Ford GT Race Car

FIA World Endurance Championship campaign 2016-2019.

Ford GT Race Car Overview

When Ford announced in 2015 that it would make its return to endurance sports car racing with the Ford GT, 50 years on from the manufacturer’s historic 1-2-3 clean sweep at the 24 Hours of Le Mans, Multimatic was tasked with building and developing the car whilst Multimatic Motorsports was chosen to run the two Ford GTs that competed in the FIA World Endurance Championship.

With the Ford GT race programme, Multimatic Motorsports took on its biggest challenge yet, fighting against fierce competition from Ferrari, Aston Martin, BMW, Corvette and Porsche. This world-class competition has helped to create one of the best race teams on the grid. A team that works tirelessly on every programme, committing 100% to every task. The work the team has done on pit-stops alone is remarkable, taking chunks of time out of the process to make sure the team always has the competitive edge.

At the 24 Hours of Le Mans in 2019, the Multimatic crew was the fastest in the pits of all the GTE Pro runners, their two cars recording the shortest accumulated stop times in the class. They provided the #66 and #67 Ford GTs with an advantage, thanks to an incredible technique they developed whereby, uniquely, the Multimatic crew could complete a full brake change and change all four tyres before the refueller had finished, ensuring no extra time is lost due to a mid-race brake change.

LM GTE back

Multimatic’s international squad of racers enjoy being at the heart of the battle and the team experienced many highs and lows over during the four year race programme. Two huge crashes at Spa-Francorchamps were low points but they demonstrated the integrity of the Ford GT when both drivers walked away unharmed. Stand out moments include the first pole position and then the first victory in Shanghai in 2016 and a win at Silverstone in 2017 for the British duo of Andy Priaulx and Harry Tincknell.

At the close of the programme, Multimatic’s Larry Holt said: “I couldn’t be prouder of our team, the durability of the cars we engineered and built and the overall capability of Multimatic’s engineering group. We first came to Le Mans in 2000 with a Lola B2K/40 that utilised a Multimatic engineered and built chassis, and we won the LMP675 class. 19 years later we are still coming back to take on the best in the world but the transition of our organisation into what it has now become is almost hard for me to comprehend. There is very little that we can’t take on at this stage, and so we now move on to a bigger and even more difficult challenge. I know that we will excel.”

Ford GT Technical Specification

Chassis

Overhead view of Chassis
Lightweight carbon fibre and aluminium chassis, designed and manufactured by Multimatic
High-tensile steel roll cage to FIA safety standards
Pneumatic air jack system fitted for fast pit stops

Chassis

Overhead view of Chassis
Lightweight carbon fibre and aluminium chassis, designed and manufactured by Multimatic
High-tensile steel roll cage to FIA safety standards
Pneumatic air jack system fitted for fast pit stops

Suspension

Overhead view of Suspension
Double wishbone, pushrod suspension front and rear
Inboard mounted, 5-way adjustable Multimatic DSSV dampers
Torsion bar springs front and rear

Engine

Overhead view of Engine
Longitudinally mid-mounted, twin-turbocharged, 3.5 litre Ford Ecoboost V6
Dry sump oil system
Power: >500ps*
Torque: >500Nm*
(*governed by regulation)

Transmission

Overhead view of Transmission
Rear mounted, tranverse cluster, six speed sequential gearbox
Pneumatically actuated, semi-automatic paddle shift
Mechanical, plate and ramp limited slip differential

Wheels and Tyres

Overhead view of Wheels
12.5” x 18” Forged aluminium front wheels
31/68 – 18 Front tyres
13” x 18” Forged aluminium rear wheels
31/71 – 18 Rear tyres

Brakes

Overhead view of breaks
Six piston front calipers
380mm Ventilated discs front
Four piston rear calipers
355mm Ventilated discs rear