Ford Mustang GT Concept
With 39 years of storied automotive history, 8 million customers and
legions of fanatic fans to satisfy, Ford is introducing two all-new Mustang
design concepts at the 2003 North American International Auto Show.
The Mustang GT convertible and coupe concepts arrive ready to take enthusiasts
breath away three design-generations after the original made history
in 1964. The latest legends of the American pony car are contemporary
automobiles that capture the essence of Mustangs design and performance
heritage.
Presented as a two-seat fastback coupe and convertible, the Mustang GT
concepts are strong indicators of the next-generation Mustangs design
direction. They emerge as a bold testament to the timeless value that
automotive enthusiasts hold for the original American pony car.
These Mustang concepts are thoroughly modern automobiles that point
to a bright future for Mustang, says J Mays, Ford Motor Company
vice president of Design. Their powerful stances, smooth surface
language and ultra-modern interiors set new standards for muscle cars.
Above all, these concepts communicate the soul of Mustang: a classic,
cool and quintessentially American muscle car.
Introspective and Extroverted
The Mustang GT concepts draw on the very elements that have
made Mustang the definitive American sports car for nearly four decades.
Their exterior designs are clearly inspired by some of the extroverted
Mustangs of the past and have been created by a design team that took
an introspective approach to updating a classic design.
The designs are modern, crisp and reveal the true character of what Mustang
means to so many people. The original 1964½ Mustang actually evolved
from the racing-inspired, two-seat concept car called the Mustang 1. After
reviewing archived files, Mustangs modern-day crafters were struck
by how the original design embraced the same inspirational cues that communicate
performance. The design team looked beyond production models to the Mustang
1 concept for modern inspiration. Much like the Mustang 1 and the later
Mustang Mach 1 show car in 1968, the Mustang GT concepts are rare, radical
designs that will appeal to everyone.
By melding the true character of Mustang into these fully modern
offerings, weve ensured that even the uninitiated will instantly
recognize these cars as Mustangs, says Mays. We went beyond
their exterior designs to truly understand the extent to which Mustang
has embedded itself in American culture.
New Design
The Mustang GT concepts are instantly recognizable as Mustangs,
yet they stretch the design far into the future with a distinctly modern
look. Like the Mustang 1 concept, the GT concepts are two-place sportscars:
one a coupe and the other a convertible. Both cars started out with a
significantly modified Ford Thunderbird rear-wheel-drive architecture.
The platform was sectioned to achieve the proper proportion. The front-end
geometry is all original customized to accommodate the signature
Mustang MOD 4.6-liter V-8.
In concert with plans for the all-new Mustang, due in 2004, the exterior
and interior designs of the Mustang GT concepts were penned by designers
in Fords Living Legends Studio in Dearborn, Mich., and Fords
California Design Center in Southern California. The concept design execution
was done exclusively at the California Design Center.
Getting the proportions right is the magic to making the entire
design work, says Mays.
When youre designing a new Mustang, youre the steward
of 40 years of automotive history. If you dont get it right, youve
got 8-million Mustang fans to answer to. I think we got it right,
says Mays.
The silhouette of the car is unmistakably Mustang. The coupe conjures
images of 1967 and 1968 Fastbacks while the convertible brings back cues
of the early Shelby Mustangs, especially in its show bar and
wide-element tail lamps.
Inside, theres no mistaking the no-holds-barred Mustang classic
cues. The cockpit is dramatic for the driver and passenger with lush red
and charcoal leather accented by billet-aluminum hardware. Theyre
reminiscent of another era yet, inside and out, the Mustang GT concepts
are thoroughly modern.
Heritage
When the Mustang was first unveiled, Ford chose the 1964 Worlds
Fair in New York as its stage. A global audience sat and watched an automotive
revolution roll into existence. Fords timing couldnt have
been better as the baby boom generation was just coming of car-buying
age. The baby boomers wanted something very different from what their
parents were driving. They wanted to express their own individuality.
The Mustang was their answer.
The cars barely had time to relax between the production line and the
showroom floor as dealers churned out more than 22,000 orders on the cars
first day on sale.
