A guy showed up to our cruise on Saturday with what I thought, from a distance, was a Dark Horse. Turned out to be an S550 with a Dark Horse front end. Hadn't seen that before. Unfortunately I didn't take a closeup of his car but here's a cropped group pic and another pic he posted on FB.
In Texas where I live not only are 2 plates required but the front one must be down in front. Displaying it in the windshield only draws attention to failure to comply with the rule, so I keep mine under the driver's seat.
Today I drove it on a 150 mile back road "cruise" where posted speed limits were sometimes obeyed. :wink: Always fun driving with fellow Mustang people.
Yeah I suspect you can't go with much more up front because of inside clearance to the strut. That's why the Dark Horse handling package wheels are 10.5 width with +24 offset. There might be a little more wiggle room with 285 tires, though.
I agree with that. But you said it would push the rear out more than an inch and "poke." 13 mm won't poke.
(In what I posted before I used OEM PP wheel size of 9.5. Apparently the OP has the base Dark Horse wheels 10 inches wide on his GT.)
I agree with that. But you said it would push the rear out more than an inch and "poke." 13 mm won't poke.
(In what I posted before I used OEM PP wheel size of 9.5. Apparently the OP has the base Dark Horse wheels 10 inches wide on his GT.)
Why do you want 10.5 wheel width if you're going with 285 tires? If you get 20x10 with an offset of 35-37 or so on all 4 you can rotate the tires front to back.
I did install camber plates in front as an abundance of caution but I'm not sure they were needed. Didn't do anything else.
I know Steeda has a bump steer kit that's supposed to correct suspension geometry for lowered cars, but I don't think it's needed unless you go with more than 1 inch of drop.