What started out a year and a half ago as a sketch on a placemat at a Dearborn Coney Island will be one of the Ford show cars on display at the Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) show, which opens today in
Using the 1966 Sebring-winning Ford GTX1 roadster as his inspiration, Kip Ewing, a Ford Special Vehicle Team engineering supervisor, sketched a convertible version of the Ford GT, which he named -- quite appropriately -- the Ford GTX1.
"The Ford GT has been an amazing automotive icon that I've had the pleasure to work on," said
The SEMA show is the premier automotive specialty products trade event in the world. This year, more than 2,000 manufacturers will display their wares in over one million square feet of space at the
Getting his idea accepted as a SEMA project required some creative thinking on
"Sometimes people have a hard time understanding what you want to accomplish, but if you can show them a three-dimensional representation, it helps to seal the deal," he said.
So
"I cut the roof off and then remodeled the body using typical auto body materials like Bondo. Then I repainted it," he said. "It was a nice visual that I could put on someone's desk."
In June, Hau Thai-Tang, director of Ford SVT and Advanced Product Creation, gave
"I've spent my education between engineering and fine arts, but my career path has been engineering," said
One of the most innovative aspects of
The Genaddi Design Group, a Wisconsin coachbuilder with experience cutting the roofs off of expensive and exotic cars, was chosen to build the car.
"The Ford GTX1 project is a great example of manufacturers working together with the aftermarket to stretch the boundaries and investigate potential design and product innovation," said Thai-Tang.
"I was in
So, how did he feel when the car was finally finished?
"It's very gratifying to see something that was in your head transfer to paper and then transfer to real life," he said. "But to actually get behind the wheel of it and drive your sketch is just a mind-blowing experience."
When asked to predict how he would feel standing beside the GTX1 at the SEMA show this week