strictly my own opinion but I haven't liked the back end of the Mustangs in years. they look so good coming toward you and then once they pass, it's like "what is that?" the designers start off with good intentions and just kinda fall short once they get to the back. Too Toyota-ish to me in the back. JMHO
I applaud the GT350 and all that Ford is doing. I hope they have more up their sleeve versus the specs of what they have conveyed on the motor. Developing a flat-plane crank engine has to have been a really fun and challenging exercise for Ford engineers (all engineers love a challenge) but I hope the performance parameters have been achieved. Although the ls7 is almost 40% larger in displacement (7.0L versus 5.2L), the physical size and weight of the ls7 I suppose is "much" smaller than the 5.2L motor? (Please correct me, ol' wise ones.) The LS7 debuted in 2006 with 505HP and 470LB-FT of torque and was a relatively mass produced motor. Fast forward NINE YEARS, and Ford is getting hay for a "500-ish" HP /"400-ish" TQ motor that may very well be bigger and heavier. OK, great, I agree that it at least SOUNDS better than the engine GM brought to market almost a decade ago.
I don't want to be the naysayer but I hope the specs that Ford conveyed are very, very, conservative. More importantly, I barely have any concerns at all about peak HP or peak TQ - that's stuff of internet lore. The real enchilada is the shape of the curve and, most importantly, the area under the curve. Once again, having driven the LS7 numerous times on a track, they pull like a goddamn freight train.
Exactly the market Ford is after.
That's all well and good until we start seeing Mustang drivers wearing monogrammed Piloti shoes.
BMW owners do that too? I thought that was only F-car owners?
I don't want to be the naysayer but I hope the specs that Ford conveyed are very, very, conservative. More importantly, I barely have any concerns at all about peak HP or peak TQ - that's stuff of internet lore. The real enchilada is the shape of the curve and, most importantly, the area under the curve. Once again, having driven the LS7 numerous times on a track, they pull like a goddamn freight train.
Unlocking the potential of the FPC engine could become a cottage industry in and of itself. Since Ford retained VVT in the upper end, I can only imagine the number of possible variations in performance that can be configured when you combine nearly infinite variation in (exhaust and intake) timing in conjunction with camshaft designs. Recall the DFV variants of past lore?
Likely the biggest limiter in production form is what the EPA (Ca) will certify. But once it's in your hands, can you say Cosworth?? ;-))
hopefully they start offering the turbo kits. that's where the power is!
GT350R to be unveiled at Detroit Auto Show?