2010 Ford Shelby GT500

Kymerik

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2003.5 Mazda Protege5
Leftlane News Take:

Take a look at the 2010 Ford Shelby GT500: The first thing youre bound to notice is the huge Big Mouth Billy Bass openings above and below the bumper; then, as your eyes move over the Ticket Me Red paint job with Le Mans-style stripes, youll stop at the beefy 19-inch wheels and extra-wide tires. If its muscular looks dont stop you in your tracks, its basso profundo gurgling exhaust certainly will.

If it doesnt, youll want to check your pulse.

With a sound that grabs you with the first turn of the key, the 2010 Ford Shelby GT500 roars to life with power that improves on the outgoing GT500. A corporate Shelby, rather than one built in Las Vegas at Shelby Automobiles, this Mustang is a collaboration between Carroll Shelby and the Special Vehicles Team at Ford. Its built in the Mustang factory in Flat Rock, Michigan, not Las Vegas.

Ford took us to Sonoma, Californias Infineon Raceway to put the newest GT500 through its paces.

What is it?
Ford recreated the high-power retro-pony class with the first neo-GT500 for the 2007; the 2010 is the response to Dodge and Chevrolets entrants. It promises more, more and more of everything a muscle car buyer wants: Power, noise, swagger and even handling.

Whats it up against?
As we eluded to before, the 2010 GT500s natural adversaries include the Dodge Challenger SRT8 and Chevrolet Camaro SS pony cars, but there is a whole herd of other cars that nearly match up in power, if not price. In that category, add the Ferrari F430 Scuderia, BMW M6, and as the dark horse, the Nissan GT-R. Sure, theres a reason youll pay double the GT500s asking price to enter that level, but the GT500 promises to run neck-and-neck with those champions.

Any breakthroughs?
How about drivability for one? New for 2010 is a revised 5.4-liter 32-valve supercharged V8 pumping out 100 horsepower-per-liter. We know its not exactly a breakthrough number, but its power is impressive. A new cold-air intake was cause enough for Ford to ask ol Carroll himself whether it was okay to move the Cobra badge from the drivers to the passengers side of the grille. His response: If it makes it go faster, then yes.

A new 3.55:1 top gear adds up to 2 extra mpg on the highway, but the way we enjoyed the skinny pedal during our evaluation, we didnt really notice.

Fords Microsoft Sync system brings the muscel car into the 21st century with its voice commands and Bluetooth functionality.

How does it look?
Like the current iteration of the Mustang GT, but on enough steroids to make A-Rod look like a girly-man, the GT500 is both familiar and new at the same time.

The first time you see the front end, you cant help but be drawn to the gaping grille split by the front bumper. Ford claims it pays homage to the A/C Cobra 427 open sports roadsters that put Shelby on the map. To us, it is reminiscent of Big Mouth Billy Bass, the animatronics toy that flapped its large mouth bass lips to the tune of Dont Worry, Be Happy back in 2001. Were still happy.

The power bulge hood rises up to provide added clearance for the Roots-style supercharger. Other functional exterior details include functional air extractors to release trapped air from underhood, the aforementioned LeMans stripes which are taped instead of painted on (for easier replacement in case of damage). Finally of note is the new rear spoiler, which has been moved forward to actually decrease rear downforce, but reclaims some of it by way of a Gurney flap built in to the top of the wing.

Remember, all this is on top of the changes recently shown to the 2010 Mustang we drove earlier this year.

And inside?
A more refined version of the traditional Mustang cockpit, it features the familiar gauge setup but with SVT illumination in the tachometer face, and upshift warning lights on the speedometer side. Fuel, boost, water, and oil temperature gauges are located between the two larger gauges. From left to right, the face of the dashboard is covered with a technical dot grid on brushed aluminum. A new arrangement is in place on the centerstack, housing a 7.5-inch monitor for navigation and Sync controls. Climate controls follow down, just ahead of the short throw stick shift with cue ball shift knob.

Millions of virgin Alcantaras gave their lives to the Snake so they could wrap themselves around the steering wheel and shifter boot in the Shelbys interior. Nicely bolstered leather upholstered seats offer much better support than previous versions and include a power lumber support. Stitching down the center of the seating area matches the colors of the exterior LeMans stripe. It provides a visual contrast to the otherwise dark interior color scheme.

If we were to ding the Shelby, it would be for the excessive use of hard plastics around the cabin, just like the Mustang. From the tops of the door panels, to the large expanse of dashboard and the center console, there are many examples of hard plastics inside that although possibly cost effective, take away from the overall quality and value of the vehicle. Oh, that and the lack of a dead pedal to rest your foot when off the clutch.

