Ford Mustang Shelby GT500 Super Snake 1967, Estados Unidos
Motor : 427 CI
Exterior : Branco/Azul
Interior : Preto
Fotografia
Histórico do carro (em inglês) :
HIGHLIGHTS
·
The one and only 1967 Shelby GT500 Super Snake
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GT40 Mk II 427 engine, built specifically for this
car
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Purpose-built for the Goodyear Thunderbolt tire
test
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Shelby invoice, MSO and Goodyear tire test photos
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One-off chrome inboard headlight surrounds
·
Unique Le Mans Blue hood striping to distinguish
the car
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Fitted with passenger car, 7.75x15-inch Goodyear
Thunderbolt whitewall tires
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The Super Snake drove 500 miles at an average of
142 MPH and retained 97% of the original tire tread
·
The Super Snake was never mass produced because the
projected retail price would be over twice the price of a baseline GT500 and
more than a 427 Cobra
·
This prototype was sold in August 1967 for $5,000
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Featured in many magazines and My Classic Car
When Ford redesigned the
Mustang in 1967 to take the 390/320 HP big-block V-8, Carroll Shelby took the
next logical step and introduced the GT500, the first big-block Shelby GT,
powered by a modified Police Interceptor 428 CI engine rated at 355 HP. Buyers
took to the new car immediately, and the car outsold its small-block GT350
stablemate 2,048 to 1,175 units. In addition to his partnership with Ford,
Shelby was also the West Coast distributor for Goodyear, who in February asked
Shelby to take part in a promotional event for its new Thunderbolt line of
economy tires. Shelby judged that the GT500 would be the perfect choice for an
extended high-speed demonstration of the new tire, but the decision took a
twist when former Shelby American Sales Manager Don McCain approached Shelby
with the idea of building a supercar that would outperform anything else in the
world. Then employed by Dana Chevrolet in South Gate, California, and Mel Burns
Ford in Long Beach, McCain suggested that Shelby put a racing 427 in the GT500
for the test, let him sell the car and then build 50 more for Burns.
Ever one to leap at
opportunity, Shelby instructed Fred Goodell, Shelby American’s chief engineer
on loan from Ford, to prepare a GT500 with a special engine for the test, which
would be held at Goodyear’s high-speed test facility near San Angelo, Texas.
Goodell selected GT500 No. 544 for the task: “We rebuilt it with a special
lightweight 427 racing engine; special rear axle, special transmission and, of
course, Thunderbolt tires.” McCain later described the engine as “the mother of
all 427s at that time … aluminum heads, aluminum water pump, forged crank, Le
Mans rods, just basically everything inside the engine was built to run
sustained 6,000 RPM—to race at Le Mans.” Essentially, it was the same
powerplant used in the GT40 MkII that had won the famous French endurance race
the previous year, including a variation on the MkII’s “bundle of snakes”
exhaust system and its 600 HP output. Goodell made other modifications to
prepare the car for the tire test. An external oil cooler, braided lines and a
remote oil filter were installed to increase the 427’s reliability; stiffer
springs and shocks were mounted on the passenger side of the GT500 to
counteract the high-speed cornering forces it would encounter on Goodyear’s
5-mile oval track. Goodell completed the car with one-off chrome inboard
headlight surrounds and a unique version of the production Le Mans striping
with two narrow blue stripes flanking a wide blue center stripe, elements that
distinguish it from all other GT500s.
Upon its arrival in Texas the
last week of March, the Super Snake was fitted with Shelby 10-spoke aluminum
wheels mounted with 7.75-15 Thunderbolt whitewall tires, which were
overinflated with nitrogen to keep the sidewalls rigid and prevent overheating.
Before the test commenced, Shelby took a number of invited journalists,
including the editors of “Time” and “Life” magazines, for demonstration laps
around the track. Over the years, there were conflicting claims as to who
actually drove the car on its 500-mile test, but the story was set straight by
Goodell during an interview for an episode of Speed Channel’s "My Classic
Car." After the demonstration runs, during which Shelby reached a top
speed of 170 MPH, Goodell recounted, “[Shelby] came back and he handed me his
helmet and he says, ‘I’ve got to go to Washington, so you go ahead and drive
the test. And so I got back in the car and I drove the car in the 500-mile
test. We drove at 142 MPH average for 500 miles.” The test was a complete
success; the skinniest tires ever mounted on a Shelby GT, the Thunderbolts had
performed flawlessly, retaining 97 percent of their original tread.
The Super Snake was then
shipped back to Mel Burns Ford in California, where it remained on display
while McCain worked to generate interest for a limited run of 50 427-powered
GT500s. At over twice the price of a baseline GT500, the Super Snake was priced
well beyond its competition, including Shelby’s own 427 Cobra. McCain was
forced to admit the car was “just too expensive”; it was ultimately shipped to
Dallas where it was purchased by Braniff International Airways pilots James
Hadden and James Gorman, who then replaced its original 2.73 gearset with a
4.10 unit for drag racing. The Shelby Registry states the car was purchased in 1970
by Bobby Pierce of Benbrock, Texas, who cared for it for 25 years before
selling it to David Loebenberg of Florida.
The Super Snake returned to
California seven years later when it was bought by Charles Lillard, who later
sold it to Richard Ellis, a collector of rare Mustangs in Illinois, at which
point the car registered 26,000 miles on the odometer and showed almost no
deterioration.
Ellis proceeded with what he
describes as a “light restoration,” locating the correct wires and hoses for
the engine compartment, a period-correct Rotunda fire extinguisher, NOS Shelby
10-spoke wheels and, amazingly, four brand-new Thunderbolt whitewall tires in
the proper size. As Ellis explained in an interview with “Auto Enthusiast
Magazine” in September 2011, “I wanted to own this piece of Shelby history
worse than anything. It was well cared for by its previous owners, but I’ve put
a lot of effort into returning it to the state it was in on the day of the tire
test.”
Ellis elaborated about the
tires: “The Thunderbolts were made for … well, boring family cars in the ’60s,
which is why nobody reproduces them or has even heard of them for 35 years. I
found what has to be the only surviving set in a warehouse in Akron, Ohio. I’m
sure Shelby pulled the original Thunderbolts and threw them away when the car
got back to California.”
The Super Snake was also
featured in the book, “Million Dollar Muscle Cars” by Colin Comer, and in 2013,
ownership changed hands to Shelby collector John Wickey, who has fastidiously
cared for this illustrious one-of-one Shelby super car for the past five years.
Built with the heart of a Le
Mans champion yet ultimately destined for but one day in the sun, there is only
one Super Snake, the result of a confluence of forces that could only have
happened in the charmed life of one Carroll Shelby.Fonte : https://www.mecum.com/lots/FL0119-359599/1967-shelby-gt500-super-snake/
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