Shelby GT-R
Update: 29 Jan 05
Ford spent $5 million
developing this car, and another $2 million just building
this particular one. This is the first and only one of this
type in existence, and was completed yesterday afternoon
January 27, 2005 in California. In January of 2004 it was
sketched out on paper. In February a full size mock-up was
moulded in clay. Now, a year later, the real thing is on
it's way to the Detroit Auto Show. This car wasn't a mock-up
or a shell. The sculptor, designer and escort for the car is
hoping it will take best of show this year.
If Ford decides to put it into production, potential
buyers can expect to pay around $200,000 for it. The entire
exterior of the car is polished aluminium, and it has liquid
cooled LED headlights.



Shelby GT-R Concept car
The Ford Shelby GR-1 concept is the third high-performance
concept car in two years inspired by the heritage of racing
legend Carroll Shelby.
Ford Motor Co.’s storied relationship with racing legend
Carroll Shelby has inspired the development of a third
high-performance concept car in two years — the Ford Shelby
GR-1. Unveiled at the Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance
Thursday 12 Aug 04, the two-seat fastback features the same
dynamic underpinnings as the Ford Shelby Cobra shown at the
North American International Auto Show in January. It
also shares engineering advances the automaker developed for
the 2002 GT40 concept car, which led to the 2005 production
Ford GT supercar.
“The Ford Shelby Cobra concept was a small step in our plans
for the Ford GT supercar architecture,” said J Mays, group
vice president of design at Ford. “The Ford Shelby GR-1 is a
giant leap toward the future.”
The automaker hasn’t confirmed plans to market a second
supercar. But Ford executives have said the company’s
investment in the GT warrants at least one more program
based on its design. Ford began shipping the $140,000 GT to
dealers last month and it’s already sold out, underscoring
the viability of the exotic car market — even during
uncertain economic times.
DaimlerChrysler AG unveiled a two-seat supercar — the ME
Four Twelve — at the Detroit auto show. And there are signs
that it will go into production.
“The sports car market is not going to go away, no matter
what happens,” said George Saridakis, the designer of the
GR-1. “You’re beginning to see cars which have got a little
bit more soul and some history associated to them.”
The GR-1, which features a 605-horsepower, V-10 engine, was
built atop a spare chassis originally assembled during the
Shelby Cobra’s development. It’s both a tribute to Carroll
Shelby and a nod to time-honored sports car proportions,
Saridakis said.
“What this car represents is a truly classic sporty
proportion — the engine really up front, the wide wheels,
the track, the short wheelbase, the relatively short
overhang.”
Saridakis spent his early childhood in Greece before moving
to Scotland. “I have an affinity to both the vibrant
and passionate Mediterranean culture and also the more
restrained yet dynamic Scots,” said Saridakis, 33, who works
out of Ford’s advanced product creation center in
California. A graduate of Glasgow University with a
degree in aeronautical engineering, Saridakis said the GR-1
“has been in the back of my head” since he was a boy. “When
you’re growing up and you have a passion for cars like I do,
all you do every day in school is draw cars on your jotter,”
Saridakis said.
“George produced this completely resolved sketch — the best
I’ve seen in 10 years,” Mays said. Normally, initial
sketches are reworked repeatedly before a clay model is
made.