But does it go?
Like the proverbial bat out of Hell, the 2010 Shelby GT500 is a rocket that strikes with the speed and ferocity of its Cobra namesake. Donning our Pyrotect helmets (required with any on-track activities at Infineon), we were ready to see what this snake could do. With its supercharged and intercooled 540-horsepower V8 pumping out 510 lb-ft. of torque, the GT500 is able to rip mid-12-second runs down the dragstrip at Infineon time after time with speeds in the range of 113-115 mph - on street tires, no less.

The Tremec 6060 six-speed gearbox is a good one - essentially the same unit in the V8-equipped Camaro SS. It just seems more precise in the latter, rather than the former. The addition of a Hurst short-throw shifter should help matters in the GT500. The new dual-disc clutch is a vast improvement over the outgoing model, which gave a nice, uneven workout for the left thigh.

In much the same way that engineers helped to make the Shelbys drivetrain more refined, they also went the distance to provide a car that sounded good without the exhaust note becoming intrusive.

Electronic assists help to make the GT500 a docile daily driver as well as a contender on track days. Fords AdvanceTrac stability and traction control defaults to an on mode that keeps things tame, but a Sport mode stiffens things up and allows a little more hooliganism. Push the button twice and the system turns off entirely, allowing tail-out maneuvers easier than a bad Vin Diesel sequel. As hard as we put it through its paces, the Shelby managed to keep things on a fairly even keel in a manner that instilled confidence and almost begged us for more input. On the road course, the car showed quick acceleration up the straights with great road holding through the esses (S-turns). The four-pot Brembos up front did their job nicely while the two-pot factory-sourced binders at rear decently scrubbed speed before the sweeping, but blind right-hander. Letting the car settle allowed us to power through the fun left-hander up ahead. The GT500s ride was a blast thanks to the MacPherson struts with their reverse L lower control arm, and 34mm stabilizer bar in front, as well as the three-link solid axle with coil springs and panhard rod and twin tube gas-charged shocks in the back.

The Shelby GT500 continues to utilize the live axle of its predecessors rather than moving in the direction of the new Camaro with its new independent rear suspension. Keep in mind that this is a highly evolved live axle that can go right and left. Despite Fords assertion that its customers like the straight-line durability and flexibility of the solid axle, we are sure there are some development cost decisions that keep an independent rear away from the GT500.

With a curb weight of 3,924 pounds, the 5.4-liter engine received an EPA rating of 14-mpg city, and 22-mpg highway not bad.

Why you would buy it:
The run-of-the-mill Mustang just doesnt cut it for you, and subsequent cars modified by Steeda and Roush arent your thing. Its Shelby or nothing and you cant argue with that factory warranty.

Why you wouldnt:
You are holding out for a supercharged Camaro Z28 that GM keeps denying it is building.

Leftlanes bottom line:
With a base price of $46,325 the 2010 Ford Shelby GT500 stands out as one of the least-expensive and most enjoyable ways to raise your insurance rates and use lots of tires. Unlike its predecessor, hours upon hours of seat time didnt beat us up, meaning this GT500 finally makes a decent daily driver. Credit the smoother clutch, the more refined ride or maybe just the raw power. We like it.

2010 Ford Shelby GT500 base price, $46,325. As tested, $48,175 (plus $1,000 Gas Guzzler Tax).
Destination, $850.
Options have not been priced out yet by the manufacturer.
 
Edmunds.com - Insideline take

Quicker, Smarter, Nicer — Yet Still a Bad Boy

It's something like trying to drive the 2010 Ford Shelby GT500 on a roller-coaster, only there are no steel tracks to keep you from slithering off the pavement and ending up in a flaming heap of 540-horsepower Mustang.

You can't even see where you're going, really. Hard on it, the GT500's rear tires begin spinning just as you can see nothing but sky in the windshield. You're on top of the hump at the entrance to Infineon Raceway's Turn 6, and as your stomach and both right-side tires go weightless, you start a long, long dive to the left, sliding sideways all the way down the hill and around the 180-degree corner.

The Shelby GT500 is so torqued up with the cornering force from the low-profile 19-inch tires and the drive from the supercharged V8 that you can practically hear the welds popping in the chassis. But something is different this time — palms are not slick with sweat, tires are not threatening to let go at the most inopportune moment and steering left in order to go right is a joy and not a reflex of self-preservation.

The 2010 Ford Shelby GT500 gets 2 mpg more on the EPA highway cycle this year. The Ford engineers are really proud of this. But every time we make another lap and slide down Turn 6, we have our doubts that fuel economy is what this car is about.

