Ken, I realize you put 'Shelby' in quotes so I'm not trying to correct that statement. Just a bit more clarification. The R&D work for the tiger was done at 'Shelby American' but the actual engineering and design work was carried out by Ken Miles, who as well as being an engineer, was one of Shelby's drivers and I believe was killed during testing of the 'King Cobra'.
At least that was what Carrol Shelby told me (and a bunch of others) at one of the Shleby American Collections holiday get togethers. BTW, for those that do not know. There is a museum of sorts on the North East side of Boulder dedicated to Shelby American history. More info here:
https://www.shelbyamericancollection.org/index.html
The museum is always changing the displays as cars rotate in and out. Many of the owners of these cars still vintage race them and are not afraid to mix it up when on the track. Neat place, neat people and the holiday parties allow you to get right up close to legends and rub elbows with them. The list of people that I have not only seen at the events but actually had one on one conversations with include... Carrol Shelby, Phil Hill, Bob Bondurant, Pete Brock, Dave Friedman (team photographer), and the list actually does go on but you get the idea. /ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif
BTW, the first Cobra also used the 260 V8. Shelby talked Lee Iaccoca into giving him 289's because the 260 would blow up if you tried to repeatedly rev it past 5k rpm. That was the beginning of the Shelby/Ford relationship.
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