(from Ford Press Release)
The 1960s were the heyday of the truly cool American car; a time when
slabs of sheet metal, chrome and the Rat Pack defined cool. Those days
have given way to multi-purpose vehicles, pop-idols and plastic. But,
Ford is signaling a renaissance in the classic American sedan with the
new Ford 427 concept introduced at the North American International Auto
Show.
The Ford 427 concept is a showpiece of the possible design direction for
a future lineup of Ford cars. It debuts at the 2003 North American
International Auto Show as part of Ford’s biggest-ever wave of new
product and concept introductions, nine of which are cars.
The 427 concept is a modern, all-American sedan inspired by the
exuberance of the company’s landmark sedans of the 1960s, replete with
the uncompromising, 590-horsepower engine that inspired its name.
“This is a car that you take home, park in your driveway, sit back and
let your neighbor eat his heart out,” said J Mays, Ford Motor Company
vice president, Design. “The 427 concept is unmistakably Ford and 100
percent American. It demonstrates that a sedan from a U.S. manufacturer
can once again be exciting, sexy, sophisticated and powerful.”
Menacingly blunt in its all-black silhouette with glints of chrome and
billet aluminum, the 427 concept is dark and mysterious, day or night.
Striking an almost sinister pose wherever goes, the car seems like it
was designed for film noir.
“It’s the kind of car that, when you drive it, makes you look like
you’re doing something wrong,” Mays said.
To create the 427 concept, Ford designers went back to the blue oval
sedans that defined American luxury and performance in the 1960s. They
constructed a wish list of elements they felt would be needed to create
a modern-day interpretation of the large, family sedan and then
incorporated those into a car that would unmistakably be a Ford.
The Ford 427 concept proportions are long, low-slung and wide. The hood,
roof and rear deck surfaces are purposefully taut with deliberate
graceful transitions. The car’s profile can be described in a single
line, flowing crisply through the front fenders and over the roofline
before returning on itself in an accelerating sweep into the rocker.
This graphical simplicity is emphasized by the use of brushed billet
trim to highlight the window line and rocker.
The car’s overall profile is clean, smooth and unfettered by extraneous
detail. The front fascia is vertical and linear with a powerful, thick
bent bar grille that was inspired by the mid-sixties Galaxie lineup. The
front headlamps and rear taillamps are vertical, drawing from the same
era but adding modern rounded square cues.
The wheels feature an iconic five-spoke wedge-shaped configuration
wrapped with 19-inch rubber. The nomenclature is a modern rendition of
the ‘427’ logo that saw use on the Galaxie 500 XL 427. When all of these
elements are combined, they cast a silhouette that is unquestionably
Ford and unabashedly American.
Even the license plate, with “DET PWR” machined into billet aluminum,
articulates the throbbing, made-in-Detroit presence within the 427
Concept.
Where the Ford 427 concept exterior design is all-American, the interior
is fully modern. Contemporary exterior themes of the muscular bent
grille, the squared vertical headlamps and clean American profile are
carried over to the interior in an uncompromising fashion. There is no
mistaking that the exterior and interior of the 427 are in complete
alignment with the car’s mission and mystery.
The sedan’s striking black interior is tightly wrapped in sophisticated
black handcrafted leather with cornmeal stitching. These long, flowing,
stitched lines are consistent with the soft and sexy lines of the 427
concept’s exterior silhouette. The detailed stitching has no harsh
corners and describes the interior in a single fluid graphic.
Recessed brushed billet trim panels near the A-pillars create the visual
effect of the door as a solid, cohesive part of the car. The doors are
wrapped in leather and feature offset armrests. They include additional
brushed billet trim and door handles, building on the structural visual
experience. The seats have racing inspired contours with brushed
aluminum seat backs and bases. They also add to the structural effect,
making it appear as if long pieces of soft leather have grown out of
steel bases.
The steering wheel carries the same leather stitching, with a tight
sectional pattern inspired by the angular waterfall bends in the front
grille. Visible through the steering wheel is an instrument cluster with
a rounded square speedometer and tachometer that are direct descendants
of the front and rear lamps. These gauges are analog with bold black
numbers bathed in a fiery red glow. The instrument panel also employs
billet end-caps that create the illusion that the panel has a core of
solid steel. The rearview mirror is trimmed in similar fashion.
The center console runs the entire length of the interior, conveying the
sense that the car has the strength and structure to handle large,
potent powerplant. It also creates a sensation that its four-passenger
bucket seats form individual roomy fighter jet cockpits. The console
houses the six-speed shifter with a modern authoritative brushed billet
base capped off with a soft leather shift knob and integrated aluminum
emergency brake. Its lower portion adjacent to the floor pan is trimmed
in billet and accents the angular slotted billet pedals. Finally, the
carpet is all black with chrome checkered flag buttons fastening it in
place.
“From the first time we drew it up, we knew we had to do a powerplant
that lived up to the image of this sinister sedan,” says Chris Theodore,
Ford Motor Company vice president, North America Product Development.
“Putting a 590-horsepower 427 in this car is like putting a Navy Seal in
an Armani suit.”
The modern version of the Ford 427 concept’s power plant started off as
a cloak and dagger “skunk works” project commissioned by Theodore, who
wanted to know if it was feasible to craft an all-new, lightweight 427
cubic inch (7.0-liter) engine out of Ford’s highly flexible modular V-8
engine family. Ford’s Powertrain Research & Development answered the
call and began working under the radar screen on a limited budget. The
result shocked everyone.
The 427 engine produces a tremendous 590 horsepower at 6,500 rpm and 509
foot-pounds of torque at 5500 rpm. Remarkably, the engine is almost 70
pounds lighter than the 5.4-liter 32-valve Cobra R engine from the Ford
Mustang. The 427 achieves this astonishing power-to-weight ratio through
the following attributes:
--Siamese bore aluminum V-10 engine block based on Ford’s modular V-8
DOHC engines
--Ford-pioneered metal spray process to maximize the bore at 95mm
--Newly designed lightweight forged aluminum pistons with a very short
compression height
--Aluminum cylinder head derived from the SVT Cobra R Mustang
--New billet H-beam connecting rods and billet steel common pin
crankshaft for increased strength without the need for a balance shaft
--Lightweight hollow stem valves
The engine technologies were developed in Ford facilities between
Detroit and Dearborn. So, it was only logical to carve the “Powered By
Ford” and “V-10” logo with a Redline Red finish on the billet cam
covers. Above that, the engineers bolted a massive aluminum strut tower
inspired from the grille. As a final touch, they added lightning bolt
caps along the inner fender walls.