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Ford GT designer Moray Callum is selling his 2017 model

We suspect Moray Callum would be a shoo-in when Ford began taking applications from enthusiasts who wanted to buy a GT. He’s the vice president from the company’s design department, and that he led they that designed the supercar. Stylists often hang on to the projects they worked on, but Callum made a decision to sell his 2021 GT.
Listed by California-based dealer Canepa, Callum’s GT is completed in Liquid Red (he notably didn't order racing stripes) with a Re-Entry interior, which adds white leather accents for an otherwise black interior. It had been built in February 2021, along with a plaque on the dashboard identifies it as the sixth car made that year, so it’s an early model.
Moray made no modifications to his GT — you didn’t think he’d add an aftermarket wing and gold 23-inch wheels to it, have you? In fact, he hardly drove it. Its odometer shows 204 miles, and it’s advertised as being in like-new condition. It’s run by a twin-turbocharged, 3.5-liter EcoBoost V6 that makes 657 horsepower and 550 pound-feet of torque. Mid-mounted, it spins the rear wheels using a seven-speed dual-clutch automatic transmission.
Finding a second hand GT used to be difficult because Ford enforced (or, attempted to enforce) a two-year resale ban, but second-hand examples are starting to look at big-name auctions all over the world. Canepa listed the GT with no price, so you’ll need to reach out to the dealer to discover what to write on the check, but don’t expect to score the vehicle for cheap. French racing driver Sébastien Bourdais (among the pilots who drove the winning GT within the 2021 24 Hours of Le Mans) sold his 270-mile 2021 GT Competition Series for $1 million earlier in 2021. Another 2021 example ordered using the ’66 Heritage Edition package traded hands for $1.54 million in late 2021.
Ford stopped racing the GT in 2021, but production of the street car continues. 2021 brought a Heritage Edition model inspired by the 1966 Twenty four hours of Daytona-winning GT40 driven by Ken Miles and Lloyd Ruby.