This model was designed in Sketchup and converted to other formats using the buit-in sketchup converter. Rendering program is Vray 5. Textures in model from Sketchup and Vray libraries. Diferent parts of the model (steering wheel, lights, tires and wheels, wing mirrors, seats, etc.) are compiled in components and grouped in one single model.
This model is offered as it is.
Eleanor is a code name used in independent filmmaker H. B. Toby Halicki's 1974 film Gone in 60 Seconds to refer to a 1971 Mustang (redressed as a 1973) featured in the film.
The Eleanor name is also used in the 2000 remake for a customized Mustang.
In 1995, Denice Halicki, H.B. Halicki's widow, licensed the rights of the 1974 film to Disney for a remake of the same name. The new 2000 Gone in 60 Seconds film, produced by Jerry Bruckheimer, features Nicolas Cage as master auto thief Randall Memphis Raines. Both films share plot similarities about a crew of thieves who steal a large order of cars, and deliver them to the Long Beach docks. Once again, the Eleanor name is given to the film's featured car; now a Dupont Pepper Grey 1967 Mustang fastback, depicted as a GT500, with a customized body kit designed by Steve Stanford. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eleanor_(automobile))