Ford has showcased the Shelby GT500 at the Detroit motor show, reviving a model the company stopped selling in 2015. The super-performance muscle car, which features the iconic tuning firm’s famous Cobra logo, uses a further developed and supercharged version of the Mustang GT350’s 5.2-litre V8 engine. It delivers more than 710hp, which is more than twice that of the first-ever V8 Mustang of 1967, and gets a transmission inspired by Ford GT supercar.
Power is delivered to the rear wheels through a carbonfibre driveshaft and a 7-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission, which was developed with insight from the team that worked on the GT supercar. Ford suggests the combination should deliver sub-100 millisecond shift times. Acceleration from 0-100kph is promised to be in the mid-3sec and the car should run the quarter-mile in sub-11sec.
Ford is promising the GT500 will be a capable car on the track as well as the drag strip, thanks to revised suspension geometry, lighter front and rear springs, and a new electronic power steering unit. It also uses 420mm two-piece brake rotors, the largest of any American sports coupé, along with larger Brembo six-piston calipers for superior braking over the GT350.
The GT500’s greatly enlarged front grille and louvered bonnet vent create 50 percent more airflow than the GT350, and help generate more downforce than any other factory Mustang.
It sits on Ford Performance-specific Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tyres, but the optional carbon-fibre track package swaps these for more circuit-friendly Pilot Sport Cup 2s. The pack also includes 20-inch carbon-fibre wheels, an adjustable rear wing, and deletes the rear seats to reduce weight.
The interior is only slightly changed from the GT350, with new carbon-fibre dashboard trim and optional Recaro bucket seats with pass-throughs for safety harnesses. It retains the 12-inch digital instrument cluster and 8-inch Sync 3 infotainment, along with a 12-speaker B&O Play audio system.
The GT500 has been in development for more than a year, with Ford having previously confirmed the car’s wide longitudinal body stripes in a teaser video released before the Detroit show last year.
The car will go on sale in the US later this year, replacing the GT350 as the flagship of the Mustang line-up.
Ford had previously announced that the Shelby GT500 would be one of a number of new versions of the Mustang – which will include a hybrid version, part of a major electrification strategy of the firm's North American line-up. Ford says the hybrid system in the Mustang Hybrid will be tuned to "deliver V8-like performance with more low-end torque."
Also see:
Ponytale: 3 iconic Ford Mustangs driven
Ford rolls out 10 millionth Mustang
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