OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Originally Posted by Chris 96 WS6
I know lots of people autoX Fbodies but get serious, the car was not meant to be tossed around a parking lot, it was meant to stretch its legs at an open track.
Originally Posted by Chris 96 WS6
I think Darth hit on something....we are changing as a group. its been 3 years since Fbody production ended and many of us are growing up and growing older......Ask yourself has Camaro changed or have YOU changed.
FWIW though, I was a bit disappointed way back in '93 when IRS wasn't at least an option. I was 22 at the time.
Originally Posted by Chris 96 WS6
Also lets try to get away from all the "I feel" crap and start dealing with as many facts or at least beliefs and opinions. Feelings are subjective and pretyt much worthless.
I would argue that this type of car in particular is all about feelings and emotional repsonses.
Last edited by Chewbacca; Apr 14, 2005 at 05:03 PM.
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Originally Posted by jrp4uc
It doesn't even need to be "sporty coupe." I'd say sporty car is more accurate. With today's performance offerings, there is little stigma associated with a four-door, so cross-shopping sedans and coupes is not uncommon.
If I were shopping for a new car right now, it'd look something like:
'05 GTO
'05 WRX STi
'05 Lancer Evo MR
Infiniti G35
If I were shopping for a new car right now, it'd look something like:
'05 GTO
'05 WRX STi
'05 Lancer Evo MR
Infiniti G35
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Originally Posted by steves
I know what Iam getting into. 

G35 vs. SS/WS6???
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Originally Posted by PacerX
You made the claim, I wanna see track times. 2005 Mustang GT vs. a G35.
G35 vs. SS/WS6???
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!
G35 vs. SS/WS6???
AHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!!
I stand by my statement. You can prove me wrong if you'd like. BTW where did SS WS6 come from?
Last edited by steves; Apr 14, 2005 at 09:23 PM.
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Originally Posted by Gold_Rush
They sold what last year? 112,000 mustangs? So in doing the math, around 78,400 were v6's, around 28,000 were GT's, and around 5,600 were Cobra's. I don't know the actual breakdown, but that's what the figures point to if you follow the typical 70%, 25%, and 5% breakdown.
This year though, who knows. Figures should be a lot more since the 04's were near the end of their life-cycle and the new ones are fairly fresh. No Cobra this year and so i expect GT to account for 30-40% of Mustang sales, with v6 making up 60-70%.
This year though, who knows. Figures should be a lot more since the 04's were near the end of their life-cycle and the new ones are fairly fresh. No Cobra this year and so i expect GT to account for 30-40% of Mustang sales, with v6 making up 60-70%.
In 2003, Ford sold 153,134 including 9652 Mach 1s & 13,476 Cobras.
86,440 were V6s, 41,756 were GTs.
Breakdown is roughly: 56% V6 cars & 46% V8s.
Originally Posted by Big Als Z
How many people traded in there 4th gen Camaros and Firebirds for a Mustang because "GM doesnt make the Fbody". They wanted a 2dr V8 sports car for under 30k. THERE IS ONLY ONE ON THE BLOCK! Most sales are due to people who are die hard fans or older people who loved the design new. Younger guys might buy it because its the newwest thing on the block...
I would say few. Why? Both have diehard fans.
If I were to buy a new Mustang and commit to multiple years of car payments, it's because I really like the car.
The last thing on my mind would be "Well, since they don't make Camaro anymore...".
Originally Posted by Chris 96 WS6
I think you guys are still missing the forest for the trees.
The whole point is that there's not 200,000 Mustang buyers out there saying "well I had to buy this car because its the only choice I have".
The whole point is that there's not 200,000 Mustang buyers out there saying "well I had to buy this car because its the only choice I have".

Want an example? How about this:
Originally Posted by dream '94 Z28
...If you take projected Mustang sales, subtract what the F-twins used to sell at (keeping all things equal for simplicity), is the new 'Stang really a stellar sales success?
2. Glossing over the fact that the F-bodies are dead, and have been for 4 years. Killed by the Mustang in sales.
and....
Thus my thesis arguement: Mustanmg sells phenomenolly because it's all alone in a market segment: $25-$28K V8 RWD coupes.
I'm not singling you out dream, so don't take it that way. There are alot of people who have the exact same sentiment as you.
Originally Posted by falchulk
The mustang IRS was crap. A lot of the cobra guys switched to a solid axel anyway. Wheel hop was terrible. IRS is absolutely not required and only a hardcore road racer will notice the diffrence over a properly setup live axel. The new mustang proves that.

