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Monday, April 5, 2010
 Shelby fanatics have waited more than four   decades for a new GT350. Beginning in 1965, Ford Mustang GT  fastbacks   rolled into the Shelby American facility near Los Angeles International   Airport. Carroll Shelby and his band of racers, mechanics, fabricators,   and engineers then turned them into legend. Ford took over the Shelby   Mustang program for 1968, and it was all over just two years later.  Ever  since Ford and Shelby got back together (for the Shelby-built GT-H   Hertz rental program in 2006 and the Ford SVT-produced GT500 beginning   in 2007), people have asked the question: “When will the GT350  return?”
Shelby fanatics have waited more than four   decades for a new GT350. Beginning in 1965, Ford Mustang GT  fastbacks   rolled into the Shelby American facility near Los Angeles International   Airport. Carroll Shelby and his band of racers, mechanics, fabricators,   and engineers then turned them into legend. Ford took over the Shelby   Mustang program for 1968, and it was all over just two years later.  Ever  since Ford and Shelby got back together (for the Shelby-built GT-H   Hertz rental program in 2006 and the Ford SVT-produced GT500 beginning   in 2007), people have asked the question: “When will the GT350  return?” The 2011 Mustang GT 5.0 has made it possible.   This Camaro fighter, packing all the design revisions and hardware   upgrades of the 2010 model plus Ford’s new 5.0-liter, DOHC, all-aluminum   V-8, gave today’s Shelby American (formerly Shelby Automobiles) the   foundation it needed to reseed the icon. It’s white-with-blue-stripes   time, all over again.
The 2011 Mustang GT 5.0 has made it possible.   This Camaro fighter, packing all the design revisions and hardware   upgrades of the 2010 model plus Ford’s new 5.0-liter, DOHC, all-aluminum   V-8, gave today’s Shelby American (formerly Shelby Automobiles) the   foundation it needed to reseed the icon. It’s white-with-blue-stripes   time, all over again. The deal to do the car at all had been an   on-and-off affair for years, then happened fast. Shelby didn’t want to   develop a GT350 based on existing 4.6-liter models, only to have to   rework the engine package later for the impending 5.0. Everyone was on   edge about the economy. And there were already plenty of specialty   edition Mustangs on the 2008-09 roster, including the GT500KR and   Bullitt. That air has cleared, the new powertrain has arrived, and the   GT350 button was pushed late last fall.
The deal to do the car at all had been an   on-and-off affair for years, then happened fast. Shelby didn’t want to   develop a GT350 based on existing 4.6-liter models, only to have to   rework the engine package later for the impending 5.0. Everyone was on   edge about the economy. And there were already plenty of specialty   edition Mustangs on the 2008-09 roster, including the GT500KR and   Bullitt. That air has cleared, the new powertrain has arrived, and the   GT350 button was pushed late last fall.
Reinterpretation of the mid-’60s look was  assigned to veteran automotive  designer Larry Wood and in-house  designer/development driver Vince  Laviolette. Shelby American president  Amy Boylan knew Wood from her  tenure at Mattel, where he created  numerous Hot Wheels models, including  a pint-size GT350. “Amy called  me,” grins Wood, “and asked me if I’d  like to try doing a full-size one  this time.”
Labels: 2011 Ford Shelby GT350

















