Ook beschikbaar in het Nederlands
by Ton Roks:
The coolest Mustang of them all is the Shelby GT500 Eleanor,
that featured spectaculair in Gone in Sixty Seconds. A lot
of Americans fel in love with this machine like Nicolas Cage
in the movie and had a Mustang transformed into an Eleanor.
Now there is one in Holland.
IT ALL STARTED with the poster.
On the wall at graphic designer Frans' house in North Holland.
A movieposter of Gone in Sixty Seconds, with Eleanor lively
in picture and not Angelina Jolie, a correct choice. Frans
had nothing with Mustangs, but in the years this poster was
on the wall a passion grew that was not to be ignored. And
also his wife Yvonne slowely got the Eleanor-virus.
NEVER UNDERESTIMATE the pictures that impressed you at youth,
these can nest in your subconsciousness and develope into
a passion. So it seems to be with Frans. Here's why: the first
version of Gone in Sixty Seconds was made in 1973, and Frans
watched that a couple of times. And also in this a Mustang
played an important role, a Mach 1. That film was made by
Toby Hálicki, who not only wrote the script, but also
directed it and played a leading role. The man also took care
of the stunts. The movie was about a gang that had to steel
48 vehicles for a "customer". All the cars had been
given girlsnames to misled earsdroppers. The Mustang was listed
under the name of Eleanor. The film finishes with one of the
longest and most spectacular pursuits ever filmed, where Eleanor
makes a jump of dozens of meters. It took more than seven
months to get that part of the movie well on the celluloid
and it seems 93 cars were driven to scrap. A beautiful score
for a regisseur/actor who started his carreer as a junkman.
In spite of the fact that there where some errors in the chronology
- just like in Bullit - and in spite of initially bad criticisms,
the film was a success. It's been brought out on DVD again.
IT DIDN'T ENDED well with Toby. At the making of a continuation
movie, Gone in Sixty Seconds II - The Slicer, he planned a
scene in which a watertower should fall. To make this happen
at the correct moment, one of the steel legs on which the
water tank stood was cut. Unfortunately the watertower collapsed
to soon and fell exactly on... Toby Halicki. A continuation
has come eventual, at least a remake, under control of Jerry
Bruckheimer (also responsible for top gun) and with Nicolas
Cage, Angelina Jolie and of course a Mustang in the lead.
This time not a Mach 1, but an older Shelby GT500 (1967).
Especially for this film Cinema Vehicle Services developed
a bodykit to give the car enough attitude to put it above
the Porsches, Ferrari's and Lamborghini's. This adjusted Eleanor
had such an impact that it has been reconstructed several
times in the U.S. Not on the basis of an original GT500 (that
would be a sin, because those are collectors items), but with
an ordinary Mustang as a donor. A Mustangdealer in Texas has
made it into a business. He took over the prints from Cinema
Vehicle Services and started to make the bodykit in serial.
Under the blessing of Carroll Shelby, the dealer will even
(in association with cobra builder Unique performance) produce
a serie of 400 ready-to-rumble Eleanors.
FRANS WAS ONE of the first to visit the remake of Gone in
Sixty Seconds and after several years of staring at the poster
he made up his mind. He is a car-enthusiast (drove a Porsche
928, Nissan 200SX and Mitsubishi 3000 GT VR4) and decided
to put everything aside for his very own Eleanor. I sold my
Mitsubishi, from then bicycled to the office and searched
the internet for months. In November 2004 I found a real nice
Eleanor on Ebay. A really serious candidate. The owner even
had a website on which i could see how the car was developed
in his task. After looking at the more than hundred pictures
i was convinced, this one i had to have. I immediately pressed
the Buy It Now button. Not a moment to soon so it appeared,
because there were already far-reaching negotiations with
someone in New York. The car was on Ebay for only eleven hours.
On February 14 2005 the Mustang was delivered at Frans' home
in a container. He removed the sealing and there she was:
Eleanor. "without a scratch, a little dusty, but even
more beautiful than in the movie", said Frans. On April
12 the GT500 was approved by the Dutch RDW and with that the
first Eleanor in Holland was street-legal.
