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![A 2019 Ford GT Heritage Edition supercar (left) and a 2006 Ford GT Heritage Edition supercar (right).](https://robbreport.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/01/1-w-RM6_7225-copy-1.jpg?w=1000)
Ryan Merrill, courtesy of Broad Arrow Auctions.
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Image Credit: Ryan Merrill, courtesy of Broad Arrow Auctions The 2006 Ford GT Heritage Edition being offered through Broad Arrow Actions in March.
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Image Credit: Ryan Merrill, courtesy of Broad Arrow Auctions The cockpit of the 2006 Ford GT provides an interesting analog contrast to the supercars of today.
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Image Credit: Ryan Merrill, courtesy of Broad Arrow Auctions This 2006 Ford GT’s rear-strut tower brace is signed by the model’s designer, Camilo Pardo.
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Image Credit: Ryan Merrill, courtesy of Broad Arrow Auctions The Ford GT model that was built in 2005 and 2006 made no pretense of being a race car, but rather a powerful two-seater in the spirit of the best European supercars of its decade.
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Image Credit: Ryan Merrill, courtesy of Broad Arrow Auctions Also set to cross the Broad Arrow auction block, this 2019 Ford GT Heritage Edition has a top speed of 216 mph.
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Image Credit: Ryan Merrill, courtesy of Broad Arrow Auctions While certainly street legal, Ford’s second iteration of its GT supercar, with model years from 2017 through 2023, is an unapologetically brutal and purpose-built machine.
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Image Credit: Ryan Merrill, courtesy of Broad Arrow Auctions The 2019 Ford GT’s twin-turbo EcoBoost V-6 engine makes 647 hp.
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Image Credit: Ryan Merrill, courtesy of Broad Arrow Auctions At the time of cataloging this car, it had only 58 miles on the digital odometer.