Featured: This Ford GT40 Replica Was Born To Tear It Up Tastefully

This Ford GT40 Replica Was Born To Tear It Up Tastefully

By Petrolicious Productions
December 14, 2015
11 comments

Story by Eric Dean // Photography by Brian Bassard (aka Blacktop Motoring)

I’ve always been nostalgic for the racing cars of the ’60s and ’70s. Films like Grand Prix and Le Mans captured my imagination like nothing else. The sights, sounds, and bravery of those drivers had a profound impact on me at an early age.

So, I bought a basket case 1968 ASP Formula Vee in my twenties, and my obsession spiraled out of control from there.  I restored the car to the best of my abilities and went racing. I wasn’t a very good driver or mechanic at the time, but I learned that I loved the challenge of both. Over time, I moved from the back of the pack to the front, and my standards for car preparation became higher and higher. I would often completely restore a car that I had built only a few seasons prior, because I knew it could be better. I then became completely obsessed with racing and restoring Merlyn Formula Fords.

After restoring several vintage formula cars from the ground up I was ready for my next project…or so I thought.

As it turns out, my experience building and restoring race cars, didn’t equip me as well as I thought it might to build a replica of what I believed to be the greatest car of all time. All of the cars I’ve previously built, had at one time been whole. Not this one. Building a replica requires a lot of patience, trial and error, and a good bit more fabrication than I imagined. The smartest thing I did was hire my friend Dave Lyman, who is an amazingly talented engineer and fabricator to work alongside me on evenings and weekends. I also built the car at my friend Geoff’s shop Alloy Motors, which is outfitted with lifts, a full machine shop, metal shaping tools, welders, a paint booth, and extra help when needed. This probably shaved a year off the 3-year project.

My vision for the car was to build it as if it were a private team entry for Le Mans, keeping it as stripped down, lightweight, and raw as possible. No interior luxuries, and little in the way of modern amenities. A purposeful racecar that can go fast, handle, and still be driven on the street. It isn’t an accurate recreation of a specific car but it was important to me that it was built in the spirit of the era.

I started with an RCR chassis, which is a beautifully fabricated all-aluminum monocoque. Interestingly enough, I once read an article in which the Eric Broadley, the Lola designer that originally designed the GT40 MKI, said he wanted the car to be of aluminum monocoque construction. Ford ultimately built it in steel but later went on to build the MK4 cars out of aluminum. The body is taken from a mold of an original GT40, so it very much looks the part. The engine, built by Keith Craft, is a small block Ford mated to a Porsche G50 trans with a Guards clutch-style limited slip diff. The engine puts out 440 horsepower and 425 lbs-ft of torque. Fully assembled, it weighs in at around 2,300 pounds. It’s the 1968 Eric Dean Vintage Racing GT40.

It’s terrifyingly fast, mind-numbingly loud, completely uncivilized, and I absolutely love it.

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Mike Soteros
Mike Soteros
7 years ago

nice!

Terrance Ostro
Terrance Ostro
7 years ago

I’d pay to get the design specs for this beauty!

Boxerman
Boxerman
8 years ago

Gt40 2306

Boxerman
Boxerman
8 years ago

Got one too, mines a spf, built primarily for track. Nothing modern even comes close in terms of fun skill or reward, plus its quicker on track than most modern street cars except maybe an acr.

Robert Hiermeier
Robert Hiermeier
8 years ago

I’ve always loved these cars and this one is totally awesome, as I was reading about it, I thought to myself Petrolicious should make a video, I just noticed that other readers though the same.

Patrick Mussotte
Patrick Mussotte
8 years ago

Absolute beauty…and beast!

I agree we need a video of this baby

Cheers

MatthewGT3
MatthewGT3
8 years ago

Even though it’s a replica, it still is amazing! Such a nice car that! Deserves a video for sure. Should hear a nice orchestra from that exhaust :)!

Christian Oliver
Christian Oliver
8 years ago

Love it. The passion, the vintage spirit, the period resto-mod.

Definitely deserving of a video.

Arnaldo Juris Maclang
Arnaldo Juris Maclang
8 years ago

Make a video, please!! 😀

Thistlebeeace
Thistlebeeace
8 years ago

Amazing – love it. 15″ knock-offs make it perfect.

Jack Hills
Jack Hills
8 years ago

Beautifully finished, no corners cut which is nice. The only thing I’m wondering is, where on earth did he find the money to buy, restore and race a Formula Vee in his 20’s?!

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