Originally Posted by PacerX
I'd like to see track times.
My guess is that the Mustang is quicker on a roadcourse than a G35, and an F4 SS/WS6 will annihilate it.
My guess is that the Mustang is quicker on a roadcourse than a G35, and an F4 SS/WS6 will annihilate it.
A G35 quicker than the Mustang on a roadcourse? Pleeease!
Last edited by guionM; Apr 14, 2005 at 09:32 PM.
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Originally Posted by steves
I stand by my statement. You can prove me wrong if you'd like. BTW where did SS WS6 come from?
I further added that I am pretty darned sure that an F4 SS/WS6 would murder a G35 on a roadcourse (declarative AND definitive), since an F4 SS will actually BEAT a C5 around a roadcourse (a secret Mr. Hill was a bit miffed about if my sources can be trusted... which I believe they can), depending on options. And a C5 will MOST ASSUREDLY chew up and spit out a G35.
Last edited by PacerX; Apr 14, 2005 at 09:37 PM.
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Originally Posted by guionM
Point is IRS doesn't equal better handling, and live axle doesn't equal neanderthal. There's more to it than that.
On a smooth track there's really not a whole lot to choose between the two at the limit, and much to be said in favor of the live axle.
BUT, when you live in... say... Michigan, where salt is the #1 ingredient in the asphalt used to make our roads, the fact that an IRS can provide better handling AND a better ride over a rough surface shines through.
Given that the odds of driving at 9/10ths down a pothole collection optimistically called a "road" in the Great Lakes State is kind of rare, unless you are dodging the local constabulary, I have been very content with the live axle in my SS... and haven't had any "America's Best Police Chases" moments to date.
The only thing I really don't like about live axles is that they eat up HUGE amount of interior space in the vehicle and are part of the reason that 2005 Mudstain rear seats double as torture devices... unless you happen to be an a double amputee... then they're fine.
The Mudstain was more upright and taller than the Camaro (and remains so) because the seating positions of the occupants had to be made more vertical to avoid the live axle. It made the whole car taller. GM solved the same problem by stretching the car and giving a MUCH more aggressive seating position - that women apparently hated if they happen to have forgotten their undies and were wearing a dress... I have no idea why.
Originally Posted by guionM
A G35 quicker than the Mustang on a roadcourse? Pleeease! 

I just wanted to see the data he based that on.
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Personally, I think an '05, 6 speed, G35 Coupe with the sport suspension package, will absolutely eat an '05, 5 speed, Mustang GT on a road course.
Just intuitive......don't have any track times.
Just intuitive......don't have any track times.
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Originally Posted by Z284ever
Personally, I think an '05, 6 speed, G35 Coupe with the sport suspension package, will absolutely eat an '05, 5 speed, Mustang GT on a road course.
Just intuitive......don't have any track times.
Just intuitive......don't have any track times.
But I still say a full-book F4 SS is going to simply up and destroy a G35. God forbid a straightaway actually being present or they're going to have to clean up the G35's remains with a mop.
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Z28Marcus was kind enough to supply this link:
http://www.edmunds.com/insideline/do...01/pageId=5979
If we assume that the '05 GT is faster than the '01 Bullitt, I guess that we can extrapolate.
http://www.edmunds.com/insideline/do...01/pageId=5979
So the Camaro has the muscle, but the Mustang typically has more grace. So what happens when the road gets twisty? To find out, we took these cars to Willow Springs Raceway along with the other sport coupes. The Vegas betting line (you can bet on anything in Vegas, right?) favored the Mustang. Because of its lowered suspension, Tokico shocks and subframe connectors, the Bullitt is arguably the best handling Mustang for 2001. And yes, we're including the SVT Cobra.
But after the tire smoke from the power slides cleared and the lap times were averaged, the Z28 sneaked out a slight edge over the Bullitt. Its average lap time was a 1:24.9 compared to the Mustang's 1:25.3. Round Two goes to the Bow Tie boys.
Now things get tricky. When asked which car they liked better on the track, our editors favored the Mustang. Why? It's certainly more fun to drive. It is more controlled, and it feels better connected to the pavement through its steering and suspension. The Camaro certainly has the ability to handle; it's just that it doesn't communicate well and therefore the driver has to just trust that the big 245/50R16 tires are doing their job properly.
But after the tire smoke from the power slides cleared and the lap times were averaged, the Z28 sneaked out a slight edge over the Bullitt. Its average lap time was a 1:24.9 compared to the Mustang's 1:25.3. Round Two goes to the Bow Tie boys.
Now things get tricky. When asked which car they liked better on the track, our editors favored the Mustang. Why? It's certainly more fun to drive. It is more controlled, and it feels better connected to the pavement through its steering and suspension. The Camaro certainly has the ability to handle; it's just that it doesn't communicate well and therefore the driver has to just trust that the big 245/50R16 tires are doing their job properly.
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Originally Posted by guionM
A G35 quicker than the Mustang on a roadcourse? Pleeease!

