By P.J. McCombs
November 26, 2007 -
As automakers continue their relentless pursuit of refinement, there’s precious little “magic” to be had behind the wheel of a new car. Sit down, and you instantly know where everything is and how to operate it. Start it up and drive and few sensations are overly vivid. In short, most new cars are about as surprising as a toaster. Ford’s Mustang Shelby GT is the un-toaster. I recently braved the perils of California’s Mojave Desert (e.g. bad road food) to sample the Shelby at the Willow Springs Raceway. The experience was not bland. On the contrary, it was, erm… memorable.
But I’m getting ahead of myself. The Shelby GT is a for-the-people version of 2006’s Shelby GT-H, a special-edition ‘Stang available only for rental through Hertz. The same upgrades apply: a one-and-a-half-inch drop, stouter springs, dampers and anti-roll bars, a front strut tower brace, and a freer-breathing intake and exhaust. There’s also—wait for it— a numbered and Carroll-Shelby-signed commemorative plaque on the dash. Ooh. Aah. Sorry, just yawning.
Now, this may seem like the umpteenth special-edition ‘Stang Ford has released to pump life into its retro pony’s sales (Warriors in Pink Edition, anyone?). But the car’s pert, chunky lines still draw stares. And while Shelby’s visual additions put the “tack” in tack-ons (eighteen-inch imitation “mags,” hood pins, billet grille, the usual suspects), they can be taken in good fun. Early in the day, journalists waited in line to drive this car. When’s the last time someone got excited about a rental Ford?
I mentioned memorable sensations. The first arrives when you swing open the Shelby’s heavy door and drop yourself into the dark, leather-trimmed interior. Half-filling your bunker-slit view is a hood scoop. Not a WRX-style mail slot, but the real dream-cruise deal, racing-striped and stamped into place with rivets. It’s nonfunctional, of course.
At the base of the console sits another shameless, self-conscious grasp at the past: a cue-ball-topped Hurst short shifter. Try to grab a gear with this thing and it feels broken. Improbably high effort is required to scritch-scratch the lever through its tiny, gritty H-pattern, as if someone used sand as a lubricant. Stylistically, it gels seamlessly with the rest of the ‘Stang’s ‘60s-revival interior décor. And hey, at least the five-speed is a manual; the Hertz GT-H, as some may recall, was auto-only.
The salience of that last point becomes apparent upon turning the key. The noise that issues from the Shelby’s exhausts is the stuff of teenage fantasies: dense, rumbly, woofly and loud. Spine tingles come standard. And with a manual at your disposal, this luscious soundtrack inspires all kinds of delightful antisocial behaviors, from unnecessary revving at a stop to unnecessary displays of WOT on the move.
According to Ford, the exhaust and intake combo are good for an extra 19 horses versus the standard Mustang GT, for a total of 319. That’s more than enough for serious fun, especially since the 4.6-liter V8 pours on torque thickly and smoothly in the midrange (low-end grunt is surprisingly modest). Zero to 60mph runs take just about five seconds. But the Shelby’s dynamics are, um, less than contemporary.
Readers who’ve driven the standard-issue ‘Stang are doubtless already familiar with its light, numb steering, its proclivity to understeer and the general sense of squidge in its suspension. Truth is, the Shelby’s starched suspenders don’t improve matters much. Body motions are nicely taut, and its stride feels a bit more hunkered-down. But the Shelby still left my neurons reeling as its helm scribed gloopy, too-fast arcs into Willow Springs’ sweeping high-speed corners.
And braking? Talk about “memorable.” The middle pedal feels weaker than a wine spritzer and mushier than Mills & Boon. Worse, the Shelby GT evinces a spooky live-axle weave when you drop anchor at triple-digit speeds. Its rear end gets loose and queasy as the front end dives to sniff the pavement. I didn’t notice any pucker marks on the seat cushion’s leather upholstery. Must be tough stuff.
Okay, so the typical Shelby GT buyer isn’t looking to run it around a track. More likely they’ll use it to cruise the main drag, luring envious glances from other aging rodders. Or maybe they’ll canter down a mountain road, reveling in the echo of its exhaust. Under such circumstances, I, too, would surely fall under the Shelby’s spell.
