Mustang GTD Liquid Carbon displays High-Tech Craft at Monterey
The glimmering Mustang GTD Liquid Carbon debuted during Monterey Car Week 2025 at Laguna Seca Raceway. The car‘s unveiling highlights how its structural use of carbon fiber shapes performance and presence together. With this latest example, the team at Ford celebrates and expresses the car’s construction as a design element rather than as an aspect to be concealed.
Where the typical automobile smooths over materials with paint and coatings, this edition of the Mustang GTD leaves its carbon fiber visible. The approach emphasizes joinery, pattern alignment, and surface rhythm — elements more familiar to architectural practice than to automotive styling. Each weave is carefully oriented to continue across hoods, doors, and fenders, establishing a uniform geometry that underscores precision.
images courtesy Ford
Material Performance expressed as aesthetic
The Mustang GTD Liquid Carbon is a love letter to carbon fiber which, with its strength-to-weight ratio, has long been the material of choice in competitive racing. In the Mustang GTD Liquid Carbon, its application becomes both a technical solution and an aesthetic stance. Replacing painted panels and integrating bonded carbon-fiber doors reduces overall weight while reinforcing the car’s performance identity.
‘Mustang GTD Liquid Carbon is the ultimate expression of the Mustang GTD’s high-tech, high-performance construction and is a reminder of the race-derived, cutting-edge capability that sits beneath the surface of every Mustang GTD,’ explains Chief Program Engineer Greg Goodall at the debut. His comment highlights how the car’s stripped-back appearance conveys not absence but refinement—the visible record of advanced fabrication.
the Mustang GTD Liquid Carbon debuts during Monterey Car Week 2025
Precision in Detailing
The detailing throughout the Mustang GTD Liquid Carbon is deliberate. Hood, roof, and rear wing patterns align down the car’s centerline, creating a spine-like order. Fender panels continue these lines outward, producing cohesion across the body. Black Brembo calipers and gloss-black GTD script echo the monochrome material palette, allowing the carbon weave itself to become the defining surface.
Design Manager Anthony Colard describes the development as an exercise in precision: ‘High performance requires high precision. When we were designing Mustang GTD Liquid Carbon, it was essential that these small details were present, because they speak to the care and attention required to both build a vehicle like Mustang GTD and to compete and win on the world’s stage with Mustang GT3.’
carbon fiber surfaces remain exposed to highlight construction as design
The interior is a continuation of the team’s measured ethos. Black leather, Dinamica microfiber suede, and Hyper Lime stitching frame the driver’s space with tactile contrast. A reflective gradient at the center of the seats introduces a controlled highlight, enlivening the otherwise restrained palette. The effect is purposeful, reinforcing the connection between precision engineering and crafted experience.
The Mustang GTD Liquid Carbon is delivered standard with the Performance package, matching the Spirit of America edition and Carbon Series in capability, while offering the most uncompromising material presence of the range. The visible weave turns what is often hidden into the car’s defining feature, integrating structure and surface with architectural clarity.
the car reduces weight by replacing painted panels with bonded carbon fiber
With the arrival of this edition alongside other GTD models, owners can now choose the level of carbon exposure they prefer. ‘Mustang GTD is a great looking car and now it stands out even more with its striking exposed carbon body and functional aero elements,’ Goodall adds. His statement reflects the balance between visual language and performance that defines the project. The first deliveries of the Mustang GTD Liquid Carbon are scheduled for October.
precision pattern alignment runs across hood roof and fenders