A Mustang with a Track pack?
Corvettes and Vipers grab the glory for Old Glory at temples of speed such as Le Mans. The lumbering, log-axle Mustang is just a quarter-miler for the tattoo-and-tobacco crowd, right?
Actually, mes amis, the Mustang is America’s other road-racing workhorse. It has its own pro series, the eight-race Mustang Challenge. And there were more than a dozen Mustangs on the grid at Daytona this past January when a Roush-prepared Mustang finished second in the three-hour Koni Challenge race. It made all its rights and lefts better than Porsche 911s and BMW M3s.
No, we wouldn’t expect that hierarchy to hold on the street, even if the 2010 Track-pack Mustang GT is billed as the hairpin-and-carousel king of the newly reskinned Mustang lineup. Still, Ford’s old pony has a long history of making incremental improvements as it ages, and the Track package shows that the late-night lights still burn in some windows at Ford.
Building a Track-pack Mustang on the order form starts with a GT Premium and its 315-hp, 4.6-liter V-8 and five-speed manual, for $31,845. The $1495 Track package swaps out the 3.31 or 3.55 axle for a 3.73 limited-slip rear end with carbon friction plates. The shocks are less forgiving in both compression and rebound, the anti-roll bars are thicker, and dual-piston front brake calipers with performance pads from the 2009 Bullitt model do the stopping. Also, the stability-control system is retuned to tolerate more sideways play.
Finally, some very expensive Pirelli P Zero summer tires are fitted with white gloves. The size is 255/40ZR-19. The replacement price at Tire Rack: $398. Each. Avoid parking in dark alleys.
Off to the track we marched, taking along a standard Mustang GT rolling on its Pirelli P Zero Nero all-season tires for comparison. The results were illuminating.
Besides new sheetmetal, all 2010 Mustangs are recalibrated for less squish, less wiggle, less pogo, and less teeter-totter in the turns. Lay on the Track-pack version, and the strings are pulled even tauter.
The body isn’t allowed to slump to the outside as much. Helm response quickens, and corner placement gets finer. The sticky Pirellis earn their tariff, maintaining a gummy, squeal-free grip that keeps the front end carving smooth arcs.
Mustang steering has always been numb, and the Track pack doesn’t force any more circulation into it. Don’t bring along a Miata, as we did, or you’ll just get depressed. The Mustang’s flat seats allow you to flop around—we had knee bruises at day’s end—and the brake pedal started melting after a few laps, requiring frequent cool-downs.
At $33,340 before discounts, a Mustang GT with the Track package stampedes into territory prowled by the Nissan 370Z, among others. Some would say, “So what?” More is at issue than test numbers cavorting on paper. The Mustang is America, Manifest Destiny rolling on radials. Lining it up next to a Z—we did it once, back in 2002—is like serving sashimi with succotash.
And the Mustang is as fun as firecrackers on the Fourth. Everything is oversized and executed at volume 11, from the broad sweep of the double-hump dash to the big-grab shifter to the Yankee roar of the V-8 getting to 60 mph in 5.1 seconds.
It’s easy to be fast and pitch it sideways in a drift. And a sport mode in the new-for-2010 stability control allows a little more hooliganism within the safety net.
The quality is better for 2010, especially inside, where stitched panels on the doors and tighter-fitting, squishable plastics have relieved the gloom of cheapness in the previous model. But curses were muttered when the jagged splinter of an indifferently applied spot weld in the trunk tore an expensive down comforter. A Friday build, perhaps?
Though freeway ride suffers some with the Track package, Mustang fans who prefer candy-cane curbs to Christmas trees get a lot more control of their fillies. And for not much extra cabbage.
Saturday, March 28, 2009
Blog Archive
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2009
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March
- 2008 Saleen S7 Twin Turbo
- 2007 Skyker C12 Zagato
- A hobby for automaniacs
- the best and popular modification Nissan Skyline GTR
- racing luxrious sport car Nissan Skyline GT-R Cals...
- racing most Eunos Roadster V-Spec 1991
- racing most Eunos Roadster V-Spec 1991
- racing luxrious sport car Nissan Skyline GT-R Cals...
- the best and popular modification Nissan Skyline GTR
- winner best sport Car Show 2007
- winner best sport Car Show 2007
- ZO6 Chevrolet Corvette The most powerful passenger...
- Hummer HX Concept
- Porsche celebrates 250,000th Cayenne
- Porsche celebrates 250,000th Cayenne
- BMW Alpina B6 GT3
- BMW Alpina B6 GT3
- Toyota Verso crams three rows into Corolla-sized p...
- Toyota Verso crams three rows into Corolla-sized p...
- BMW 730 Ld SE Carbon
- BMW 730 Ld SE Carbon
- The All Electric 2009 Roadster
- Chevrolet Volt Concept
- Volkswagen Tiguan
- Volkswagen Touareg
- Volkswagen Touareg R50
- 2009 Jaguar XK Series
- 2009 Jaguar XK Series
- A Top of the best cars of 2008
- A Top of the best cars of 2008
- New Mazda3 MPS
- New Mazda3 MPS
- Audi r8 quattro
- Audi r8 quattro
- Lexus RX450h the new third generation RX
- Lexus RX450h the new third generation RX
- AUDI R8 4.2 FSI QUATTRO R TRONIC
- AUDI R8 4.2 FSI QUATTRO R TRONIC
- CHEVROLET CORVETTE ZR1
- CHEVROLET CORVETTE ZR1
- 2009 Fiat 500c
- 2009 Fiat 500c
- 2010 Ford Mustang GT Road Test
- 2010 Ford Mustang GT Road Test
- 2010 Chevrolet Volt Price Depend on Gas Price
- 2010 BMW Z4 U.S. Priced From $46,575
- 2010 BMW Z4 U.S. Priced From $46,575
- 2009 Infiniti G37 Convertible Road Test
- 2009 Infiniti G37 Convertible Road Test
- 2009 VW Jetta TDI Road Test: Turbocharged Torque
- 2009 VW Jetta TDI Road Test: Turbocharged Torque
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