what I do/think
Not many have seen my car, since it isn't finished. The few that have, or photos, occasionally ask me if it is "an original one".
I tell them, no it isn't. For me, an original GT40 is a car that was run in the days when Ford was campaigning the cars, or privateers were. Or, it can be a car that was built in that period. Or, it can be a car that was built from parts made at that time and finished later on, as several were. Or, it can be a car that was resurrected from a race car built and run in period and then rebuilt later- although this gets a bit thin when you are looking at cars that consist of an original chassis number plate that someone has applied to a repro car. That's NOT an original car AFAIC. Or, it can be a car which was built in original tooling by folks who have a legitimate and solid connection to the original builders of GT40s.
It is hard to define what my car is, by those rules: the body was cast from the original FAV Slough molds, and it has a 1968 engine. The monocoque is a Mark I tub, not a Mark V. However, many of the bits in it are updated or modern. Finally, it is coming from the company (Safir) that actually owns the name and shape and paid to own them. If they say it is a GT40, then it is.
What I set out to do was this- and this was a conscious decision when I set out to have the car built: I wanted, within my budget (which has been stretched considerably) to have the car that I would have owned if I had somehow been able to afford a Mark I street GT40 in 1966 or 1967. No more, no less. This meant trying to recreate that size, feel, and sound, warts and all, in the modern era. And although we have had to make some accommodations for street driveability and cost considerations, I remain hopeful that we have gotten very close, chiefly through the thoroughness and persistence of Brady and Bob.