LEGO® Speed Champions · Ford · 2021

Ford GT Heritage Edition & Bronco R

A 660-piece dual featuring two of Ford Performance's most distinctive race-derived heritage projects — the GT Heritage Edition supercar and the Bronco R Baja prototype.

Set #76905 2021 660 pieces 8-stud Retired

76905 is one of LEGO® Speed Champions' more thematically focused dual sets: both vehicles come from Ford Performance, and both are race-derived heritage homages to specific Ford motorsport history. The GT Heritage Edition references the 1969 Le Mans-winning Gulf-liveried GT40, while the Bronco R Baja prototype previewed the production Bronco that would arrive in 2021 by first running the 2019 Baja 1000. Brix Plus presents this set as a Ford Performance heritage shelf — supercar and off-roader, but with a real shared design intent.

LEGO® Speed Champions set 76905 Ford GT Heritage Edition and Bronco R, product image
LEGO® Speed Champions 76905. Source: Brickset.

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76905 includes two complete cars: the 2019/2020 Ford GT Heritage Edition (Gulf-liveried) and the Ford Bronco R Baja race prototype.

2019 Ford GT '69 Heritage Edition in Gulf livery
Photo: MrWalkr · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons

THE SUPERCAR

Ford GT '69 Heritage Edition

3.5L twin-turbo V6, Gulf-liveried tribute to the 1969 Le Mans-winning GT40

The Ford GT '69 Heritage Edition is one of several limited-livery editions Ford produced of the second-generation GT (2017-2022) supercar. The 2019 Heritage Edition specifically commemorates the 1969 Le Mans 24 Hours victory of the Gulf-sponsored Ford GT40 — chassis #1075 driven by Jacky Ickx and Jackie Oliver — which was Ford's fourth and final consecutive Le Mans overall win after 1966, 1967, and 1968. The car uses light blue and orange paint mimicking the 1969 Gulf colours, captured in LEGO® 76905 and indexed at Brickset.

The base Ford GT (2017–2022) is built around a 3.5-litre twin-turbocharged EcoBoost V6 producing 478 kW (660 hp), with carbon-fibre monocoque construction and a 7-speed dual-clutch gearbox. Per Ford Performance, Ford built only 1,350 second-generation GTs across all variants — making any of them a relatively rare car. The Heritage Edition program also produced a 1966 Le Mans tribute (Mk II liveried), a 1967 tribute (red and white), and a 1968 tribute (Gulf with #9), in addition to the 1969 #6 Gulf scheme that LEGO® 76905 captures (see Brickset 76905).

The Heritage Edition livery is captured in LEGO® 76905 through printed elements rather than stickers, including the prominent #6 racing number and Gulf decals. See Brickset 76905 for set photography and Ford Performance for archived GT documentation.

Sixth-generation Ford Bronco — the production platform underpinning the Bronco R Baja 1000 prototype.
Photo: SsmIntrigue · CC BY-SA 4.0 · no Wikimedia photo of the Baja 1000 race prototype exists; closest reference is the production Bronco it shares its DNA with:

THE RACE TRUCK

Ford Bronco R (Baja 1000 prototype)

Race prototype that previewed the production 2021 Bronco at the 2019 Baja 1000

The Ford Bronco R was a race prototype unveiled by Ford Performance and Multimatic Motorsports in November 2019, designed to preview the upcoming sixth-generation Ford Bronco at the SCORE Baja 1000 desert race. The Bronco R competed in the Baja 1000 with the goal of showcasing the fundamental architecture of the production Bronco that would arrive ~16 months later, captured in miniature by LEGO® 76905 and indexed at Brickset. It used a long-travel suspension and a 3.5-litre EcoBoost V6 — coincidentally the same engine family found in the Ford GT, though tuned very differently for off-road racing.

The Bronco R was driven by a roster including Cameron Steele, Curt LeDuc, and Shelby Hall. The car finished a partial run at the 2019 Baja 1000 (the team withdrew due to mechanical issues), but its core mission of generating media attention for the upcoming production Bronco was unambiguously successful. The 2021 Ford Bronco arrived with the Bronco R's distinctive front-end styling and stance largely intact, captured visually through LEGO® 76905.

Note on the photo: the Wikimedia Commons image shown here is the 2021 production Ford Bronco rather than the Bronco R race prototype. The Bronco R was a one-off race vehicle and is not well-documented on Wikimedia Commons. Per Brickset 76905, the LEGO® model represents the race prototype with its distinctive open cockpit, full roll cage, and race-tyre treatment.

You've built it. Now display it.

Brix Plus stands are built around the exact dimensions of every LEGO® Speed Champions set — including 76905's two very different vehicle silhouettes. Made for collectors, by collectors.