But hey, that’s easy to do while driving on someone else’s dime. The MSRP for this nostalgic bit of blue-oval bluster? $36,970. Seriously. And all of the performance parts are, as they say, “also sold separately.” Check ‘em off in your Ford Racing catalog and you’ll total $2,656. Budget a couple thousand more to have everything bolted onto your $25,840 Mustang GT.
Have you driven a $6,970 commemorative plaque lately? I told you it left an impression.
61 Responses to “ Ford Mustang Shelby GT Review ”
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POWERED
November 26th, 2007 at 8:34 am
I think the Bullit model would be the one I would choose if and when I want a blast from the past. Now if Porsche will just bring back the 356 Speedster, now that would be the ultimate boomer retro car along with a VW Combi Bus.
November 26th, 2007 at 8:41 am
For almost $37k I’d rather find a couple year old C5 or C6 vette and have an all around better performer with the same if not more aftermarket upgrades available. I guess Ford isn’t going to have too many more opportunities to use Carrol Shelby’s name while he’s alive so, they’re using it for all it’s worth. Too bad they couldnt have made it a better performer for the money.
November 26th, 2007 at 9:50 am
At that price, I’d rather rent the Hertz version!
At least the hood scoop on the Subarus are functional… Otherwise, great review.
November 26th, 2007 at 10:13 am
The Bullitt model has an even squishier suspension than the base V6 stang! Check out the pop mechanics video of their road test. It’s pretty bad. From what I’ve heard the Roush stang is the one to get.
November 26th, 2007 at 10:23 am
Dead on review. The Mustang GT is a good straight-line performance car for your dollar. The Shelby GT is just paying for a name, paying a lot. At that price a BMW 135 will get my dough.
November 26th, 2007 at 10:26 am
What is Ford’s plan for this platform? Surely they aren’t going to subject it to the same living death as the PT Cruiser or VW Beetle. Or is it too late?
November 26th, 2007 at 11:02 am
Interesting review. I’ve read alot of reviews who pan this car for it’s suspension and it’s cheap interior.
I think that the interior is so cheap and poor functioning that it deserves scorn, the backseat is smaller than the late 60’s version, and the trunk does not deserve the name it was given, the car has done exactly what Ford intended it too….
It reinvigorated the muscle car. For $26-27k, you got a honking v8, rear wheel drive car that sounded like a muscle car, steered like a muscle car, and looked like a muscle car. It’s been a huge sales success for Ford and has helped keep their name on the map long enough to hopefully bring on some more success.
Beyond the craptastic functionality of the interior (cup holders that are 1 to 1.5″ deep, etc.) the true crime behind this car is the number of people out there who jumped on the bandwagon to release endless “special editions”. It was a short term plan doomed for long-term scorn. Carroll Shelby lost my respect, and I’m a young’n.
I admire the Mustang for what it is. Cheap performance in an everyman’s car. Whilst many scorn it’s live axle rear, it’s the best solution to cheap manufacturing AND durability in launch after launch.
The mustang is the 50-and-up crowd’s WRX. Cheap interior, some functionality, lotta tunability, and wallet-friendly fun.
Joe
November 26th, 2007 at 11:03 am
Box it up for a future ebay auction.
Used mustang = 15K
Suspension mods = 3K
Supercharger kit = 4K
Tire upgrade = 2K
Seeing the look on someone’s face when you blow past them for 24K = priceless.
November 26th, 2007 at 11:05 am
Stupid little tricks and gimics for Ford dealers!
Can’t make profit pushing regular Ford products? Just sell a few of these turkeys (if you can get them to from the factory) to some unsuspecting fools and your dealership will be in the black this month.
Have the domestic automakers any pride?
November 26th, 2007 at 11:14 am
>>Used mustang = 15K
>>Supercharger kit = 4K
>>Seeing the look on someone’s face when you blow past them for 24K = priceless
Blowing the engine on a used Mustang=expensive