Cory S
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Dec 10, 2019
- Threads
- 47
- Messages
- 3,355
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- 3,751
- Location
- Bradford, NH
- First Name
- Cory
- Vehicle(s)
- 2016 Mustang GT Premium
OP. Keep your ‘23. Enjoy it for 15+ years.
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It’s all about luck. Put 51k trouble free miles on my 15’ EB in under four years.IMO it's always bad to buy a first year of anything, even though this is just a refresh.
Did you drive a base or a premium? I’ve heard the premium screen (all one screen instead of 2) is a lot better. I’m going to look at a couple tomorrow just to see them in person. A base and a premium with the bronze package.A local dealer has several. I went and test drove one. I could get used to the outside looks but I cannot stand the dash. The Ipod I will never like. I do not like navigating screens to activate things and it just looks like an after thought the way they stuck it to the dash. I also do not like the Cameroish dash styling and the low mounted A/C vents.
So S650 is a hard no for me. If I need something new again it will be a gas powered F150.
Added coolers to 2017 GT350. Improved engine in 2019. Better cup holder in 2015.What did Ford "fix" on the 18-23s???? Or the 15-17s? Or previous Mustangs?
The only thing I've heard of Ford "fixing" in their production, was the aluminum shift forks in the MT82.
Other than that, they never change anything. They don't do yearly fixes or running production changes to fix issues.
Don’t forget it’s fully networked so it will phone home to Ford that it’s been messed with. Whether Ford does anything has yet to be determined but you’d have to figure out a way to bypass that too. Which is why Ford is giving the keys to some aftermarket companies like RTR and Whipple.It won't stay locked long. Too much money in tuning mustangs. Several companies will put a team of hackers on it.
Not only that, but financially it would be best to wait a bit. Right now I imagine most dealers will be asking MSRP or more for the first models on the showroom for. In a year or two barring any major economic shift, you should be able to get the same car for thousands below MSRP.I think the smart move is to keep my 23 and wait a couple more years for Ford to get any issues fixed on the new S650
Corvettes are still locked.It won't stay locked long. Too much money in tuning mustangs. Several companies will put a team of hackers on it.
I would define "hacking" a car to tune it, as pure software changes. Unless it's pure software being changed via the OBDII port, an ECU is "locked".ummm, no