- Joined
- Jul 4, 2014
- Threads
- 3
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- 3,156
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- Location
- Irvine, ca
- Vehicle(s)
- 2003 cobra
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- #136
why not? In spite of the “all new” marketing snd s65 designation, it’s really just an s550 refresh and those only last a few years as it is.We can all dream but Ford wont bring out a really new Mustang in a year or two after they just brought the all new for 2024 refreshed S550 called S650…The platform is what it is not a sportscar like alpha where front does not understeer and rear does not oversteer or even rotate into turns which the alpha did not either…Aluminum body to reduce weight is part of the F150 but a pipe dream for the Mustang so here no realistic changes either…What I see is what Ford could do to generate some excitement and make it worth the price they are asking is increase the engine bore by 10 mm which would necessitate a new block that would also be appreciated by F150 buyers who prefer V8 sound over V6 baritone as also more reliability because no turbos can go bad and bring much needed TORQUE to make the whole experience more fun…Also a few buttons would be great so you dont have to touch the screens and look at fingerprints and of course better quality would be a win/win for customer and manufacturer…!We’ll see what the future brings but its sad the so much money was wasted on Mach-E & Lightning…But GM & Stellantis wasted even more on the “electric future”…LOL
But no one is expecting Ford to abandon s650 despite its tepid reception.
what we are hoping for is thst ford is using this borrowed time snd past 20 years of saving platform money to prep a truly capable new platform that sets the amustang up for success from the ground up at the fundamental level and offers the engines, thr suspension, and the design to maximize that potential.
so much of what ford has tried is good. The engines, the transmissions, the branding, the digital focus on the BMWesque interior, etc. but it’s all sandbagged by a 20 year old platform that was never designed to handle all that well, bubble gum and duct tape engineering add-one notwithstanding. A rigid, lightweight platform with geometry designed from the ground up to be the next generation performer would be a great start. Invest in thst snd the returns on everything else from engine power (whether electric, hybrid, or ICE) to suspension tweaking will yield much greater returns on investment. Keep the convenience factors and don’t offer too many different models, charging an arm and a leg for every upgrade. We don’t need a dark horse or Mach 1. Make all the GTs thst level and the economy of scale will keep it affordable.
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