RE: Ford GT history: review

RE: Ford GT history: review

Tuesday 15th December 2015

Ford GT history: review

'Ford GT: How Ford Silenced the Critics, Humbled Ferrari and Conquered Le Mans'



We're in a perilous time of year for motoring enthusiasts. Despite the variety of quality motoring appurtenances available in the PH shop and beyond there's a sad predictability to the motoring related tat many of us unwrap come Christmas day. They mean well. But, really, branded baseball caps and bargain bin Clarkson DVDs aren't that imaginative.

This disappointment can be avoided with a gentle nudge in the right direction. Today that direction is a book delivered to us for review and just in time to make our Christmas lists. We'll have a few more like this coming over the next few days too.


According to publisher Motorbooks, Ford GT - How Ford Silenced the Critics, Humbled Ferrari and Conquered Le Mans "celebrates the 50th anniversary of Ford's iconic victory, providing the detailed back story leading to that historic win... for a complete view of this remarkable era in racing." It does this very well in fact.

Although of suitable coffee table proportions the text is not something to be merely skimmed over. The many stories behind the creation of the GT40 legend are successfully intertwined, from Ford's motivation - personal and corporate - to the contributions of the numerous notable individuals to whom the car owes its success.

And, of course, plenty of absorbing accounts of the car's development and racing history. Contentious moments are viewed through the lenses of as many different participants as possible to let you understand the context. Author Preston Lerner also does a commendable job of remaining impartial when it comes to the Anglo-American aspect of the GT40's creation. This is not a stars and stripes tribute to American ingenuity beating the Europeans at their own game, but neither is it the story of a handful of plucky Brits who deserve all of the real credit.


Supplementing the text, or rather vice versa, are hundreds of striking photographs taken by Dave Friedman, Shelby American's official photographer, who travelled with the team to races around the globe during the 1960s. These truly serve to bring the story to life.

Ford GT - How Ford Silenced the Critics, Humbled Ferrari and Conquered Le Mans provides an excellent blend of narrative with deep levels of technical detail, rendering it accessible to the casual motorsport fan but still interesting enough for the true enthusiast. Coupled with the stunning photography and the high quality production, whether you're familiar with the GT40's story or approaching it for the first time, it should be high up on any PHer's holiday reading list. People still give book tokens at Christmas, right?

Ford GT - How Ford Silenced the Critics, Humbled Ferrari and Conquered Le Mans by Preston Lerner
For more information click here

[Words: Dafydd Wood]
Photos: LAT

Author
Discussion

tosh.brice

Original Poster:

204 posts

211 months

Tuesday 15th December 2015
quotequote all
Buy from the BookDepository.com and save - with free worldwide delivery - no I don't work for them, I am a satisfied customer living in a country where most online retailers don't deliver at all, much less for free!

ruffstuff

24 posts

255 months

Tuesday 15th December 2015
quotequote all
Try Haynes Ford GT40 owners workshop manual. Half the price & excellent read.

lestiq

705 posts

169 months

Tuesday 15th December 2015
quotequote all


smile

MikeT66

2,680 posts

124 months

Wednesday 16th December 2015
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Ooooh, this looks good. At least it's cheaper than Christopher Ward's GT40 watch that I wanted.

Can't recommend AJ Baime's 'Go Like Hell' enough, too. The GT40 story is a fantastic sports chronicle full of bitterness, revenge, passion, bravery and tragedy, all played out by some of THE most iconic figures in Motor Sport history - Henry Ford II, Enzo Ferrari, John Surtees, Bruce McClaren, Ken Miles and of course Carroll Shelby. Will someone please make the bloody film!


bubney72

1,102 posts

153 months

Wednesday 16th December 2015
quotequote all

Humbled Ferrari? Not at all.

Point a: Ford used a 5 litre vs Ferrari 3 litre, the following year Ford used a 7 litre against Ferrari's 4 litre.

Point b: Ford were/are a massive company with huge resources, and Ferrari were a tiny little company then....even now they are small in car terms, but now at least have FIAT backing them up.

Point c: Even with their huge resources, Ford took 3 odd years to beat them at Le Mans.

MikeT66

2,680 posts

124 months

Thursday 17th December 2015
quotequote all
bubney72 said:
Humbled Ferrari? Not at all.

Point a: Ford used a 5 litre vs Ferrari 3 litre, the following year Ford used a 7 litre against Ferrari's 4 litre.

Point b: Ford were/are a massive company with huge resources, and Ferrari were a tiny little company then....even now they are small in car terms, but now at least have FIAT backing them up.

Point c: Even with their huge resources, Ford took 3 odd years to beat them at Le Mans.
I see what you mean, bubney, however, the rules that allowed Ford to pit their 5 and 7-litre engines against Ferrari were open for the Italian firm to use, too. That they didn't was their experienced and informed choice - Enzo simply decided to continue with what had been successful before. When the 7-litre engines were outlawed for 1968 by the ACO (under some pressure from you-know-who), John Wyer and his Gulf-sponsored team returned (without Ford's financial backing) to win in 1968 and '69, and it was with the (now old and obsolete) 5-litre MKI GT40, so quite an achievement.

Also, back in the early 1960's Ferrari were the undisputed kings of Le Mans, winning in '58, '60, '61, '62 and 1963 prior to Ford entering the fray in 1964. That they won again in 1964 and 1965 shows how strong and experienced Ferrari were at this type of European racing. Ford, despite the money (and ambition of Henry Ford II) had no experience of that kind of motor racing at all - oval racing was pretty much all they had experienced in the USA, so knowledge of what they were up against was pretty slim. Indeed, it was only really when Carroll Shelby (who managed to trip up Ferrari courtesy of Aston Martin in 1959) joined that they really got to grips with the idiosyncrasies of Le Mans and turned their racer into a winner.

As for waiting 3 years, well, motor sport could take as much time even these days. If VW decided to enter, say, Formula 1 without drafting in any experienced names (Ross Brawn, etc) then, despite their gigantic wealth, they wouldn't be guaranteed a F1 Championship in their first year, either.

Ford certainly took the wind from Ferrari's sails, in time for Porsche and their astonishing 917 to come along and finish the job. That the most famous sportscar company in the world ever hasn't officially challenged for the top Sportscar/GT Championship since those days is quite telling, IMHO.




Edited by MikeT66 on Thursday 17th December 13:14

iloveboost

1,531 posts

162 months

Sunday 20th December 2015
quotequote all
A basic history is available for free here, from the 'collaborating with ford' section onwards:
http://broadleyautomotive.co.uk/the-legacy

CanAm

9,200 posts

272 months

Sunday 3rd January 2016
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bubney72 said:
Humbled Ferrari? Not at all.

Point a: Ford used a 5 litre vs Ferrari 3 litre, the following year Ford used a 7 litre against Ferrari's 4 litre.

Point d: Ford's engines were iron block pushrod V8s from production cars, compared with Ferraris all aluminium DOHC pure racing V-12s.yes

CanAm

9,200 posts

272 months

Sunday 3rd January 2016
quotequote all
lestiq said:


smile
A nice drawing of a replica of the 1966 winner.