Stangomydreams
Well-Known Member
Domestic and non domestic for 2022
Sponsored
I believe it has something to do with the hydrocarbon traps, new sensor, tune. Nothing with the exhaust.Is that power loss due to the exhaust particulate filters installed on non-domestic built Mustangs ?
There's no such thing as GPF in Kingdom of OilIs that power loss due to the gas particulate filters installed on non-domestic built Mustangs ?
There's a rumor that this is going to be the last ICE mustang sold in Europe. The 7th gen will not be imported due to regulations, so the Mach E will be the only car with a pony on the front grille sold in Europe...There's no such thing as GPF in Kingdom of OilOnly in Europe. From what I saw Dubai has a mix of domestic/export features, it's not the same as EU cars. But surprisingly enough, 2022 EU cars have no change of hp, still 460 hp.
There's a rumor that this is going to be the last ICE mustang sold in Europe. The 7th gen will not be imported due to regulations, so the Mach E will be the only car with a pony on the front grille sold in Europe...
If the EURO7 comes into force in the next couple of years, ICE car prices will go up approx 20 to 30% due to additional tech for filtering, small engine cars will be 100% replaced by electric, as the price for installing the recycling stuff to a 1 liter engine will make it unsalable. So what we're gonna get are hybrids, electrics and very very expensive ICE cars with limited performance to match the regulations.
Enjoy the last of the running free stallions as long as they still exist, because soon these will become unicorns...
F the salesman, talk to a mechanic.I thought you had to do the first service at 1600 Miles/2000 KMS but the salesman was telling me not anymore I just need to bring it in within 6 months or 10,000 km whichever comes first. I told him but this is a Mach 1 he said it's no longer needed.
Shall I listen to him or just pay out of pocket and do an early service? (my car has 5 years free service contract)
Spirited during break in?There’s a few “schools of thought” on this subject. Are you doing high-performance driving or just daily driving? If you do HP then you’ll change your oil long before the recommended service interval. If you have a performance built racing motor you’ll change it out after break-in.
If you just daily it with some spirited driving the normal service interval will be just fine. Your warranty won’t magically disappear if you don’t change your original oil before 5K miles and this isn’t 1968, new engines have much tighter tolerances and will not shave metal off of the reciprocating mass during break-in.
CJPP just dropped the video, have a look yourself.