Gorilla Glass Comes Full Circle in Detroit With the Ford GT

Ronnie Schreiber
by Ronnie Schreiber

Ford Motor Company has announced that, in partnership with the Corning glass works, the new Ford GT supercar will have a windshield and engine cover made of what they call Gorilla Glass Hybrid.

In case you don’t know, Gorilla Glass is Corning’s brand name for the ion-exchange-strengthened glass used in smartphones and tablets. Instead of two sheets of annealed glass laminated with a middle sheet of clear polymer — as in conventional safety glass — Gorilla Glass Hybrid replaces the inner layer with Gorilla Glass.



The reason why Ford is using it in the GT is to save weight. “Light weighting” is quickly becoming a meme in the industry. Ford is trying to sell a supercar with a V6 engine so making it as light as possible is critical. Gorilla Glass is significantly thinner than annealed glass of similar strength, it has a much higher strength-to-weight ratio, and the result is something that weighs a third less than conventional glass.

While this is the first use of Gorilla Glass-branded product for a car’s exterior glass, faithful readers of TTAC will recall that this is not the first time a Detroit automaker has turned to Corning and used ion-exchange glass to save weight.

Three years ago, Jack Baruth wrote about how Corning helped Chrysler lighten the factory “stock” lightweight NHRA A body drag racers they made in 1965. Back then, the thin ion-exchange glass was called Chemcor. Corning publicity for Gorilla Glass makes it sound as if it’s a whole new thing, saying that it uses a completely different formulation than Chemcor, but I’d be willing to make at least a small bet that there’s a chain of patents between Chemcor and Gorilla Glass.

Ronnie Schreiber
Ronnie Schreiber

Ronnie Schreiber edits Cars In Depth, the original 3D car site.

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  • Stuki Stuki on Dec 17, 2015

    Cellphone batteries, cellphone operating systems and cellphone glass.... No wonder Apple figures they can have a go at the car biz.... Next thing you know, you'll get fined for using a car while driving.

  • Rpn453 Rpn453 on Dec 18, 2015

    Making a supercar as light as possible has always been the goal, regardless of cylinder count!

    • See 3 previous
    • Rpn453 Rpn453 on Dec 18, 2015

      @Corey Lewis Fiberglass is nothing special. The aluminum panels of older supercars are probably lighter than fiberglass equivalents.

  • Corey Lewis Facing rearwards and typing while in motion. I'll be sick in 4 minutes or less.
  • Ajla It's a tricky situation. If public charging is ubiquitous and reliable then range doesn't matter nearly as much. However they likely don't need to be as numerous as fuel pumps because of the home/work charging ability. But then there still might need to be "surge supply" of public chargers for things like holidays. Then there's the idea of chargers with towing accessibility. A lack of visible charging infrastructure might slow the adoption of EVs as well. Having an EV with a 600+ mile range would fix a lot of the above but that option doesn't seem to be economically feasible.
  • 28-Cars-Later I'm getting a Knight Rider vibe... or is it more Knightboat?
  • 28-Cars-Later "the person would likely be involved in taking the Corvette to the next level with full electrification."Chevrolet sold 37,224 C8s in 2023 starting at $65,895 in North America (no word on other regions) while Porsche sold 40,629 Taycans worldwide starting at $99,400. I imagine per unit Porsche/VAG profit at $100K+ but was far as R&D payback and other sunk costs I cannot say. I remember reading the new C8 platform was designed for hybrids (or something to that effect) so I expect Chevrolet to experiment with different model types but I don't expect Corvette to become the Taycan. If that is the expectation, I think it will ride off into the sunset because GM is that incompetent/impotent. Additional: In ten years outside of wrecks I expect a majority of C8s to still be running and economically roadworthy, I do not expect that of Taycans.
  • Tassos Jong-iL Not all martyrs see divinity, but at least you tried.
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