Original ‘Eleanor’ Mustang from newer ‘Gone in 60 Seconds’ for sale

One of the 11 screen-used Eleanor Mustangs from the 2000 film Gone in 60 Seconds specifically the main Dream Car is scheduled to cross the auction block early January, and will likely clear US$1 million.The car was built for the movie by none other than Chip Foose, and it has just about every now-typical resto-mod touch on it, but its this car that has the distinction of being the inspiration for many of those tweak ubiquitous in hot rods now.Being the hero car or Dream Car of the 11, theres nothing fake about this Shelby-inspired 1967 Ford Mustang every component on it works, even the NOS system. This isnt some shell of a car used to model some CGI around, its a real, driveable hot rod.The Dream Car was used for exterior and interior shots, as well as chase scenes through the shipyard, city and along the Los Angeles River. Its the vehicle that likely would have been on-screen the longest. Not all of the 10 or 11 other vehicles used in filming had such cushy roles, or made it out in one piece.The last time this Mustang sold was at Mecum Auctions in Indianapolis, for US$1,000,000 coincidentally the budget of the original 1974 version of the film.The winner of this upcoming auction, held by Mecum in Kissimmee, Florida at the beginning of January 2020, can pretend to be Nicolas Cage, like all the other guys whove resto-modded their vehicles to look just like this one! Except now at car shows, youll have to explain this is one of the originals actually used by Disney to ruin H. B. Halickis legacy.(Okay, yes, were fans of the 74 film, you caught us.)Dont forget the real Eleanor from the old movie is a 1971 Mustang with a 1973 Mustang grille, painted with school-bus-yellow
Origin: Original ‘Eleanor’ Mustang from newer ‘Gone in 60 Seconds’ for sale

New De Tomaso to be Ford-powered like original — though now with 700 hp

The De Tomaso P72 is a revival of old-school muscle mixed with a modern take on 1960s Le Mans racers, and were finally learning what powers the beast a throwback engine in and of itself.Yes, the supercar is getting a Coyote V8, built in collaboration with Roush performance. The motor is sourced from Ford, just as the original P70s engine was, except this time its been fitted with a supercharger to bring it up to a ridiculous 700 horsepower and 608 lb.-ft. of torque.Connected to a six-speed manual transmission, the P72 promises to offer a fully old-school experience.While 700 horsepower doesnt seem like a lot today in a world of 1,000-plus-horsepower monsters the folks at De Tomaso say they kept the numbers there on purpose. According to De Tomasos general manager, Ryan Berris, the choice to give the car a modest amount of horsepower and a manual transmission was to spite the dearth of hypercars in todays world.In our opinion, the market is now over-saturated with commercially driven limited-edition models primarily marketed on performance metrics, he says. We have grown tired of this notion and thus took a contrarian approach with the P72.The added benefit of ignoring the chase for speed and horsepower means that De Tomaso has had time to focus on the driving experience. The engine will have a smooth torque curve and has a specially tuned exhaust to make it sound like 60s race car while drowning out the modern sound of the supercharger.The price of the P72 is expected to be around US$850,000, and only 72 of them will be
Origin: New De Tomaso to be Ford-powered like original — though now with 700 hp

2017 Ford GT sells at auction for triple its original price

A 2017 Ford GT 66 Heritage edition just crossed the block at Barrett-Jackson Las Vegas for US$1.54 million, more than three times its original sale price of US$450,000.The GT only had 30 miles (50 km) on the odometer, which is even less than a previously pristine example that sold at Bonhams during Monterey Car Week. The Bonhams car had 120 miles (193 km) on the odo, and sold for US$1.05 million.A third GT recently sold by RM Sothebys in Monterey fetched US$1.24 million; it had 400 miles (643 km) on the clock, but was painted in a standard shade of orange.The contract that buyers of the incredible Ford supercar originally signed barred them from reselling the vehicle for two years. Fords original plan was to deliver the vehicles only to customers who would actually want to get out and use the highly capable car on the track, or at least show it off. Instead, it seems like the two-year no-sale period just served to add value to the vehicles, with those who invested waiting until auction day to make a big profit.John Cena infamously tried to sell his blue GT well before the two-year clause in his contract had come up, and ended up getting in serious trouble. After making its way through various auctions, the highest price it ever sold for was US$1.4 million.The highest price ever paid for a GT so far was US$2.5 million, as part of a charity auction put on by Ford before the official two-year no-sale restriction was lifted. That car was also a Heritage Edition, though it was different from a 66 Heritage
Origin: 2017 Ford GT sells at auction for triple its original price

