Fearsome GT3-based Mustang supercar will go after Lamborghini and Porsche at the Nürburgring
The new Ford Mustang GTD is a carbonfibre-bodied, aerodynamically optimised, track-ready “technological tour de force” that takes the crown as Ford’s most powerful road car yet.
It will be built in limited numbers from late next year and priced from around $300,000 (£234,000) in the US.
Autocar understands the UK will receive an allocation, but numbers and pricing remain to be confirmed at this stage.
The GTD is said to have been conceived “after hours” by “a handful” of engineers in an anonymous storage garage at Ford’s Michigan headquarters, with the aim of creating “a Mustang to take on the best of European sports cars”.
Ford is targeting a sub-seven-minute lap time at the Nürburgring, a feat that would put the GTD on a par with European supercars including the Porsche 911 GT2 RS, Lamborghini Aventador SVJ and Mercedes-AMG GT Black Series.
Ford CEO Jim Farley said: “[The] Mustang GTD shatters every preconceived notion of a supercar. This is a new approach for us. We didn’t engineer a road car for the track, we created a race car for the road.
“This is our company. We’re throwing down the gauntlet and saying ‘come and get it’. We’re comfortable putting everybody else on notice. I’ll take track time in a Mustang GTD against any other auto boss in their best road car.”
Designed and engineered in partnership with motorsport outfit Multimatic, which built the Ford GT supercar, the new arrival is effectively a road-legal reworking of the Mustang GT3 that will race at Le Mans next year.
It has been named for the IMSA Sportscar Championship’s GTD classification, for cars built to the FIA’s GT3 specifications.
A targeted output of more than 800bhp from the heavily reworked, supercharged V8 makes the GTD the most powerful Mustang yet created, outpunching even 2019’s snarling 700bhp Shelby GT500. It’s even more powerful than the £1.4 million, track-only Ford GT MK IV revealed last year.
The bespoke 5.2-litre engine is larger than that fitted to the standard road-going Mustang and packs a suite of motorsport-derived modifications – including a dry sump, dual air inlets and a titanium active-valve exhaust system (which generates “exceptional notes”) – in pursuit of Lamborghini-aping performance figures.
It delivers its reserves to the 345mm-wide rear wheels via a lightweight carbonfibre driveshaft and eight-speed transaxle – the latter fitted in place of a standard gearbox to ensure “near 50:50” front-to-rear weight distribution, and because simulations proved that to be the most effective way to “put power to the ground”.
So too is the chassis radically different to that of the standard car.
The GTD is equipped with semi-active suspension, which brings variable spring rates and a 40mm lower ride height in Track mode. A motorsport-inspired “short-long arm” set-up for the front suspension is said to boost stiffness and responsiveness, and the rear suspension is mounted to a lightweight tubular subframe, as it is in the GT3 car. The suspension control units are housed alongside the transaxle cooling system at the rear, where the boot used to be.
The GTD has a track that’s nearly 100mm wider than that of the standard Mustang, which together with massive 325mm-wide front tyres (wider than the rear tyres of the GT) boosts grip and cornering stability substantially.
Buyers are offered a choice of 20in forged aluminium wheels or optional magnesium items modelled on those worn by the GT3 racer.
The aero package is obviously lifted nearly wholesale from the GT3 racer, with a massive hydraulically adjustable rear wing, a vented bonnet, chunky air scoops, a beefy front splitter and a wind-cheating rear diffuser boosting downforce at speed and stability through bends.
Stopping power is provided by huge carbon-ceramic disks, engineered to resist fade under repeated braking.
Inside, the GTD is closer to the standard Mustang than the race car, retaining digital displays and the standard infotainment system with over-the-air software-update functionality.
Notably, though, the rear seats have been removed in the name of weight-shaving, the front seats are swapped for track-ready Recaro buckets and the rotary dial, build plaque and paddle shifters are all 3D-printed using titanium recovered from retired F22 fighter jets.
Ford hasn’t given a weight figure for the GTD, but the carbon body panels and stringent lightweight methods mean it’s likely to tip the scales at substantially less than the 1768kg Mustang Dark Horse.