Spartan
Well-Known Member
Well you have the EB slotted at 310 or so and the GT at 435. You have a good gap or so there....but in order for the 2.7 or 3.5 to get in there, the GT would have to be bumped up to 455 or so.Okay, I know I mention engines quite a bit when it comes to 2018. But I had a thought about it last night.
Looking at Camaro, we know it has a I4-V6-V8 lineup and Mustang currently has V6-I4-V8 lineup for 2017. As far as I'm concerned, the 3.7L is gone after this MY. But from a buyers standpoint and to align itself with Camaro, why not add a EBV6 in the middle to give Mustang the same basic engine lineup as Camaro? Completely disregarding tunes and aftermarket, keep the EB at its current power figures, and offer an optional EBV6 for a set price; just like the V6 is an optional extra on Camaro. That gives you two basic and standard Mustang models (GT350, GT500, and Mach 1 aside), the EB and GT, but three engine options. :shrug:
My other theory is Ford could pull a "1969" on us, so to speak, and make the Mach 1 what the GT is now, with performance bits and upgrades from the GT350, and make the GT an EBV6. But that's more of a stretch.
Anything new powertrain-wise is what's keeping me waiting for 2018.
Like I've said on here, Ford really d--ked over the V6 crowd. That's a great engine and for someone who doesn't want a V8 or turbo it's the perfect between. Hopefully we see the EB6 sooner or later. I'd still rather have a 6 then 4 in the Mustang.
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