Hiding in Plain Sight: Keeping the Highly Anticipated New Ford Mustang Away from the Paparazzi
- The all-new Ford Mustang is one of the most hotly anticipated
cars of the year, with everyone wanting to see what it looked like
before it was even revealed
- When prototypes with final bodywork are built, engineers spend
months testing the vehicles with padded camouflage and special paint
jobs to hide the true shape
In the months leading up to the global reveal of the all-new Ford
Mustang in early December, debating the exact shape of the car was one
of the hottest topics for fans on the Internet. Helping fuel their
speculation – while enabling the Mustang development team to log tens of
thousands of test miles on public roads this past summer and fall
without revealing the car’s shape – was the job of the camouflage team
from Ford design and engineering.
With more than
3,000 film and television appearances over the past 50 years, Mustang
has the sort of on-screen résumé many in Hollywood would envy. Like
those celebrities, when a new Mustang is on the way, the car paparazzi
immediately mobilize in an attempt to capture the first photos for fan
sites on the Internet.
“Ford designers
and engineers spend a lot of time developing new cars, and part of my
job is to make sure people don’t see the result until it’s completely
ready,” said Dave Pericak, Mustang chief engineer. “Professional spy
photographers have been stalking prototype cars for decades, and now,
the addition of camera phones has made it even more critical to hide our
cars from prying eyes.”
The chase is on
Getting an early look at highly anticipated new cars like Mustang is a
cat and mouse game between automakers and a small cadre of automotive
spy photographers that hide out for weeks on end in hopes of catching a
glimpse of an upcoming vehicle that will tease fans.
“The professional
photographers all know where the cars get built and where they get
tested,” said Pericak. “One photographer we see frequently parks in
discrete locations with a view of these facilities, just waiting for
something new to emerge.”
With most people
now carrying smartphones with cameras and Internet connections, just
avoiding the usual photography locations is no longer enough.
“Before a single
one of these test vehicles is allowed to leave the prototype plant, a
camouflage package is developed and must be approved by the design,
engineering and test track safety departments,” said Al Wilkinson, Ford
camouflage coordinator. “With all of the camo in place, even a good
photograph should not give away the design details of the new car.”
Initial camouflage
development begins with the design team, and is then refined through
engineering and safety. With Mustang, the first recommendation for camo
was surprisingly minimal in an effort to keep weight and aerodynamic
effects to a minimum.
“When I saw the
first camouflage package the team suggested, I knew it wasn’t good
enough to counter the paparazzi, so we went back to the drawing board,”
said Pericak.
With too much of
the new body revealed in the first camo package, the team quickly went
to work to make sure the entire body was covered with black vinyl and
heavily padded underneath with foam. The second proposal still showed
the basic profile of the fastback roofline, something Pericak didn’t
want to have revealed this early.
Click here for a video about the Mustang camouflage https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_unByV5VeQ
The final camo
package created for the new Mustang obscured the new fastback profile
and proportions, making it appear more like a notchback, and smaller
than it actually was. Pieces of plastic and foam were strategically
placed beneath the vinyl to hide the true contours of the car.
“Safety is as
important as security when testing prototypes,” added Wilkinson.
“Despite covering the body, we still have to make sure car lights and
signals can shine through.”
The vinyl panels
have to be applied in a specific sequence to make sure there are no
places for air to catch the vinyl and pull it up. With the new Mustang
GT capable of hitting 155 mph, having the camo come loose at high speeds
is a danger for both test drivers and bystanders.
In its final form,
the camo package for the new Mustang weighed in at just 49 pounds,
providing security without undue impact on the vehicle dynamics.
Professional
photographers – who prefer to stay in the shadows or trees – acknowledge
they can wait anywhere from minutes to months to catch a prototype, and
patience is a virtue. When vehicle engineering manager Tom Barnes
finally drove the first fully covered new Mustang out of the factory on a
rainy day in June, it took less than an hour for photos of the car to
begin turning up on automotive websites.
“After spending
weeks refining the camo package for the Mustang, it was a bit
frustrating getting snagged by the paparazzi almost immediately,” said
Barnes. “On the other hand, when we saw the photos later that day, it
was a relief to realize you really couldn’t tell what the car looked
like.”
- Even with the
lengths Wilkinson, Pericak and the rest of the team went to in order to
obscure the shape of the new Mustang, sometimes a new car still needs to
be tested without camo, and the only way to do that is a lot of late
nights. Now that the world has seen the new Mustang, the engineers are
free to complete the final months of development out in the open,
camo-free, as the spy photographers have moved on to new targets.
No comments:
Post a Comment