Spartan
Well-Known Member
Just curious..have you seen it in person or just photos? Photos do not do this car justice.LOOKS - Not impressed ( I think it's improved, but not impressively improved)
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Just curious..have you seen it in person or just photos? Photos do not do this car justice.LOOKS - Not impressed ( I think it's improved, but not impressively improved)
INTERIOR - Impressed
PRICE - Not impressed
LOOKS - Not impressed ( I think it's improved, but not impressively improved)
MPG's - Not impressed
Performance -..............................the last piece of the puzzle.
This will be the key issue to me. Seems it's coming down to the wire...lol
To me, the Mustang is a performance car. If I'm impressed by the performance, then it's a winner in my eyes. If I'm not impressed with the performance, then it will simply be unimpressive as a whole. Not a bad car, in fact, a great car for the price yet unimpressive for a complete redo. I don't mind if they sacrifice some MPG's for performance, in fact, I would prefer they sacrifice MPG's for performance as opposed to sacrificing performance for MPG's.
As to what will impress me: I believe it will be fine on a road course if it outdoes the Boss, so that only leaves strip and street. I think the EB will be OK on the street with the low down torque as well as the GT with the new intake that will improve low end torque.
So now, the last piece of the puzzle, what will impress me on the strip?
The GT will need to be a solid 12.5 car. Solid 12.5 meaning that many runs will be faster than 12.5. If it's a solid or 12.7 car that will be an improvement but it won't be like "WOW, impressive".
The EB will have to be a 12.6 car.
I won't be particularly disappointed if it doesn't achieve that level of performance but if not, I certainly won't be saying that it's an impressive car, I'll just be saying that I'm impressed with the interior on the new Mustang![]()
Now this I can agree with and is the best defense and explanation for the loss of mileage in the V6. Still it doesn't make sense to me not to offer the 2.73 for the EB if it helps mileage by that much, especially with the improved torque curve of the EB.You are forgetting that ford also redesigned the diff. Although the ratios are the same would it be worth having their supplier produce a 2.73 that was going on only 1 engine and that they can handily beat its fuel economy with the ecoboost. I don't think so. The v6 was not going to be the fuel economy leader anyway even with the 2.73 so why bother to produce another variant of the diff?????? Makes no sense to me.
so you want a 2.73??? a PT Cruiser has a 3.91A Honda civic also lacks displacement and a twin scroll turbo..
I'm sure it's a balancing act. If their target mpg was say 34 and they can do that with the ecoboost and still offer the 3.15 which will give stronger acceleration and a more sporty feel to every mustang rather than saddle buyers with the lowest performing ratio in order to get 35-36 mpg. I bet they made a calculated decision that the mustang would be the mpg leader either way and all buyers would be up a notch on performance. So everyone wins. Rather than have a customer have to drive the less responsive 2.73 in order to drive the mpg leaderNow this I can agree with and is the best defense and explanation for the loss of mileage in the V6. Still it doesn't make sense to me not to offer the 2.73 for the EB if it helps mileage by that much, especially with the improved torque curve of the EB.
Those vehicles you have named sound like they belong in a trash compactor lolso you want a 2.73??? a PT Cruiser has a 3.91
Civic Si 4.76
WRX 4.11
Exactly!Those vehicles you have named sound like they belong in a trash compactor lol
If memory serves, none of those cars has 280 ft-pounds of torque at 2,000 RPM. Those are 5.0 Windsor numbers, and Mustangs with that engine came standard with 2.73s for the entire run. The EB would do fine with an AT and 2.73 gears, especially slotted in as a fuel economy special.so you want a 2.73??? a PT Cruiser has a 3.91
Civic Si 4.76
WRX 4.11
If the 4cyl had a 2.73 you would need a push car just to move. A honda civic is 3.94
so you want a 2.73??? a PT Cruiser has a 3.91
Civic Si 4.76
WRX 4.11

no it wasn't fine for the 3.7, it was a gimmick to get the mileage up. even the 4.0 had a 3.15.
umm...I'm sure gear ratio's in the transmissions are much different as well. Also, are you saying the 2.73 was fine in the inferior V6, with less hp and tq, let alone a lot less tq under the curve?
You sound like an engine cylinder, displacement fan boy type of guy.
I hated my 2011 V6 with 2.73s Blegh and it never came close to 31 mpg.Exactly! and even garbage wouldn't be caught dead with a 2.73![]()
I wouldn't say the 2.73s were fine in the 3.7. I've driven the rental cars. Ugh. No torque, and an automatic bent on hitting sixth gear before you get across the intersection.Also, are you saying the 2.73 was fine in the inferior V6, with less hp and tq, let alone a lot less tq under the curve?
no it wasn't fine for the 3.7, it was a gimmick to get the mileage up. even the 4.0 had a 3.15.
displacement fan boy? I had a 3.3 I6, a 2.5 Chrysler and an '08 v6 so how do you figure?