Sal JC
Well-Known Member
The funniest part is the sticker price...almost 40k!
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The funniest part is the sticker price...almost 40k!
Prices:Not funny at all. The price of the car trim and options are even higher in Canada, which would put this car at 43,249 + the cost of the 201A package (I'm not sure what the Canadian price is).
I think the figures are very disappointing, especially since the only reason I was thinking to get back into a Mustang at all was the possibility of not giving up too much of the great MPG I've gotten used to over the past two years.
The fact that the 3.7 was downrated, though, may just indicate that Ford's latest round of reformulating its economy tests has resulting in more accurate (i.e., less inflated) MPG figures.
However, those writing here about getting better MPG from a model without options or the PP will be very disappointed. The window stickers are always for the base car. Different stickers are not produced for the same model based on options. Therefore, they are always "best case". Consider that 2011-14 V6 automatics are always rated 31 MPG highway (which assumes 2.73 gears) even if the particular car has 3.31 gears optioned alone or as part of the PP and will thus get significantly lower mileage. The car stickered here will get nowhere near the stated mileage (due to 3.55 gears vs 3.15 and the option weights). This is standard practice and perfectly legal.

Exactly.The performance package comes with a 3.55 rear end gear ratio. That will certainly effect highway mpg. A base model ecoboost with 3.15 gear ratio should be higher.. Maybe around mid 30's :shrug:
Wow -- well done man, you're killing it! I'm usually beating EPA, but not by THAT much!But I am solidly spoiled by the mileage I'm getting out of the BRZ. I'm realizing 37mpg (all highway, all summer long) compared to the 30mpg reported by the EPA figures (above). I do get 32mpg in the winter (same commute, same usage).
RIGHT!?!?! I'm not that old either and I think this is REALLY good by any historical standard. Interesting how people's pre-release expectations are totally influencing their thoughts about this -- the absolute numbers are pretty great but because people generally wanted 32+ and talked about it like that weeks and months, they're somehow disappointed. "Anchoring" writ large. Stupid human psychology ;)I hate to sound old (since I'm not yet 40), but man, I remember when getting 30+ MPG out of my Escort was something worth talking about. Now we're talking about a 300+ HP turbo pony car getting that, and people are disappointed? Really???
A quintessential indicator of aging is forming present expectations based on past conditions. I'm older than you, but I base by expectations on present alternatives not historical vehicles.I hate to sound old (since I'm not yet 40), but man, I remember when getting 30+ MPG out of my Escort was something worth talking about. Now we're talking about a 300+ HP turbo pony car getting that, and people are disappointed? Really???
They use what Ford says in the engine book which is going to be 87. The Torque and HP come from the 93 Premium.
That I believe is basically driving it "like you stole it" fuel economy observed.check out the fuel economy c/d observed
http://blog.caranddriver.com/perfor...mustang-gt-versus-2015-ford-mustang-ecoboost/
They have to list the minimum Octane that the engine will run on, which is 87.When you say engine book, you mean the owners manual?
I don't understand why they would have two different specs.