FORD 2005-’06 GT: ALL-AMERICAN SUPERCAR

Everything you’ve always wanted to know about the FORD 2005-’06 GT: ALL-AMERICAN SUPERCAR, from Concept to production, plus a buying guide. Hemmings’ Mark J. McCourt covers all bases.

FORD 2005-’06 FORD GT: ALL-AMERICAN SUPERCARBeing a Ford GT40 and Mark IV nerd, a longtime friend of the late Roy Lunn, above, the Godfather of the 1966-1969 Le Mans winning racecars ( Ford GT40 Mark II, Mark IV & GT40), and an owner of an ‘06 Tungsten Grey GT for some dozen years, I marveled over just how much historical and current valuation information Mark McCourt had packed into his feature article. I’m also fortunate to have Jim Padilla, the retired President of Ford during the GT program, and Chris Theodore, V.P. of Car Product Development, known as the father of the Ford GT, below, as friends. When the FORD 2005-’06 GT: ALL-AMERICAN SUPERCAR was launched, it was America’s Supercar. And, in many ways, it still is! Martyn Schorr.

As the Ford Motor Company approached the year 2000 and began preparations to mark its centenary in 2003, its design executives were combing through the back catalog for inspiration. Ford debuted its 1999 Thunderbird show car to widespread applause, that retro-themed two-seater tastefully recalling the 1955-’57 originals and leading to the production 2002-’05 Thunderbird. The fifth-generation Mustang, codenamed S197, was in development and took major cues from the 1967-’68s; it would appear in concept form in 2003 and enter showrooms for 2005. And the ultimate postwar Ford to inspire a celebratory retro reboot was the Ferrari-beating Le Mans racing champion of the 1960s, the GT40 & Mark II, which begat the 2005-’06 GT.

FORD 2005-’06 FORD GT: ALL-AMERICAN SUPERCARLike the Thunderbird before and Mustang that followed, the production GT was introduced to the public as a concept car — the 2002 GT40. This modern classic was the handiwork of Ford stylist Camilo Pardo, right, working under design chief J Mays, and it would soon roll onto the streets looking virtually unaltered. While the original GT40 was a racecar that sold to private owners in tiny numbers as a road-legal homologation special, the new-millennium GT would be a road car that could hold its own on a track against imported thoroughbreds like the contemporary Ferrari 360 Modena and Porsche Carrera GT. Its advertising tagline was apt — “The Pace Car for an Entire Company,” and 20 years of hindsight has proven this Blue Oval halo car earned its veneration through analog driver engagement, reliable supercharged V8 power, and timeless beauty.

A FoMoCo-sanctioned conversion called the GTX1, below, conceived by Ford SVT engineer Kip Ewing and executed by Genaddi Design Group in Wisconsin, was available for a short time after debuting to rave reviews at the 2005 SEMA Show. It features four removable roof panels, a power-retractable backlite, and a redesigned clamshell deck with a glass panel to expose the engine. It allowed the car to be fully open, fully closed, or to run like a T-top, and all four panels could be stowed within the car. Special five-spoke alloy wheels, 19 x 9- and 20 x 11.5-inches front and rear, were included. It’s believed fewer than 50 GTs were altered.The FORD 2005-’06 GT: ALL-AMERICAN SUPERCAR balances its decades-old heritage with cutting-edge design work and the clever use of motorsports-grade materials. Ford engineers and technical specialists in the Special Vehicle Teams division collaborated with counterparts at Roush Industries (engine development and prototype construction), Mayflower Vehicle Systems (aluminum-body assembly), Lear Corporation (interior and electronics), and Saleen Special Vehicles (pre-driveline assembly and paint) to create this new model from the ground up in roughly two years, working hard to meet goals for styling, functional aerodynamics, occupant packaging, safety, emissions, and weight.

FORD 2005-’06 FORD GT: ALL-AMERICAN SUPERCARDespite being a bigger car — 18.3 inches longer, 6.9 inches wider, and 3.8 inches taller — than the diminutive 1960s GT40, the production GT sports an exterior that’s faithful to the 2002 show car, and so is its interior, which interprets the Le Mans racer through a modern lens. The seven-dial instrument panel, with a large tachometer directly in front of the driver and a matching speedometer angled at far right, made the final cut, as did the row of vertical toggle-switch controls, the satin metal center console containing an aluminum ball-topped manual shifter and heating-A/C controls, and the carbon-fiber-shell seats with circles recalling the GT40’s venting holes.