TIME FOR A RIDE with the beast, which looks mighty impressive
due to the big bult on the hood, under which is a Holley-carburator
as large as a camping cooker. This warrior-appearance is also
being contributed by the new frontbumper, with an extra grille
and two modern, small lights. Visual appearances are reinforced
by the two extra lamps in the nose, the sideskirts, the sidepipes
and the spoiler on the reardeck, all elements of the Eleanor
bodykit. Under the hood there's not the 428 V8 that belonged
to the original GT500, but a 351 Cleveland, with which the
355 HP which where initially provided by the GT500 effortlessly
is exceeded. At present a 500 HP should be at hand, but Frans
want's to install NOS, so that he can incidentally call an
explosion of 800 HP. In the movie Eleanor also got NOS, but
not for real. It's only for appearances. The car has got,
however, a push button on the acceleration poke with the text
Go-Baby-Go to activate the NOS. I already got that one, the
rest is approaching. At the moviecar the sidepipes too where
only for appearances, at my Eleanor they are however the real
thing. They make a serious sound too. Not warmly and dark
brown, but hard and aggressive, like a NASCAR. It makes the
hairs in the back of your neck spontaniously jump into line,
very beautiful therefore. Although it could be a little tireding
at the long run, unless you really love the sound of anti-aircraft
guns.
THE PREVIOUS OWNER used its Eleanor for drag-events. Thats
been proven by the clutch, the heaviest I have ever felt since
the Lamborghini LM002. Extra difficulty is that it seizes
all the way at the top, as a result of which you almost must
lift your foot of the floor at driving away. Its difficult
to dose so i it took me a couple of kilometres to drive it
fluently. The interieur is standard Mustang, with some additives.
Such as an enormous tachmeter on the steeringcolumn and two
red buttons on the middleconsole: to awake (still to assemble)
the NOS and to activate an extra fuelpump. Those are, as it
happens, very necessary to obtain the maximum from the NOS.
The steering is a little vage. That is not typical Mustang,
but typical for an American classic with this kind of steering.
I'm about to change that too; says Frans. There is a lot of
stuff out there for Mustangs and that includes rack and pinion
steering. With that she will handle better and also be more
responsive. She will go from four rotations to three.
IN SPITE OF THE FACT the engine is enormous (approximately
5.8 litre), it's a little cammy, this means: it must make
a certain number of revs to really produce power. Below that,
it somewhat rumbles and it takes some time to get the pace.
But then it goes. I don't want to hurt Frans' love, therefore
no burn-outs and all, but i may put the pedal to the metal
once the machine rolls. The anti-aircraft guns increase in
volume and frequency dramatically as the Mustang goes, with
the intimidating unstoppability of a supertanker. Due to the
hood with the bult and the enormous mouth filled with gauze,
it looks somewhat like a prehistoric monster on the attack.
Eleanor doesn't feel superfast, a feeling which I recognise
for example from a Viper. That's because all the strenght
is at hand constantly, without a sensational peak. As a result,
you don't feel the kick in your back, but the constant, insisting
push of a fictitious giant hand. How fast you're really going,
you can see at the pace the Mustang pulls in the other traffic,
from which more than regular a thumbs up is to be seen. That
kick in the back wiil be there soon, when the NOS is installed.
Then all Frans has to do to get launched with 300 HP extra,
is push the red Go-Baby-Go button on the shifter.
AT THIS MOMENT the transmission is fairly short: at 70 miles
per hour (115 kmph) the tach-counter indicates 2900 revs.
At an engine with this capacity it is possible to lower that.
Frans intends to do that too; instead of a drag-transmission
he wants it a bit more racy. Eleanor brakes considerably well
for a car from the sixties and it's fairly easy to make it
even better. There are still a lot of parts being manufactured
for Mustang motorsports. You will have to apply some muscle
strength to operate the brakes, but this is normal for a potent
American from that time: except for the steering all the controls
feel like driving a truck. As for the behaviour, you don't
want Eleanor to suprise you. As long as you can see the line
it is possible to do some high speed cornering, you will be
aware of the weight in front. But it doesn't understeer. Instinctively
you know that, once this animal unexpected comes in over-
or understeer, you will be out of rescue options at the blink
of an eye. As a result, you will even more respect the guys
who provided the stunt work in Gone in Sixty Seconds. Those
are heroes. Suspension, at present, still allows relatively
much movement of the bodywork. Also that is something Frans
wants to improve, what undoubtedly will lead to more feeling
of control.
HE HAS PLANS STILL MORE: a dashboard and door panels of brushed
aluminium and wheels of a ford GT40, with knock-off spinners
please. "about those wheels, i'm not certain, because
i also like the current Centerlines", so he says, an
opinion i entirely share with Frans. Frans makes use of the
services of Katella Classics (of peter Onken, a man with experience
in dragracing) in Beverwijk, to get Eleanor into a state of
true perfection.
Frans is not planning on keeping Eleanor all to himself in
everyway. He wants to take his beauty to shows and all. He
who wants to see her with his own eyes, put down September
3 and 4 (2005!) in your agenda. Then the first Dutch Shelby
GT500 Eleanor comes to Palace 't Loo in Apeldoorn, as one
of the stars of "AutoVisie 50 years" jubilee-exposition. |