AC Cobra 289
The Shelby AC Cobra 289, legendary Anglo-American sports car produced 1963-1965 through collaboration between Carroll Shelby and AC Cars combining lightweight British roadster chassis with American V8 power, features Ford 289 cubic-inch (4.7-liter) small-block V8 engine producing 271 hp (275 PS/202 kW) at 5,750 rpm and 312 lb-ft (423 Nm) torque at 4,500 rpm driving rear wheels through four-speed manual transmission with live rear axle and rack-and-pinion steering. Exceptional power-to-weight ratio achieved through featherweight 2,315 lb (1,050 kg) curb weight combining AC tubular steel chassis, aluminum body panels, and minimal equipment delivering extraordinary 0-60 mph acceleration in 5.5-6.0 seconds and top speed approaching 140 mph representing supercar performance benchmarks of early 1960s era competing against Ferrari 250 GTO and Chevrolet Corvette Grand Sport in GT racing.
The Cobra 289 evolved from original 260-powered Mk I version introduced 1962, with 289 Mk II variant produced 1963-1965 achieving remarkable competition success in SCCA and FIA racing including GT-class victories before legendary 427 big-block version introduced 1965. Approximately 580 original 289 Cobras produced during brief production run create significant collector value commanding seven-figure auction prices, with visceral driving experience combining brutal acceleration, communicative steering, minimal creature comforts, and demanding handling characteristics requiring skilled drivers. Original competition variants including Cobra Daytona Coupe achieved overall victory at 1965 FIA World Sportscar Championship representing only American constructor defeating Ferrari in international GT racing, establishing Cobra mythology enduring through numerous replica manufacturers and continuation series maintaining original design influence spanning six decades as quintessential British-American sports car collaboration.