Ford to Import 101 Ford GTs into Europe
Ford's Newest GT Joins its Illustrious Predecessors
Press Release
Ford's Newest GT Joins its Illustrious Predecessors
The first fully-homologated production Ford GT supercar to be officially imported by Ford Motor Company into
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
"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," he added.
Built at Ford Motor Company's Wixom plant in
Although some race-tuned GT40s were capable of exceeding that figure, road-going versions would achieve a maximum speed of around 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 £120,900 Ford GT is a little taller than the original cars but, at 44 inches, is still 12 inches shorter than a current generation Ford Fiesta.
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
A little later this month the first of the batch of 28
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
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