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Display ideas

  • Pair 76905 with 76920 Ford Mustang Dark Horse for a complete LEGO® Ford Performance trio.
  • Group the GT Heritage Edition with other Le Mans-derived models — even outside Speed Champions — for a 'Le Mans winners through the decades' shelf.
  • Display the Bronco R alongside any Speed Champions race or rally car to anchor a multi-discipline motorsport diorama.

People

Two Ford Performance figures shape this set's story: the engineer who led the second-generation GT, and the executive who greenlit the Bronco R Baja programme.

Larry Holt

EXECUTIVE VICE-PRESIDENT, MULTIMATIC SPECIAL VEHICLE OPERATIONS

Holt led Multimatic Motorsports' engineering of both the second-generation Ford GT (Multimatic was Ford's contract manufacturing partner for the GT supercar in Markham, Canada) and the Bronco R race prototype that LEGO® 76905 captures. He's been the consistent engineering voice across both projects — connecting the Ford GT and Bronco R in a way that goes beyond livery, since Multimatic effectively built both. Period interviews with The Drive, Road & Track, and Motor Trend document his role on the GT programme; see also Brickset 76905 for set context.

Hau Thai-Tang

CHIEF PRODUCT PLATFORM AND OPERATIONS OFFICER, FORD MOTOR COMPANY (2017–2022)

Thai-Tang ran Ford's product strategy during the period when both the GT Heritage Edition program and the Bronco R were greenlit. He had previously been chief engineer on the original Ford SVT Mustang Cobra R and the 2005 Ford GT, giving him personal motorsport-heritage credibility for both projects. His involvement is documented in Ford Performance press materials from the Heritage Edition launches and LEGO® 76905's subject matter.

The build

Scale and era

76905 sits in the LEGO® Speed Champions 8-stud era — second wave (2021). At 660 pieces it is one of the more substantial dual-vehicle Speed Champions sets ever produced, exceeded by only a handful of other duals.

Build highlights

The GT Heritage build features printed Gulf-livery elements with the prominent racing #6, and the carbon-fibre flying buttress rear-three-quarter is a signature feature of the second-generation GT preserved in miniature. The Bronco R uses substantially more knobby off-road tyres than any other Speed Champions set, and includes a printed roof number panel.

What the 660 pieces buys you

660 pieces is a 75-90 minute build for an experienced builder, and delivers two complete vehicles plus minifigures and substrate. The piece count is split roughly 280 to the GT, 280 to the Bronco R, and the remainder to minifigures, accessories, and packaging-bag-related elements.

Minifigures (2)

76905 includes two driver minifigures, one for each vehicle — both unique to this set per Brickset's minifigure index.

FAQ

Common questions about LEGO® 76905 Ford GT Heritage Edition & Bronco R.

Is LEGO® set 76905 still available?
No. 76905 launched on 1 June 2021 and was retired on 31 December 2022 according to Brickset. Sealed copies command meaningful premiums on BrickLink.
How big are the LEGO® GT Heritage and Bronco R?
Each vehicle is approximately 14 cm long. The Bronco R is taller (off-road truck stance) and the GT Heritage is lower (supercar). See archived dimensions on the LEGO.com listing.
How many pieces does LEGO® set 76905 have?
660 pieces and 2 driver minifigures (one per car), all unique to this set, per Brickset.
Do the real GT Heritage and Bronco R share an engine?
Both use derivatives of Ford's 3.5-litre EcoBoost twin-turbocharged V6 — but tuned very differently. The GT version produces 478 kW for road use; the Bronco R version is race-tuned for off-road durability. See Ford Performance GT.
What was the 1969 Le Mans win the Heritage Edition references?
Ford's 1969 24 Hours of Le Mans victory was its fourth consecutive overall win after 1966, 1967, and 1968 — making it the closing chapter of the original Ford-vs-Ferrari era. Chassis #1075 (the same chassis that won in 1968) was driven by Jacky Ickx and Jackie Oliver in Gulf colours with race number 6 — the livery captured in LEGO® 76905.
Did the Bronco R finish the Baja 1000?
Partially. The 2019 Bronco R retired before the finish due to mechanical issues, but its primary mission — generating motorsport-heritage media attention ahead of the 2021 production Bronco's launch — was successful. See Brickset 76905 for set context.

Related sets

Keep browsing

step through the Ford range, or see what else dropped in 2021.

Sources

  1. The LEGO® Group — primary
  2. Brickset — primary
  3. BrickLink — primary
  4. Rebrickable — primary
  5. Ford Motor Company — primary
  6. Wikipedia contributors — wikipedia
  7. Wikipedia contributors — wikipedia
  8. Wikimedia Commons — wikipedia
  9. Wikimedia Commons — wikipedia