Carroll Shelby

Carroll Hall Shelby, (born January 11, 1923 in Leesburg, Texas) is an American racing and automotive design legend.

After graduating high school, Shelby enlisted in the United States Army Air Corps, serving in World War II as a flight instructor and test pilot.

Carroll Shelby has had an impressive impact on automotive racing and design over the last 50 years. Starting out amateur, he soon became a driver for Cad-Allard, Aston Martin, Maserati teams during the 1950s and 60s. Following his driving career he opened a high performance driving school and the Shelby-American company. In the shop he designed and built the famed "Cobra" cars, which were derived from an AC chassis and used Ford engines. Shelby went on to help design some of the most successful and beautiful cars of the era: the Ford Mustang, GT40, Shelby GT350, Shelby GT500, and of course the 427 Shelby Cobra. Parting with Ford, Shelby moved on to help develop performance cars with divisions of the two other Big 3 American companies, Dodge, and Oldsmobile. The most memorable of these cars was the Dodge Viper.

In 1991, he was inducted into the International Motorsports Hall of Fame.

In 2003, Ford Motor Co. and Carroll Shelby mended ties again. Carroll Shelby became technical advisor to the Ford GT project.

Shelby Dodges and Dodge Shelbys

Shelby began working with Dodge at the request of Chrysler Corporation chairman, Lee Iacocca, who had previously been responsible for bringing Shelby to the Ford Mustang. After almost a decade of tuning work, Shelby was part of the team responsible for the Dodge Viper.

The following cars were modified by Shelby, and bore his name, but still sold under the Dodge marque:

The following cars used Shelby-modified parts, but were not overseen by Carroll Shelby:

The following cars were modified and sold as Shelbys:

External link: The Shelby Dodge Pages (http://www.xmission.com/~dempsey/shelby/sheldodg.htm)

Series 1

Shelby's Series 1 roadster used Oldsmobile's 4.0 L L47 Aurora V8, but was poorly supported by the ailing GM division.

Ford-Shelby Projects

The new contract between Ford and Carroll Shelby signaled hope for Shelby products built under Ford. In 2004, a new Ford Shelby Cobra concept car was shown off in at US car shows. Built with a retro body mimicking the 1960s Cobras mixed with modern touches, it was based off the Ford GT chassis (Reworked for front engine/rear wheel drive) powered with a 6.4 L V10 engine that produced 605 hp (451 kW). It recieved bad press reviews and the idea was scrapped for production.

A production-feasable Shelby product was then introduced, the Ford Shelby GR-1 concept car of 2005. While sporting a completly modern design, it showed a nod to the 1960s Shelby Daytona. The GR-1, like the Cobra, is based off the GT's chassis and was also powered with the same 6.4 L V10 engine, although production versions, if given the green light, could see a 7.0 L V8. Press reviews for the GR-1 have been majorly positive, gaining cover spots on magazine publications such as the US' Motor Trend and the UK's Car Magazine. The Ford Shelby GR-1 could possibly be built, taking over the Ford GT's production line after its production comes to an end.

In 2005, the Shelby GT500 was revealed at the New York International Auto Show. Currently as a concept car, it could very well see production as the next SVT Mustang, as well as being Carroll's own Shelby product. It is powered by a 5.4 L supercharged V8 based on the engine of the Ford GT and is expected to have at least 450 hp (335 kW). It will have a Tremec T-56 manual transmission, reworked suspension geometry, 18 inch wheels, functional aerodynamic body kit, and still retain the solid rear axle. Pricing is expected to fall near $40,000, which would make it faster and more powerful than the Corvette for less money.de:Carroll Shelby

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