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2005-2006 FORD GT: AMERICA’S SUPERCAR

Hagerty.com’s Eddy Eckart celebrates the 2005-2006 FORD GT: AMERICA’S SUPERCAR and analyzes its marketplace appeal and strong fan base.
2005-2006 FORD GT: AMERICA’S SUPERCAR

Creating a modern GT40 road car was every bit as ambitious as Henry Ford II’s desire for international motorsports domination. Both of these goals were attained – and were historically significant.

The GT40 was a key ingredient in the formula Henry Ford II used to dominate international motorsports and change racing history. Almost four decades later, Henry’s nephew, William Clay “Bill” Ford, Jr., found new life for the GT40. First, it was a Concept in 2002, and then it morphed into a modern road car in 2005. The production 2005-2006 FORD GT: AMERICA’S SUPERCAR reinvigorated Ford’s historic hallmarks of success: passion, performance and speed.

When Chief Designer Camilo Pardo first took up his tools in 1999 to bring the 2002 Ford GT40 concept car to life, writes Eckart, the stakes were a little different than the last time the Blue Oval set about constructing an all-conquering GT40. There was no need to settle a grudge with Ferrari at Le Mans – that matter had been rather thoroughly closed a few decades prior. Instead, the concept would celebrate the brand’s centennial anniversary, and remind the world of what Ford could do when it put its collective mind to something. Today, the 2005-2006 FORD GT: AMERICA’S SUPERCAR is roundly considered an American classic and a fitting road-going successor to the 1960s originals.

The celebration fortunately wouldn’t end with the concept. After the rousing response to the GT40 concept’s debut at the 2002 North American International Auto Show, Ford realized they had to build it. The car was a home run – every bit as imposing and purposeful as the originals, but also the modern halo car needed to help refresh the public’s image of the company. Within a matter of weeks, Bill Ford, Jr. announced that the company would indeed put the car into production.2005-2006 FORD GT: AMERICA’S SUPERCAROf the many retro-inspired designs from the early 2000s, few have aged as well as the GT. It didn’t hurt that the original GT40 was an attractive starting point, but Pardo created a clear lineage to the original without making the GT feel dated or out of place, even when observed over 20 years after its debut. Proportions appear spot on, though dimensionally, this car is larger than its predecessor in just about every way – four inches taller, a significant 18 inches longer, and about six inches wider.

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CAMILO PARDO, FORD GT SEMINAR

What better venue than the Simeone Museum – displaying the Ford Mark I GT40 that inspired the 2005 Ford GT – could there be for a CAMILO PARDO, FORD GT SEMINAR?

CAMILO PARDO, FORD GT SEMINAR

On June 11th, Camilo Pardo will discuss the inspirations he used to design the ’05 Ford GT at an event at the Simeone Museum in Philadelphia, PA. Camilo will have an example of the 2005 model to use in his discussion, alongside the same car Camilo used as inspiration for his design almost two decades ago – the ‘66 Ford Mark I GT40 Mk I, chassis #1030, owned by Benjamin Levy. The event will take place at 11:15 – Noon as part of the Museum’s “Demo Days,” where cars from the collection are driven on the back parking area. The theme of the Demo Day is “Americans at Le Mans.” Historian/photographer Harry Hurst will moderate.

Born in New York City, Camilo moved to Detroit at the age of 10 and had by that age developed a fascination with 1960s and 1970s-era sports cars and modern art. After graduating from Detroit’s prestigious Center for Creative Studies in 1985, Camilo was hired by Ford to work at its Design Center in Dearborn, MI. His assignments included working in the Dearborn Advanced Studios, Ford of Europe Studio in Torino, Italy, and the Design Studios in Cologne, Germany. After 15 years at Ford Motor Company, he took on what was for him the ultimate assignment – a state-of-the-art re-design of the classic Ford GT40 racecar. This project produced the ‘02 Ford GT Concept car.

CAMILO PARDO, FORD GT SEMINARAs Chief Designer of the Ford GT and the SVT Studio, Camilo’s team worked on the 2005 and 2006 production Ford GT. The GT became an instant success capturing the interest of car enthusiasts around the world. GT40 P/1030, above, with prototype ’05 Ford GT

Camilo is also a multi-faceted artist, working in oil paintings, fashion, and furniture. His automotive fine art is highly prized by collectors and Camilo plans to have a sampling on display at the Simeone, available for sale. HIs fashion pieces have been created for auto shows and runway exhibits. Camilo’s industrial design reaches into sculptural furniture design that has made the rounds from art galleries in Metro Detroit, Italy, Japan, and the Contemporary Furniture Fare in New York. Check out Camilo’s art @ http://www.camilopardo.com/

For additional information on CAMILO PARDO, FORD GT SEMINAR event, and Museum displays and details, please visit https://www.simeonemuseum.org/