The Ferrari-Killing Ford GT40 Is Getting a Brand New Successor, and It's Coming From a Company You've Probably Never Heard OfThe Ford GT40 earned its legend by humiliating Ferrari on the biggest stage in motorsport, and now a company most American enthusiasts have never heard of says it is ready to build the car's successor. Cape Advanced Vehicles, based in South Africa, is teasing a brand new GT40-inspired machine ahead of a full reveal set for June 18th. For a car this sacred, that is a bold thing to promise.The GT40 was never meant to be subtle. Ford built it with a single goal, to beat Ferrari in endurance racing, and it did exactly that across the globe, most famously taking down the Italians at the 24 Hours of Le Mans. Homologation rules forced Ford to build a small number of road-legal versions, and those cars now trade for millions. That scarcity is the reason a recreation industry exists at all, with outfits like Superformance selling continuation versions to people who will never get near a real one.Who CAV is and why this mattersAdvertisementAdvertisementCape Advanced Vehicles is not a newcomer trying to cash in. The company has been building and selling Ford GT40 recreations for years, modernizing them in different ways along the road. By its own account, CAV has been manufacturing the MkI GT40 for 27 years, across four generations of refinement. That kind of track record changes how you read this teaser. This is not a startup with a rendering and a dream.What CAV is showing now is the result of a two-year effort it calls its "Special Project." For the moment, all anyone has to go on is a single dark teaser image, but the inspiration is impossible to miss. The shape is pure GT40, finished in blue paint with a gold roundel on the door, a nod to the racing livery that made the original famous. Here is the part that matters. CAV is not calling this an exact replica. It is calling it a successor.The detail that changes the storyThat word choice is everything. A recreation copies a legend. A successor claims to move it forward, and that is a far heavier thing to put your name on. CAV says the original GT40 raced in the wild for just six years, and that brief window has fueled more than a quarter century of its own work. The company frames this new model as the logical next step after all that experience.AdvertisementAdvertisementUnderneath the skin, the details are still a mystery. CAV has not laid out a spec sheet, and there is no confirmed engine, power figure, or price yet. The smart money says there is serious power coming, almost certainly from a Ford V8, because that is the formula these cars have always lived by. Anything beyond that is guesswork until the reveal, and CAV is clearly enjoying the suspense.Why enthusiasts should careThe continuation and recreation market sits in a strange spot. Real GT40s are locked away in collections and auction houses, priced so high that driving one is almost beside the point. That leaves a gap for companies willing to build cars that look and feel like the icon without the seven-figure entry fee. CAV has been working that gap for decades, which gives it credibility that a lot of replica builders simply do not have.The risk is in the ambition. Calling something a successor to one of the most beloved racing cars ever built invites a level of scrutiny a straight recreation never would. Enthusiasts are protective of the GT40 for good reason, and they will pick apart every line, every proportion, and every mechanical choice once the full car is out in the open. CAV is betting that 27 years of building these things has earned it the right to take that swing.The bigger pictureAdvertisementAdvertisementThere is something fitting about a company in South Africa carrying this torch. The GT40's story has always been global, born from an American grudge against an Italian giant and settled on French tarmac. A modern successor coming from outside the usual centers of the car world fits that international history rather than fighting it. It also speaks to how far the appetite for analog, V8-powered driving machines reaches, even in an industry sprinting toward electrification.What CAV unveils on June 18th will tell the real story. A teaser image and a confident statement are easy. Delivering a car worthy of the GT40 name, one that honors the original without simply hiding behind it, is the hard part. The company has spent more than a quarter century earning the chance to try. Now it has to prove that experience translates into something the legend would actually recognize as its heir.Source