When Carroll Shelby unveiled the GT350 to the press in early 1965, the
reaction was almost universally rapturous. Here, finally, was the very
car a performance Mustang should have been all along. The production
GT350 was fast, loud and exhilarating to drive, a uniquely brawny
American GT that was a match for almost any other muscle machine on the
road. But the production GT350 was in reality a compromise, a streetable
half-step toward the car Shelby actually planned to race – the GT350R,
the “R” signifying its racing specification.
Because Shelby had already configured the production GT350 with the suspension, steering and brakes necessary to make it perfectly suitable for the toughest SCCA competition, he had a built-in advantage when it came to preparing the R-model’s K-code 289 powerplant for its mission. R-model engines were built to order, using blueprinting, heads ported and polished by Valley Head Service, Tri-Y headers by Cyclone, a center-pivot-float Holley 715 CFM carburetor on a Cobra intake and flow-through side-exit exhaust.
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