2007
Ford Shelby GT500
By Larry
Edsall
On Sale:
Summer 2006
Expected Pricing:
$42,000-$46,000

The Bowtie
brigade and the Dodge boys only
can dream of the day when their
beloved Camaro and Challenger
might return to production. But
in the summer of 2006, Ford
faithful can buy the most
powerful production Mustang ever
to roll out of the factory: the
2007 Ford Shelby GT500.
Not only will
this car be available with a
price beginning in the
low-$40,000 range, but it will
be offered in both coupe and
convertible body styles.
Powering this
fastest of all factory built
Mustangs is a 5.4-liter V8
topped by a supercharger that
boosts its output to 475
horsepower. That necessitates
the installation of a powerdome
hood to provide room for the
hopped up engine and its
supplemental breathing device.
Power without
control can be foolhardy, so
engineers from Ford's Special
Vehicle Team, better known as
SVT, upgraded chassis
components, revised suspension
hardware and fitted the car with
high-performance tires and big
brakes so this most potent of
factory Mustangs will be much
more than a one-trick pony.
The 2007 Ford
Shelby GT500 harkens to the work
of the legendary racer and
racing team manager Carroll
Shelby, who created the famed
Shelby Cobra sports cars and
who, in the mid-to-late 1960s
souped up Ford Mustangs to
produce the Shelby GT350 and
later the Shelby GT500.
Shelby went on
to help Dodge develop the Viper
and other vehicles, but returned
to Ford to inspire work on the
Ford GT supercar. He now works
with the SVT group on the
Mustang that again bears his
name.
In addition to
the supercharger, the Ford
Shelby GT500 engine gets
aluminum cylinder heads as well
as pistons and bearings like
those in the Ford GT. Power from
the engine flows through a
six-speed manual gearbox to
18-inch rear wheels that are 9.5
inches wide and are wrapped with
285/40ZR18 high-performance
tires. Front tires are
255/45ZR18s.
Ford says the
GT500's independent front
suspension and solid-axle rear
suspension designs were
validated on the racetrack with
a Grand-Am Cup championship in
2005. To reign in this most
powerful of factory-built
Mustangs, engineers opted for
aftermarket Brembo brakes with
14-inch rotors in front and
11.8-inch discs on the rear.
The Ford Shelby
GT500 gets visual tuning with
free-flowing front air vents, a
functional lower front air
splitter, a ducktail rear
spoiler and lower rear strakes
that look like those on the Ford
GT's rear air diffuser.
The Ford Shelby
GT500 coupes get Le Mans-style
racing stripes. Because there
were no such stripes on the
original Shelby GT500
convertibles, they will not be
offered on the open-topped 2007
Ford Shelby GT500 either.
The Shelby Cobra
emblem will be used on the car's
grille and on the sides of the
front fenders. Early Mustangs
had their gas filler nozzles
located above the middle of the
rear bumper, so the 2007 GT500
gets a special cap-like Cobra
badge in that location.
In the cockpit,
the speedometer and tachometer
have swapped locations so the
GT500 driver can keep a close
eye on engine rpm for optimized
shifting. Front seats get
increased lateral support to
keep the driver and passenger
properly positioned through hard
cornering maneuvers. Seats and
door panels are offered in black
or black with red trim. Seats
are leather covered and feature
the Cobra insignia. Instead of
chrome, the interior uses satin
aluminum metallic trim.
The GT500 was
unveiled at the 2006 North
American International Auto Show
in Detroit.