Sports Car Market Magazine The Complete Insider's Guide To Collecting
![]()
| |

From
Grand Classics to Twin Stripes of Smoking
Rubber
1965 Shelby GT
350 Chassis number:
SFM5SW226
he
marriage between Carroll Shelby and the Ford Motor Company began in
early 1965 when Ford wanted to take a shot at the performance market
dominated by GM’s Corvette. Unveiled by Shelby on January 27, 1965,
the modified Mustang fastback had a few subtle exterior changes: a
fiberglass hood with functional scoop, a clean-looking grille and a
tri-colored running horse on the driver’s side of the grille. All
Shelbys in 1965 were Wimbledon White, with a blue GT 350 side stripe
below the door. Le Mans stripes running down the center of the body
were available as a dealer option. The interior was available in
black only and featured a roll bar and a flat-rimmed, three-spoke
wooden steering wheel. A special instrument panel in the center of
the dash held a large oil-pressure gauge and tachometer. The GT 350
also featured competition seat belts. 
A special aluminum intake
manifold increased the solid-lifter, Hi-Po 289’s horsepower from 271
to 306. Exhaust from the Tri-Y headers exited in front of the rear
wheels. All ’65 Shelbys had Borg-Warner T-10 four-speeds with 9"
Detroit “No-Spin” differentials. Extensive suspension work was a GT
350 hallmark, with a large front stabilizer bar, special steering
box, lowered front lower A-frames, Koni shocks and traction bars.
The front section was stiffened considerably with an export brace
and a Monte Carlo bar. The battery was relocated to the trunk for
improved weight distribution on the first 300
cars.
The GT 350 pictured has all
matching numbers, with history documented in the Shelby American
World Registry. It has undergone an extremely thorough nut-and-bolt
restoration by one of the top Shelby restoration shops in the
country. It recently finished second in the Shelby Nationals and
sports an R-type racing front air dam. (Original chrome bumpers are
included in the sale.)
More
desirable than the considerably more common 1966 models, this
pristine ’65 Shelby GT 350 represents the best of American muscle
car engineering at the time.
The
car described here sold for a high bid of $68,200, including
commission, at the RM Classic Car Auction held in Amelia Island,
Florida, March 11, 2000.
Under the
banner of “Total Performance,” Ford was hell-bent to become the
performance car manufacturer in 1965. General Motors had (again)
withdrawn their official support of motor racing, netting the 427
Galaxie forty-eight wins in NASCAR competition that year. Even the
mom-and-pop Fairlane was available with a Hi-Po 289, but it was the
Mustang that shook up the competition in the showrooms and the race
track with over 500,000 cars sold that year. Only 35% of the
Mustangs built had a six-cylinder engine. Clearly, performance was
the name of the game and Ford upped the ante with the group of
fastbacks shipped to Shelby for “treatment.” Priced at almost $2,000
more than a box-stock Mustang 2+2, the GT 350 wasn’t a cheap pony,
but even at $500 more than a ’65 Corvette (with fuel injection),
Ford easily sold all the cars built, with a view of bigger
production numbers in 1966.
It is
interesting that Ford did not seek out homologation or SCCA approval
for the coupe or fastback in ’65. A clever move, allowing Shelby to
submit the cars in GT 350 guise as production sports cars and not
sedans. This allowed the Shelbys to have a go at the “B Production”
Corvettes, something they couldn’t have done as sedans. Results?
Three B Production championships on the track and buyers who were
willing to spend more than the price of a ’65 Corvette fuelie just
to have a replica of Shelby’s white racer.
Today, this is still true with
top-notch, restored cars valued at $65,000, tidy, well- preserved
cars at $55,000 and tired street cars at $40-45,000. This car,
described by the SCM auction reporter as condition 1, would be hard
to duplicate with the scarcity of GT 350s currently on the market.
Its second place at the Shelby Nationals shows that this car passed
the scrutiny of the SAAC judges as genuine and proper. This GT 350
was a fair deal, and a good investment, at the purchase price of
$68,200.—Michael Duffey
(Photo and
description courtesy of the auction company.)
| Years
produced |
1965-1970 |
| Number
produced |
562 (1965
models) |
| Original list
price |
$4,547 |
| SCM Price
Guide |
45,000 -
60,000 |
| Chassis # |
Plate on inner left
front fender |
| Engine # |
Left front engine
block, below ignition coil |
| Tune-up |
$250 |
| Distributor
cap |
$14 |
| Club |
SAAC, Box 788, Sharon,
CT 06069; saac@li.com |
| Web site |
www.saac.com |
| Alternatives |
Chevrolet Corvette
Z06,
lightweight Jaguar XKE
| |
|