Long-lost Bentley recreated by original coachbuilder Mulliner

A very special Bentley considered the missing link between the 4.25-Litre and R Type Continental has been recreated from scratch by its original coachbuilder.Mulliner, the original builder, envisioned this beautiful teardrop bodywork wrapped around a 1939 Corniche, intended to be a high-performance version of the Bentley MkV.It was originally commissioned by Greek racer Andr Embiricos, who specified a sporting body on a 4.25-litre chassis.The car was dealt a bad hand to begin with: not long after delivery, it was so badly damaged in a traffic accident the car had to be sent back to the Bentley factory in Derby. There it was destroyed in a bombing raid at the start of the Second World War.In 2001 however, volunteers of the W.O. Bentley Memorial Foundation and the Sir Henry Royce Memorial Foundation started a project to make the car anew, though both eventually agreed to bring it back to Bentley itself to rebuild it. Chief exec Adrian Hallmark then asked Mulliner to finish the project in 2019, for Bentleys 100th anniversary. Using techniques borrowed from the 1930s, Mulliner reproduced the body panels by hand even the process of choosing the correct shade of Imperial Maroon and Heather Grey took several hours. Some of the more difficult parts, such as the grille, required the use of modern CAD design. The tech let Mulliner build models of the piece, and then hand-form the metal around those models over a period of three months. Inside, the seats were recovered using period-correct Connolly Vaumol hide, and the same West of England cloth and carpet, stowed away for years at the factory, that the car would have worn new. A special steam booth had to be developed to recreate the curved wood around the window surrounds.Salon Priv in September will be the lucky host for the reveal of the recreated Bentley Corniche, and then it will join the companys heritage
Origin: Long-lost Bentley recreated by original coachbuilder Mulliner

