MYVR
you Just hate American vehicles, it’s ok.
No. I have no brand preference- just a firmer grasp of reality than you do, apparently.
In fact, I just purchased an American vehicle. It has a turbocharged engine, a 7-speed transmission, fully-independent suspension, 20" Michelins, aluminum and composite body, and originally cost $250,000 when it was new. I purchased it used. It's a one-owner vehicle, with only about 3,000 miles on it, is in great shape, and I feel like I got a good deal on it.
No. Carroll Shelby WAS a con artist- he's dead now. Shelby's most famous scams are the "Shelby Cobra" and the "Ford GT40".
The "Shelby Cobra" was actually a British AC Ace. AC had lost their engine supplier (Bristol), and Shelby conned AC into modifying an Ace to accept an American V8 engine and giving it to him, under the pretext of Shelby "helping" to save their business, claiming to have found them a new engine supplier (another lie). Once he had the free car, he then tried to con Chevrolet out of a free engine to put in it, but they told him to go pound sand. Shelby was then able to con Ford into giving him a free engine, which Shelby then installed into the free car, and renamed it the "Shelby Cobra". He didn't "engineer" ANYTHING.
The "Ford GT40" was in reality a British Lola Mk6- we've already covered that.
Then there were the mid-'60s Cobra frames, that Shelby claimed to have "found" in his warehouse. He fraudulently filed for lost titles in California, and tried to sell Cobras for $500,000 each. That scam fell apart when somebody found out what shop had built the frames for Shelby after 1990. From Wikipedia:
"In 1993, the
Los Angeles Times exposed a Carroll Shelby scheme
[22] to counterfeit his own cars. With the price of an original 427 c.i. Cobra skyrocketing, Shelby had, by his own written declaration executed under penalty of
perjury, caused the
California Department of Motor Vehicles (the government agency responsible for titling vehicles and issuing operator permits) to issue forty-three "Duplicate Titles" for vehicles that did not officially exist in company records. A letter from
AC Cars confirmed the fact that the chassis numbers Shelby had obtained titles for were never manufactured, at least not by AC Cars. Only fifty-five 427 c.i. Cobras had been originally produced out of a block of serial numbers reserved for 100 vehicles. Shelby had taken advantage of a loophole in the California system that allowed one to obtain a duplicate title for a vehicle with only a written declaration, without the
vehicle identification number appearing in the DMV's database or the
declarant ever presenting an actual vehicle for inspection.
[23] Shelby admitted that the chassis had been manufactured in 1991 and '92 by McCluskey Ltd, an engineering firm in Torrance, California, and were not original AC chassis,
[23]"
And finally, the "Eleanor" Mustaing fiasco, which involved stolen cars, fake VIN numbers, cars made out of two cars welded together, 50 POUNDS of Bondo in each car, convicted felons doing all of this, and a bunch of victims who had put down massive deposits on cars that were never built. In the end, they were shuffling the cars from place to place to try to keep from getting caught by the police with them, but that scam fell apart too.
Shelby was a piece of doo-doo.
No. Ford was founded in America, but it has been a multinational company for many decades. During World War II, Ford of Germany supplied Hitler's Nazi party with military vehicles and even V-2 rocket engines.
en.wikipedia.org
No. I never said that.
But you can't polish a turd.