsche's 918 Spyder, and neither is there
one in the back. Ford didn't want to sacrifice low weight for heavy hybrid
components like motors and batteries. Oh, and the sports car is intended
to showcase Ford's EcoBoost engine branding, a mission that'd be
complicated by a hybrid system.
One of our
favorite things about the GT is the way its passenger cell tapers to
nearly a point at the car's tail, and the channels that create between the
"fuselage" and the rear wheels. Far more than a flamboyant
flourish, these pathways force the air to bend and submit to the GT's
will. The flying buttresses linking the roof to each rear fender may appear
flat, but they are in fact curved in section. This is because they're
really wings—cut them in half, and they're airfoil-shaped. They create
downforce, in addition to directing air flowing around the car to the rear
spoiler.
Amazingly, Ford
found a second use for the GT's flying buttresses: intake tubes. Each
hollow panel (one per side) houses piping that flows from an air-to-air
intercooler ahead of each rear wheel (visible through the large vents on
the fenders). Intake air is scooped up from beneath the GT, compressed in
each turbocharger, and then shot through the intercoolers before twisting
its way up the winglets and down into the engine. Sweet.
After passing
through the fender-mounted intercoolers, newly heated air then flows above
each rear wheel to the GT's tail, where it exits through the centers of
the taillights. Yep, the look of those lamps isn't by accident.
The GT's EcoBoost
twin-turbocharged, direct-injected 3.5-liter V-6 engine shares far more
with the EcoBoost six in Ford's Daytona Prototype LMP2 race car than it
does with any roadgoing Ford engine. With more than 600 horsepower, the
GT's V-6 earns the awesome "Powered by Ford" branding.
Oh yeah, baby,
Ford plans on keeping the two colossal, jetfighter-like exhaust outlets
right where they are, high up on the rear bumper. Those cannons are just
finishers, however—the actual exhaust pipes terminate a few inches ahead
of them. We don't care, the openings look the business.
With a
near-horizontal rear window that's roughly one and a half feet wide, parking
is probably going to be the least-fun thing you could do in a GT. So the
hyperFord has a backup camera nestled in the nether regions of its
diffuser. It makes sense, of course, as the things are federally mandated
after 2016.
According to Ford
VP of design Moray Callum, the styling is 95 percent complete. That last 5
percent? We're told the GT needs little things like the door mirrors
larger than teaspoons and subtle lighting tweaks to be salable. Otherwise,
what you see here is what is going to hit driveways. This is fantastic
news because, well, just look at the thing.
But the question hangs in the minds of many—what does FoMoCo’s new supercar sound like? It’s a longstanding jab at the Viper that the V-10 snake sounds like a United Parcel Service vehicle at idle. Scratch that. The GT is the new king of the demonic delivery trucks. The 3.5-liter V-6 garble-gargles through its high-mounted tailpipes, while the twin turbos send their barbaric whirring hiss echoing through the taillight tubes. If Steven Spielberg’s Duel were remade by Michael Bay, it’s the noise the film’s menacing Peterbilt would make at rest. Watch the clip below to see what we mean.
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