Serving Our Inner Adolescent
We're behaving like adults as the Ford engineers tell us all about the 2010 Ford Shelby GT500, even as we hear a couple of the cars making shake-down runs on the quarter-mile strip at Infineon Raceway a few hundred feet away. And in many ways, the GT500 itself is trying to act more like an adult, casting aside the muscle-bound character of the 2007 Ford Shelby GT500.

As the Ford people tell us, they started with the limited-production 2008 Ford Shelby GT500KR, the exclusive (1,700 examples built) and revenue-enhancing (MSRP $79,995) Mustang produced last year. And aside from a few fewer Shelby badges (the KR had many to spare), the GT500 is like the KR in almost every way, except it's built at the Mustang plant in Flat Rock, Michigan, rather than at the Shelby facility in Las Vegas.

You can tell as soon as you open the new GT500's hood, complete with hot-air extractors. The supercharged and intercooled DOHC 5.4-liter V8 with its truck-style iron block is still in place, but now it carries a conical air filter in its own sealed cold-air box behind the left-side headlight, an innovation that increases airflow while resisting power-sapping heat soak. For the GT500, this new cold-air intake required the migration of the iconic Cobra badge on the grille from the left side to the right side.

With premium fuel and more aggressive ignition timing plus a less restrictive exhaust, the result is 540 hp at 6,200 rpm, an 8 percent increase. Torque output goes up fractionally to 510 pound-feet at 4,500 rpm. Thankfully, the telltale supercharger whine has been significantly diminished with clever intake plumbing, while the idle burble and bad-boy tailpipe blat have been accentuated by the 4-inch exhaust system.

Totally Awesome
It's not a lot of extra power, but your inner adolescent can put it to good use because the final-drive ratio is 3.55:1, 7 percent shorter than the former 3.31:1 rear-end gears. This means a useful increase in twist at the new, 19-inch forged-aluminum rear wheels, and the result is a blast to 60 mph from a standstill in a blistering 4.3 seconds (4.0 seconds with 1 foot of rollout, like on a drag strip). In comparison, the 2007 Ford Shelby GT500 made the run in 4.6 seconds, while the 2010 Chevrolet Camaro SS did the deed in 5.0 seconds (4.7 seconds with rollout) and the 2009 Dodge Challenger R/T recorded 5.5 seconds (5.3 seconds with rollout).

Quarter-mile performance is totally awesome as well, as the GT500 makes its best pass in 12.4 seconds at 114.7 mph. That's not only a useful margin over the '07 car with its 500-hp powertrain, which did the deed in 12.8 seconds at 112.6 mph, but it also makes the Chevrolet Camaro and Dodge Challenger look like weak-ass sissies. The Camaro turned the quarter in 13.0 seconds at 110.9 mph and the Challenger did 13.9 seconds at 103.2 mph. We might have gone even quicker and faster in the Shelby GT, except for the 14-mph headwind we faced at this track close to San Francisco Bay.

While it's as easy as ever to haze the rear tires off the line, the new softer tire compound has improved the bite. If you value bracket-racing consistency over all-out performance, the AdvanceTrac stability control's new Sport mode will do its best to optimize (though somewhat limit) traction for you. You might even select the launch rpm electronically for varying surfaces.

Adulthood Comes to the Shelby GT500
Though the GT500 has that big beat from under the hood that gets your attention, it has the tractable character of the KR, so it's easy to drive.

You can feel it in the controls. Everything operates with an easier, friction-free feel, so you don't feel like you're riding some kind of beast that's trying to spit you off at the first opportunity. The steering shaft is stiffer to deliver crisper response, even though the steering ratio remains at 15.7:1. The effort level for the brakes is scaled to humans, not superheroes. The shift action of the short-throw Tremec six-speed manual is short and sharp, not stiff. Even the clutch is surprisingly easy to modulate thanks to the use of larger, more robust copper/fiberglass plates that engage more progressively.

Compliance and balance are the secrets here, an approach more grown-up than the former Shelby's brawny, stiff-legged tuning. Where the previous GT500 and especially the KR would hop over a lane line if there were a twig at the apex of a corner, the 2010 GT500 acknowledges road irregularities, but those events don't linger and oscillate more than once. Bam, and it's done.

It begins with a compliant suspension tuned to deliver lots more roll control, only it comes from nearly twice as much rebound damping than before rather than simply stiffer springs. More negative camber at the front wheels also helps the steering bite with more effect when you turn into a corner, especially since the revised Goodyear Eagle F1 Supercar tires carry a softer compound.