Land Rover Discovery: driving the original 30 years on

Developing new cars on the kind of budget that a German company would spend on a new dashboard has long been a speciality of the British motor industry. Many of these machines bomb, usually brought down by underfunded development programmes guaranteed to produce roulette wheel reliability, but some succeed despite such saddlings. One of the more famous is the Land Rover Discovery, which began life in 1989 as a reclothed, cost-reduced Range Rover designed to sit between the ageing Defender and a Range Rover enjoying ever more success as it was pushed upmarket.  You didn’t need to look underneath the Discovery to see the similarities with the Range Rover. It shared the same windscreen and distinctively slim A-pillars, the same front door glass and much of its inner structure. But to avoid producing a vehicle of almost identical silhouette, the Discovery’s designers added a stepped roof – the raised rear section carrying slender lengths of glazing angled towards the sky.  The tailgate was one piece and side-hinged rather than being split like the Range Rover’s, and most striking of all once you’d climbed inside was an unusual interior finished entirely in shades of pale blue.  This was the work of Conran Design, which was asked to develop an interior suitable for a vehicle bought as a lifestyle accessory. Slender storage racks were mounted above the windscreen, stretchable overhead nets provided carriers for pith helmets and water bottles, and a massive panic handle confronted the front seat passenger.  Even before you’d turned the key, it felt like you were having an adventure. There was even a small lifestyle accessory stowed within this big, four-wheeled lifestyle accessory – a detachable carry-bag made from the seat upholstery clipping to the Discovery’s centre console. The Sonar Blue interior and an impractical three-door body only lightly limited the 1989 Discovery’s success, Land Rover’s latest being decidedly more glamorous than the Shogun and Trooper offered by Mitsubishi and Isuzu. It was better off road than either of these nevertheless accomplished Japanese competitors too. The engine choice was either Land Rover’s new direct-injection 200Tdi diesel or the 3.5-litre Rover V8 that had started life 28 years earlier as a General Motors Buick engine in the US. Most buyers chose the diesel: its modest 111bhp was buttressed by a more promising 195lb ft of torque, all of this appearing at a helpfully low 1800rpm. And once you get over the mild shock of hearing what sounds like a truck engine setting Land Rover’s very first production Discovery all aquiver, it’s this stout pulling power that draws you along in pleasingly languid style. You have to work at it – the 200Tdi’s torque peak being more pointy than flat – but once momentum is gathered, the Discovery bowls and rolls along with comfortable authority.  The roll comes when you shuffle the wheel of a low-geared steering system that’s remarkably cumbersome at manoeuvring speeds, but quickens at speed, when big movements produce big roll. But it doesn’t take long to compensate for this, nor the fact that you must stir the clunkily glutinous gearlever repeatedly to maintain a pace in cut-and-thrust conditions. None of which matters after a while: the airiness of this Disco, the way you look down from it towards the road below, its lightly heaving gait and the light snortings of its 2.5 four-pot diesel prove strangely restful. And no other car, now or then, provides the same in-cabin ambience of an original Discovery.  It’s not just the Sonar Blue hues either – it’s the airiness of the vast cabin, the feeling that you’re viewing the proceedings from a gallery and the robustly wrought details (that grab handle and the low-range gearlever knob among them), all contriving to make it feel adventurously different.  Such impressions are as keenly felt in the rear. The sheer height of the rear compartment, the surface area of glass and the comfortable commodious rear bench make this a great machine for the long distances that it conjures in your mind’s eye. This was a cost-compromised car – any 1980s Rover nerd (who, me?) is able to expose the origins of its door handles, instruments, switchgear and tail-lights (Maestro van for the last, if you must know) – but it was one capable of taking its buyers, and makers, towards excitingly fresh
Origin: Land Rover Discovery: driving the original 30 years on

Four rare — and original — Shelby Cobras heading to auction next month

1967 Shelby Cobra 427 S/C RoadsterHandout / Mecum Mecum will auction off four rare (and original) Shelby Cobras next month from the estate of late car collector Steven Juliano. Per MotorAuthority, the snakes up for auction will be a 1967 427 S/C Roadster and a 1966 427 Roadster, plus a 1965 289 Dragonsnake and a 1964 289 Roadster. The ’67 S/C ticks all of the boxes of what you’d expect the classic Cobra to be, fitted with the outrageous 427 cubic-inch Ford V8. Side pipes, hood scoop, roll hoop, and wide hips are all present. On top of that, it’s an S/C model, short for Semi-Competition. Only 31 of these vehicles were converted from race cars into street spec, making them an extremely rare beast — especially this one, with only 10,760 miles on the clock. The second car is a 1966 model-year Cobra. It’s also fitted with a 427, but lacking the side pipes, hood scoop, and roll hoop — all of which makes it almost rarer and more unique than the S/C. It traded hands in the U.S. a few times before heading to Japan in 1987, where it was kept in perfect shape until 2010, when Juliano acquired it. The oldest Cobra here is a 1964 Factory Stage III outfitted with a 289 cubic-inch V8. This race-spec snake is the only one in the world built for street use, and was originally finished in Princess Blue before the first owner sent it back to the factory to be repainted in Ford Rangoon Red. It is considered to be one of the most highly optioned Cobras of its day. The last Cobra is a real doozy, a 1965 Dragonsnake, originally built by Shelby for drag racing and one of only six to have that distinction. It was specially ordered in yellow by brothers Don and Mike Reimer to match their Thunderbird tow vehicle. This one is also a Factory Stage 3 car. Each Cobra is estimated to sell around the US$2 million mark. The auction will take place between May 14 and 19 in Indianapolis, Indiana. Take Our
Origin: Four rare — and original — Shelby Cobras heading to auction next month