First Gen3 Supercar reaches National Motor Racing Museum
DJR Mustang the first current-era Supercar to sit in famous museum
Will Davison raced the Ford in opening rounds of 2025 season
The National Motor Racing Museum in Bathurst has welcomed its first Gen3-era Supercar.
Ahead of the upcoming Repco Bathurst 1000, a podium-winning Ford Mustang Gen3 Supercar has arrived at the foot of Mount Panorama.
The car, a Dick Johnson Racing Mustang, is the first current-era Supercar to sit in the famous museum, located near Murray’s Corner.
The Ford was raced by Will Davison in the early rounds of the 2025 Repco Supercars Championship, before being converted to a spare.
Chassis DJRS-06 claimed a podium at the hands of Davison at the Taupō round in April. With Davison shifted into a new chassis after Tasmania, DJRS-06 became a spare, and was recently put on display at the Welcome Centre at The Bend Motorsport Park.
The car is in the livery last raced by Davison in Ipswich, complete with the two-time Bathurst winner’s name on the windscreen and above the doors.
Chassis WR 025 was one of two final Holden Supercars raced by WAU in the championship, before the team switched to Ford in 2023. The car was built for Chaz Mostert in 2020, claiming a debut podium at the Adelaide 500 and Bathurst podium.
Bryce Fullwood shifted into WR 025 before Nick Percat took over for the 2022 season, Percat finishing a famous second behind Mostert in Adelaide.
The car has since been restored to its 2022 Adelaide colours, which is an homage to the 1990 Bathurst-winning Holden Racing Team livery.
The 2025 season resumes in Bathurst on October 9-12. Tickets are on sale now.