thehunterooo
Well-Known Member
Shouldn’t it be the Camaro since it is faster?
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Faster doesn't always make for a better car.Shouldn’t it be the Camaro since it is faster?
It's America's longest running continuous production sports-type car. Not even the Corvette can claim that.
Shouldn’t it be the Camaro since it is faster?
Uh, the Corvette has more than a decade on the Mustang. Missed one year, but that hardly seems important.It's America's longest running continuous production sports-type car. Not even the Corvette can claim that.
Uh, the Corvette has more than a decade on the Mustang. Missed one year, but that hardly seems important.
Continuous production is the operative phrase. The Corvette ran continually for 49 years from 1953 - 1982. The Mustang is in it's 55th unbroken year counting the 2019 models.Uh, the Corvette has more than a decade on the Mustang. Missed one year, but that hardly seems important.
Continuous production doesn’t mean anything to anyone, so it’s kind of an odd thing to add so the Mustang could “win”.Continuous production is the operative phrase. The Corvette ran continually for 49 years from 1953 - 1982. The Mustang is in it's 55th unbroken year counting the 2019 models.
Once Corvette broke the cycle in 1983, the clock stopped.
Why are you arguing this point? I simply pointed out an undeniable truth that adds credence to the growing Mustang lore which ties into the subject of this thread. Whether it's unimportant is simply your opinion, but that's not fact.Continuous production doesn’t mean anything to anyone, so it’s kind of an odd thing to add so the Mustang could “win”.
ApparentlyContinuous production doesn’t mean anything to anyone, so it’s kind of an odd thing to add so the Mustang could “win”.