It debuted at a price of $2,368 and weighed only 2,572 pounds. With its
170-cubic-inch, six-cylinder engine, three-speed, floor-mounted manual
transmission and seating for four, it offered a comfortable ride and functional
appeal.
Mustang rapidly evolved into a vehicle judged by much more than just
numbers. In Chicago, a dealership closed early and called police to slow
the stampeding Mustang prospects while a restaurateur invited his customers
to sample his hotcakes that were selling like Mustangs. Something
special was happening.
One million were sold by March 1966. They were parked in everyones
driveway, but Ford was most excited about those people eagerly awaiting
their first drivers license. They wanted their cars to be different
and Mustang delivered.
The 1964½ model was the patriarch of subsequent changes to hoods,
interiors, headlamps and spoilers. As Mustang weaved in and out of different
generations, the vehicle generated an iconic status. Running alongside
the best European road cars, it soon became a racing-inspired legend.
Mustang needed racing as much as racing needed Mustang. Right out of
the blocks, the pony car was a champion, taking both first and second
place in the 1964 Tour de France International rally. By the end of the
sixties, Mustang led the SCCA Trans-Am series.
Body styles and engine sizes changed throughout the decade. By 1969,
the Mustang offered major style changes, a roomier and more luxurious
interior and even more power. To performance enthusiasts, 1969 meant Mach
1, Boss 429 and Boss 302.
Throughout the seventies and eighties, Mustang evolved from a stocky
and imposing-looking machine to a vehicle with clean and crisp lines.
The 1979 Mustang design wound up running a full 15 model years thanks
in part to its performance roots. In 1987, the basic design became truly
slick with a smoother nose, flush headlamps and black body trim, and in
1989, Mustang celebrated its 25th birthday and received another successful
facelift.
Dramatically restyled and churning with power, the 1994 Mustang got a
performance pump from Fords Special Vehicle Team (the second-generation
SVT Cobra) and was sold to customers with the slogan It is what
it was. The rest of the decade molded the Mustang into a vehicle
that mingled nostalgia with new lines and curves
and, of course,
more power.
The last major redesign of the Mustang came three years ago. Since then,
the company has continually kept customers excitement with special
interest models like the Mustang Cobra, Cobra R racing edition and the
Mustang Bullitt GT. For 2003, the Mustang Mach I returned replete with
the shaker hood scoop and more than 300 horsepower.
Powertrain |
Drivetrain layout |
Front engine, rear-wheel drive
|
Engine type |
90-degree MOD V-8, cast-iron block, aluminum heads,
belt-driven supercharger with liquid-to-air intercooler
|
Valve gear |
DOHC, 4 valves per cylinder
|
Bore/stroke, in/mm |
3.55 x 3.54/90.2 x 90
|
Displacement, in/mm |
280.8 / 4,601
|
Compression ratio |
8.5:1
|
Horsepower @ rpm |
400 @ 6,000 (estimated)
|
Torque @ rpm |
390 @ 3,500
|
Redline, rpm |
6,500
|
Transmission |
6-speed manual (coupe)
|
5-speed automatic (convertible)
|
Axle ratio |
3.55:1
|
Final-drive ratio |
2.24:1
|
Chassis |
Brakes |
Brembo 13.8-in vented disc
|
Wheels |
Front |
20 in x 8.5 in aluminum
|
Rear |
20 in x 9.5 in aluminum |
Tires |
Front |
245/40ZR20 BFGoodrich g-force T/A
|
Rear |
275/35ZR20 BFGoodrich g-force T/A
|
Dimensions
|
Body style |
2-door coupe and convertible
|
Seating capacity |
2
|
Legroom, in |
44.0
|
Shoulder room, in |
57.6
|
Hip room, in |
54.9
|
Headroom, in |
37.0
|
Length, in |
182
|
Width, in |
74.7
|
Height, in |
50.8
|
Fuel capacity, gal |
18
|
Although New-Cars.com checks with auto manufacturers and their representatives
to confirm the accuracy of the data, it makes no guarantee or warranty,
either expressed or implied with respect to the data presented here. All
specifications, prices and equipment are subject to change without notice.
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