Balance comes from a revised aerodynamic profile meant to improve high-speed handling and stability. A revised front splitter reduces front-end lift by 31 percent, while the rear wing is trimmed out to actually increase lift. Downforce can be tuned with the small Gurney flap.

Driving in the Real World
This Shelby GT makes you believe you're in an exclusive performance car, not just a Mustang with a decal package.

The seat upholstery is real leather and the inserts are suede. The rim of the steering wheel is suede. The silver trim for the dash is real aluminum, and it has a zippy dimpled finish. Soft-touch plastic is used and the gauges are specific to the GT500. When you fire up the car, the Shelby Cobra logo appears on the navigation screen.

With one hand on the suede rim of the steering wheel and the other on the shift lever's white cueball (manufactured by an actual billiard supply company) that has been inscribed with the racing stripes that are the visual theme of the GT500, you're looking forward to the drive.

We drive along California highway 1 from Stinson Beach to Fort Ross, and then cut inland through the California wine country to Calistoga. The Shelby lets you know that it has a live rear axle, but it doesn't make you slow down for fear of upsetting the car — a real breakthrough. If only it weren't for the seat headrests giving your head a nudge every time the axle kicks.

And this thing gets fuel economy. Although the final-drive ratio is far shorter than before, 5th and 6th gears are much taller. So the result is an EPA-rated 14 mpg city/22 mpg highway.

Coming to a Showroom Soon
We can't think of a more difficult place to drive a 540-hp pony car than Infineon Raceway, but once all the Ford people were gone and we were left on our own with the 2010 Ford Shelby GT500, we did lots of time on this 2.5-mile roller-coaster. And once we flicked off the stability control, the Shelby GT came alive. You could flick the Shelby into corners, and we came down Turn 6 with smoke coming from the rear tires. And the brakes offered good modulation and a crazy amount of capability.

By the end of a day, you can't help but like this car. It's stonking fast (though it doesn't always feel that way), it slides very controllably (especially when you find that special place that's like Turn 6) and it actually looks special (and exclusive) for a change. We'd even order one ourselves (though the stripes would have to go).

You can order one for yourself when it arrives in dealerships in the early summer. The price of the 2010 Ford Shelby GT begins at $48,125, and this includes the now-lower $1,000 gas-guzzler tax (thanks to the GT's 22-mpg highway rating) and $850 destination charge. Loaded with options as our test car was, the price can easily surpass 50 grand, though.

But like the original Shelby GT500, there's a level of sophistication and even luxury sewn into the fabric of this undeniably rapid and capable muscle machine. Sure, it'll throw down consistent 12s in the quarter-mile and slide around corners with glorious plumes of tire smoke, but it'll also tell you what traffic conditions lie ahead, play DVDs and promote marital harmony with dual-zone climate control. Name another 540-hp coupe for $50,000 that can do all that.
 
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Edmunds had a good line at the end of the video, something along the lines of, if you can find another 50K coupe that can do everything the mustang can do, buy it, until then we'll be powersliding this car all the way home :)

It looks amazing, sounds like a screaming orgasm, and seems to be a well balanced car, from the video anyways...kudos SVT :)
 
$50,000?!?! That's c6 territory...I think I'd go with the vette hands down. Those are still some pretty impressive numbers tho.
 
That is a hell of a CAI :D

My color choices (non-convertible though):

NO:

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YES:
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I bet a C6 with the Z51 package would be this GT500. The last GT500 lost to a C6 with the Z51 package. That GT500 had a 100 horsepower difference over the vette.
 
Everyone and their mama has a vette. Side by side, I'd bet more people would stop to look at that sick Mustang.
 
The vette probably would match or better the performance of the GT500, but it doesn't have the personality. Just something about that GT500 that screams come drive me!!! Very unique nostalgic muscle car look for those of us that are into that sort of thing. :D
 
a C6 is .2 slower to 60 and almost half a secon slower in the 1/4mi...

I would imagine the vette would run circles around the stang in the twisties tho
 
I love the coupe. Dead sexy!

My gripe is that they didn't give the 'vert the same treatment. It's basically a carry over from '09 with 40 more ponies under the hood.
 
How many organs do I have to sell on the black market to get this car?
 
Yeah true that sucks but I must say though that the vert def looses some of the body rigidness, I used to have a v6 vert as a rental, I still digged it, was always a joy to drive, the windshield and dash and whatnot shake a lot more when going over bumps and through dips, but like I said, was still fun to cruise top down
 
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