The Middle Ages were a trip. Much of the world was advancing culturally, and Europe was grappling with changes in climate, the collapse of the dominant empire, and the rise of Christianity. However weird Europe was at this point in history, Medieval Christianity was its own bizarre experiment highlighted (lowlighted?) by the Crusades. Essentially, the Pope and a bunch of his best buds decided that it was important to reclaim the Holy Lands. It was brutal and violent and we are, to some extent, still living with the repercussions. But the stuff! So much stuff! What’s the point of crossing so much of the known world, slowly, and watching your buddies die of completely treatable infections from minor wounds without bringing back stuff? A lot of it. During that time, Europe’s coffers filled with treasure, and the coolest souvenirs became religious relics — especially anything you could claim was connected to the original church. You put these relics in a reliquary and then put the reliquary in a church. At this point there are enough “pieces of the true cross” in Europe’s churches to build a freakin’ ark. There’s a nice wrap up here of the strangest ones and, yes, this list includes “the holy prepuce” aka the circumcised foreskin of the little baby Jesus.

I bring all this up, because what Ford has created in the final final edition 2022 Ford GT LM is a legit reliquary made of a ground down crankshaft. I’ll let them explain it:

The result: the team located the third-place 2016 Ford GT (No. 69) racecar’s engine that was disassembled and shelved after the race, ground down the crankshaft into a powder, and developed a unique bespoke alloy used to 3D print the instrument panel badge for each of the 20 special-edition supercars. That’s super weird. I like it, but it’s weird. Here’s what that engine looks like when it’s not ground down into parts. Maybe you can glimpse the crankshaft that ended up in the race car? It’s probably not possible to know, but it’s as close as look as you’re likely to get:

The 3.5-liter EcoBoost V6 was built by Roush Yates, who also makes racing engines for NASCAR. One of the big bragging points at the time for Ford was that this engine was similar to what you’d fine in a Ford GT and it’s true that the blocks came from Ford’s Lima, Ohio plant the heads from the company’s engine plant in Cleveland.

Of course, the Ford GT LM actually has more power from its twin-turbo EcoBoost V6, putting out 660 horsepower. These 20 cars have some other important bits, including a unique 3D titanium-printed dual-exhaust, a 3D-printed GT LM badge, and an interior that can be done up in red or blue to match the race car’s livery. Otherwise, it’s basically a Ford GT, if there’s such a thing as a basic Ford GT.

No word on what one of these LM Edition cars costs, but expect it to be a lot and expect it to be a lot less than what someone is going to pay for it at auction in five years. All images via Ford. In our social media age, I get it – this is more about owning something most others can’t have (might be a positional good) than owning something with a racing pedigree. In fact, I have a hard time imagining any of these will ever be raced in any form by their owners. I hope I’m wrong. Also, race on Sunday, sell on Monday was likely also a factor.

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