This is the second-generation Ford GT,
the most powerful car the
company has ever built.
It's also one of the best aerodynamically
designed cars to ever be made.
Todd: Hi, my name is Todd Willing.
I'm global design director
for trucks and SUVs
at Ford Motor Company, and today,
we're gonna break down the design
of a project that I was
part of, the Ford GT.
Narrator: We asked Todd about
the aerodynamics of the car
and its iconic shape.
Todd: So, it's that teardrop shape,
you know, coming from the front axle
and really wasting away
as much as possible,
and then a short rear muscular haunch
over the rear wheel,
and they're connected by those buttresses,
which creates that very,
very dramatic view.
It was sort of mandated, if you like,
from a design point of view
that we needed to include that
to make it instantly
recognizable as a Ford GT.
Narrator: These two sections not only gave
the GT its distinctive design,
but excellent aerodynamic performance.
But the way the design
bends air to its will
is sort of complex, so let's
break it down, part by part.
The first place air comes
in contact with the GT
is through the front intake.
Airflow through this section is routed
through the nostrils to smoothly run
over the wraparound
windscreen and roof line,
effectively reducing
drag, or the force of air
pushing against the car.
Remember that teardrop shape
Todd mentioned earlier?
A teardrop is the most
efficient aerodynamic shape.
It cuts through the air at the front
and slowly brings it back
together in the rear.
This is important,
because if air can't meet
at the rear of the vehicle,
it creates a low-pressure
pocket behind the car,
and that effectively pulls the
car back and slows it down.
The flying buttresses, or the tunnels,
help channel air around its teardrop shape
and over the spoiler.
This creates downforce in the rear.
Downforce is important
to have at high speed,
especially when cornering.
Like a plane, the air underneath
the car begins to push up,
as if it were trying to take off.
Downforce counters this to
keep the car on the track
and helps tires achieve
better grip for accelerating.
But not all air gets
routed through the tunnels.
Some of it makes its way to
the vent cleverly placed below.
This air is routed through the engine bay
to cool off components before exhausting
out the center of the
taillight in the rear.
But that's not the only
aerodynamic device in the front.
Todd: There's a fantastic concept,
what's called a keel concept,
where the air splits and divides away
in the floor and goes
around the front wheels
and exits out in the side,
and you can see the scalloping
in the side of the car there
to allow that air to come out.
Narrator: The keel concept, popularly used
on Formula 1 cars,
not only generates downforce in the front,
but it sends this feed of air
on a journey around the car
to further improve the GT's performance.
Todd: Notice the little side splitter area
that's intended to stop air from flying
back underneath and
controlling it in that regard.
But also above that airflow
out from the front wheel,
there's an additional bit of
sculpture, which holds the air,
contains the air in that lower area,
and then feeds back into another duct
just in front of the rear wheel,
which in turn allows another feed of air
over the rear diffuser area,
which is very important to the overall
aerodynamic performance of the car.
Narrator: The diffuser is
a tray attached to the back
of the car that creates a
gradually larger opening.
The design of the diffuser
speeds up the airflow
as it exits the rear of the car.
This creates negative
pressure, or a vacuum,
that sucks the car to the
road through hard corners,
tight turns, and high
speeds on straightaways.
All of these aerodynamic
concepts and devices
are integral to the design of the Ford GT.
The design team was able
to use these concepts
and components in a
way that is reminiscent
of the original GT40,
but more importantly,
they were able to bring the
GT into the modern world
while making it more powerful than ever.
Hi, I'm Aj, one of the producers
of all things cars at Insider.
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