Since were all having fun here. I have been trying to find some lap times, but no luck. You guys seem pretty smart so I'll lay it out for you:
2005 Mustang GT
3450lbs
300 hp
320ft-lbs
5 speed manual
17" alloys
all-season radials
12" single piston front brakes
live rear axle
2005 Infiniti G35 Coupe
3512lbs
293 hp
260ft-lbs
6 speed manual
18" alloys
summer tires
13" double piston brembo brakes
IRS
Yeah your right the Mustang on paper sounds like it will kick some G35 *** on the roadcourse
Last edited by steves; Apr 14, 2005 at 10:56 PM.
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Originally Posted by steves
Since were all having fun here. I have been trying to find some lap times, but no luck. You guys seem pretty smart so I'll lay it out for you:
2005 Mustang GT
3450lbs
300 hp
320ft-lbs
5 speed manual
17" alloys
all-season radials
12" single piston front brakes
live rear axle
2005 Infiniti G35 Coupe
3512lbs
293 hp
260ft-lbs
6 speed manual
18" alloys
summer tires
13" double piston brembo brakes
IRS
Yeah your right the Mustang on paper sounds like it will kick some G35 *** on the roadcourse
2005 Mustang GT
3450lbs
300 hp
320ft-lbs
5 speed manual
17" alloys
all-season radials
12" single piston front brakes
live rear axle
2005 Infiniti G35 Coupe
3512lbs
293 hp
260ft-lbs
6 speed manual
18" alloys
summer tires
13" double piston brembo brakes
IRS
Yeah your right the Mustang on paper sounds like it will kick some G35 *** on the roadcourse

If you posted up the data from an F4 SS right alongside, folks wouldn't be tipped off to the fact that the F4 would kick either one of the cars above around pretty easily.
Largely due to GM generating horsepower numbers for the F4 but taking the actual engine horsepower and then subtracting 50, just for giggles.
Anyway, the big number which is the first real tip-off to the comparision is the torque values for each, if we had a idea of the rpm at which the torque peak occurs, it will indicate how much of an advantage the Mustang is really going to have.
Last edited by PacerX; Apr 15, 2005 at 07:34 AM.
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
Originally Posted by Chewbacca
Feelings are most defintely not worthless when it comes down to signing for a 5 or 6 year car loan.
I would argue that this type of car in particular is all about feelings and emotional repsonses.
I would argue that this type of car in particular is all about feelings and emotional repsonses.
It is because I feel that maybe, just maybe GM engineers didn't stumble upon the holy grail of affordable handling back in 1982.
All I'm saying is lets stop taking what are actually beliefs and opinions and positing them as feelings, because I think we muddle our language too much as it is.
Words mean things. "I feel" is not a substitute for "I think", they mean different things.
As for the open track times, I love this article: http://www.musclemustangfastfords.c...mff_deathmatch/ because the way- underpowered '02 SS comes within .3 sec/lap of knocking off the IRS equipped/supercharged '03 Cobra. Equal out the HP for the straights and the winner would have been the SS by a mile.
Re: OK, enough with the fallacies about the Mustang
[QUOTE=guionM]Ford sold to the general public (not to rental companies or fleet buyers) 141,907 Mustangs in 2004 according to Ford marketing figures. Of those: 7182 were Mach 1s & 5664 were Cobras.
In 2003, Ford sold 153,134 including 9652 Mach 1s & 13,476 Cobras.
86,440 were V6s, 41,756 were GTs.
Breakdown is roughly: 56% V6 cars & 46% V8s.QUOTE]
Guion: Because it is important for the discussion I must correct the percentages of V8s vs. V6. I went back and double checked the numbers and I confirmed the numbers I posted for the 2003 MY.
Here are the percentages for the 2001 MY vehicles to use as another point of reference. They have not change for the Mustang but I will throw in the F body numbers also.
2001
Firebird 45%V6, 55%V8 25,743
Camaro 56%V6, 43%V8 35,453
Mustang 65%V6, 35%V8 169,198
Here are the number for the other MY so we get a historical perspective:
1997 MY
Firebird 57%V6, 43%V8 30,459
Camaro 66%V6, 34%V8 58,152
Mustang 64%V6, 36%V8 112,311
1994MY
Firebird 57%V6, 43%V8 45,028
Camaro 66%V6, 34%V8 116,592
Mustang 50%V6, 50%V8 158,421
I see your caveat about rental vehicle, my source is Wards.
In 2003, Ford sold 153,134 including 9652 Mach 1s & 13,476 Cobras.
86,440 were V6s, 41,756 were GTs.
Breakdown is roughly: 56% V6 cars & 46% V8s.QUOTE]
Guion: Because it is important for the discussion I must correct the percentages of V8s vs. V6. I went back and double checked the numbers and I confirmed the numbers I posted for the 2003 MY.
Here are the percentages for the 2001 MY vehicles to use as another point of reference. They have not change for the Mustang but I will throw in the F body numbers also.
2001
Firebird 45%V6, 55%V8 25,743
Camaro 56%V6, 43%V8 35,453
Mustang 65%V6, 35%V8 169,198
Here are the number for the other MY so we get a historical perspective:
1997 MY
Firebird 57%V6, 43%V8 30,459
Camaro 66%V6, 34%V8 58,152
Mustang 64%V6, 36%V8 112,311
1994MY
Firebird 57%V6, 43%V8 45,028
Camaro 66%V6, 34%V8 116,592
Mustang 50%V6, 50%V8 158,421
I see your caveat about rental vehicle, my source is Wards.
Last edited by evok; Apr 15, 2005 at 08:39 AM.


