The Ford GT Mk IV sets a 6:15 at Nürburgring

The Ford GT Mk IV has recorded a lap time of 6 minutes and 15 seconds on the Nordschleife. This figure places the most extreme track car derived from the GT in a territory reserved for very few cars and once again positions Nürburgring as the ultimate showcase for measuring pure performance.

A time that speaks to the car's level

The important data point is the time: 6:15 on the long Nürburgring circuit. On a track like the Nordschleife, where every sector mixes fast support, elevation changes, bumps, and very technical slow sections, achieving such a record demands much more than just power: it also requires aerodynamic downforce, high-speed stability, consistent braking, and a very finely tuned chassis.

In the case of the Ford GT Mk IV, moreover, we are talking about a version specifically designed for the track. It is not a road-legal supercar pushed to its limits in a quick session, but an even more radical interpretation of the GT intended for track driving without the usual concessions of a road-legal car.

The most radical GT taken to the place where everything is measured

The Nordschleife continues to be the most symbolically significant stage when a brand or a specialized manufacturer wants to demonstrate what a high-performance car is capable of. It’s not enough to set a good sector time: the Ring demands that the engine, aerodynamics, tires, brakes, and driver confidence all function for over 20 kilometers of continuous demand.

That the Mk IV has recorded a 6:15 precisely reinforces this idea. It is not just an impressive figure on paper, but a time achieved in one of the toughest tests that exist for a track car.

What does this record mean?

This time aligns with the philosophy of the Ford GT Mk IV: a machine created to extract maximum performance on the track and to go a step further than other GT variants. The Nürburgring time serves as a perfect calling card to explain where this model stands within the universe of the most exclusive track cars.

At Cars&Pizza News, we like cars that don't need much explanation when they speak with the stopwatch, and a 6:15 at the Ring falls squarely into that category. The question is simple: how far can a track GT go when it is already performing at this level?

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