Dozens of Ford Transits have been working hard behind the scenes of this week’s 2023 Goodwood Festival of Speed, ferrying equipment back and forth to get ready for one of the year’s biggest auto events. But the incredible Ford Pro Electric SuperVan is one Transit that’s taking center stage, not merely helping build it. And it really is only one Transit: a single concept van, but one with the power of about 19 production Transits thanks to a quad-motor EV drivetrain that shares an outrageous 1,973 hp between its four wheels, and can rocket to 100 km/h in less than 2 seconds.
This is the fourth in Ford’s series of
bonkers SuperVan concepts that dates back to 1971 when someone had the insane
idea of dropping a Le Mans-winning GT40 V8 into the middle of a Mk1 Transit.
Ford repeated the trick in the 1980s and 1990s with SuperVans 2 and 3, but now
the Blue Oval has brought the blue-collar hypercar back as an EV to fit with
the times. Ford hopes the Pro Electric SuperVan, which was developed with STARD
Motorsport and makes its world debut at this weekend’s Goodwood Festival of
Speed with Le Mans winner Romain Dumas at the wheel, will help generate some
interest in its 2023 production E-Transit custom van and Ford SYNC
connectivity.
Projects like these are often built around
a bespoke spaceframe chassis and merely skinned to resemble a real car. That’s
also partially true of this SuperVan, which does feature lightweight carbon
panels over a nest of steel tubes. But Ford says the floorpan actually comes
from the E-Transit Custom production van. The overall shape is vaguely similar
too, from the front and when viewed in profile. The front splitter, aggressive
side skirts, slim racing-style mirrors and fixed windows leave you in no doubt
that this is more than your usual pimped-up construction site Transit, but
they’re nothing compared to what’s going on at the back where the SuperVan goes
from load lugger to Le Mans car.
The roof mounted spoiler and huge diffuser
fight it out to see who can generate the most downforce and the most stares,
but both our totally outplayed by striking rear bodywork that tapers to a vee
above the waistline, allowing air to flow inside each rear pillar instantly
drawing a visual link to Ford’s GT supercar. You won’t find a rolled up tabloid
newspaper or McDonald’s coffee cup on the inside of this Transit, or carpets
for that matter. Instead, you get a full roll cage, a large digital instrument
display ahead of a small Alcantara-covered steering wheel, and a tablet
touchscreen just like the one you get in a Mustang Mach-E, and potentially the
2023 E-Transit Custom. So far Ford has only released exterior images of that
van, but more details are promised for September.
The touchscreen and Ford’s SYNC connective
hardware will enable owners of that 2023 E-Transit to find and navigate to
charging stations when they have exhausted the 380 km electric range
Ford is targeting for the production van. But while SuperVan’s system will also
let Romain Dumas do that, and even make calls on his way up the hill past
Goodwood House, the system has been reconfigured to let him pick between Road,
Track, Drag, Drift and Rally driving modes and three levels of regenerative
braking. It can also send real-time performance data back to Ford’s engineers,
a nod to the remote vehicle management software Ford developed to help business
keep tabs on their fleet (and their lazy drivers).
Perhaps the zaniest bit of tech is one
we’re hoping Dumas might showcase while waiting at the starting line at
Goodwood before his run. Called Tire Cleaning Mode, it’s essentially a drag
racer’s line lock, but one with a twist in that it allows the driver to perform
a burnout on either the front or rear axle, to get them nice and hot before a real
launch.


