I wonder if Ford would have liked to build this car 10 years ago. Back then it was planning to return to Le Mans, given it was approaching 50 years since the GT40 had won there, and senior Ford bods wanted to do that with a Mustang.
It was the swankiest car they made and they thought it would be good to see it racing: win on (Saturday and) Sunday, sell on Monday. But the more Ford's engineers looked into it, the more they thought they couldn't make it competitive.
The Mustang would be a big car for endurance racing's GTE category, and while various 'Balance of Performance' allowances would be made for that, giving it more power than some rivals, there would be a limit to how fast they could make a car with such a large frontal area.
So on the sly the engineers started developing the GT, with its narrow cockpit and standing just 1.8 inches higher than the 40in-tall GT40. The bosses were convinced, and it was so naturally fast that race cars routinely had their power capped so they didn't run away with it in competition. But it was a race car that became a road car, rather than the other way around.
The Mustang itch seemingly remained unscratched, because a decade and a generation of Mustang later, Ford still really wanted to race one at Le Mans, so it made a GT3-class variant. With a gearbox mounted at the rear, suspension by Multimatic (the Canadian company that co-developed, builds and helps race the car) and more trickery besides, it has a Le Mans class podium to its name.

You're looking at the road car that was developed alongside it to celebrate the fact. You could think of it as a GT3 RS or Speciale variant of the Mustang. It's called the GTD, which comes from IMSA racing's 'Grand Touring Daytona' category, by the way. I'm guessing they didn't have VW Golf GTDs in the US to confuse it with.
What I can tell you is that no Golf ever sounded like this, as the Mustang fires up very early in the morning in a covered garage at a Californian hotel and shakes the whole place to its very foundations.
That will be its 5.2-litre supercharged V8 engine, dry-sumped for the first time in road-going Mustang history. Refreshingly to my ears, it retains a cross-plane-crank firing order so sounds like an authentic American V8.
I do feel a bit bad about the volume, but the valet parking guys are quite relaxed. That's one thing about rural American towns: they all reverberate to the sounds of V8s and vee-twins at various points, day and night. I suppose complaining about it would be like moving to a small English village and bitching about cockerels crowing or low-flying cricket balls. You probably shouldn't have moved here then, mate.










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