honeybadger
Just don't care
I'm honestly not sure if they are. their own CEO is fairly open about it.They’re more than capable. It’s a matter of wanting to
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I'm honestly not sure if they are. their own CEO is fairly open about it.They’re more than capable. It’s a matter of wanting to
While yes this is true, you can buy and build a got to be faster and much more reliable than a zr1x for cheaper than buying it new. I'll take that over the Chevy all day long. All you see now I'm the headlines are Chevy and I'm being sued because their corvettes are burning down with 100 miles on them, their trucks are blowing up engines left and right and they have no fix. YikesSeriously… as much as it pains me to say this as a lifelong Ford guy, if Ford really wants the Mustang to go toe-to-toe with what Chevy is doing right now, they need to swing for the fences.
Imagine this for a second: a twin-turbo Coyote variant designed from the ground up to live as a TT engine, stuffed into a GT-esque body—maybe even on a lightweight aluminum chassis to keep costs in check. Pair that with both RWD and an AWD/electric assist option, similar to what Chevy is doing with the newer C8 variants, and suddenly we’ve got a real heavyweight fight on our hands.
Because right now… as much as my blue-oval heart hates typing this… the Mustang and the newer C8 lineup—Grand Sport, Grand Sport X, ZR1/ZR1X—aren’t really playing the same game. Chevy brought a railgun to a fistfight while we’re still arguing about tire compounds and exhaust notes.
Don’t get me wrong—I bleed Ford. The Voodoo is one of the greatest engines ever built and the GT350 is still one of the most emotional cars Ford has ever made. But man… if Ford unleashed a purpose-built TT Coyote halo car, the entire performance world would lose its mind overnight.
A Ford guy can dream, right?
I honestly can’t help but think Ford could build something like this if they really wanted to. Maybe it wouldn’t land at the exact price point needed to go head-to-head with the top-tier C8 variants right out of the gate… but the capability is definitely there. Honestly, with the right budget, I feel like half the engineers/gear heads on this forum could probably pull it off too.Ford priced a supercharged coyote at a starting price of 103k and their 400k ultimate mustang gets clapped by a 200k Vette. Im not sure they're capable of producing what you say, TBH.
Would love to see it, tho
They should have a lot of that knowledge already from the TT V6 in the Ford GT. They ran LeMans with that setup so they know how to do a mid engine setup under extreme conditions, just need to adapt it to the Coyote/Predator platform. Like you and I and some others have said, Ford has the knowledge. It’s whether they actually want to do itHalf-joking here, but if I were Ford’s skunkworks team I’d start by grabbing a ZR1X, tearing it completely down, reverse engineering the major systems, and really studying the head flow, intake architecture, turbo packaging, and thermal management. That’s where a lot of the magic lives. Then take those lessons and apply them to the Coyote / Voodoo / Predator architecture—because those engines already have a ridiculously strong foundation.
That Coyote GT would be what $600k?
[/Q
If Chevy can make a sub 250K Domestic Supercar than Ford can too
‘exactly. Too many suckers willing to pay fords fairy tale prices killing the rest of us.If Chevy can make a sub 250K Domestic Supercar than Ford can too
The GTD. Sort of tongue in cheek, but also kinda real. The 2026 GTD uses the newest version of the DSSV dampers the 2015 Z28 used.What did Ford put the 2015 Camaro Z/28 suspension in?
In that case so do the ZR2 trucksThe GTD. Sort of tongue in cheek, but also kinda real. The 2026 GTD uses the newest version of the DSSV dampers the 2015 Z28 used.
In that case so do the ZR2 trucks