Reviewed 2013 Dodge Challenger SRT8: Is It Still Mopar or NoCar?

 

For some in the muscle car community the phrase Mopar or NoCar still rings true.  The 2013 Dodge Challenger SRT8 was our first chance to get behind the wheel of the modern retro muscle car, and it rounded out or sampling, having previously driven the Camaro and the Mustang.

The Dodge has always looked good, but how does it drive?  That’s what we find out in this episode of Rumblestrip.NET and Ten Minute Test Drive.

Reviewed: 2013 Ford Mustang GT

Not as often as we’d like we get to test and spend time with cars we’d buy with our own money, this happens to be one of those times. We got to spend a week with the 2013 Mustang GT and the contrast in how far this car has come from the 95 Mustang GT that we own is remarkable.

How good is this GT? Good enough we might just buy one with our own cash!


Reviewed: 2013 Ford Mustang V6

If you’ve followed this blog for any time, you know that we are huge Mustang fans.  We’ve owned in the past an 83 GT, a 92 LX 5.0 Notchback and our current Supercharged 95GT.  What we wanted to know was is this modern V6 Mustang something close to what the 5.0 LX was back in the day, or is it just a secretary’s car?

Lets dive in and take a look!  Also make sure that you check out our full gallery of pictures.

Blame California: Why You Can’t Have The TracKey For Your BOSS 302

For many people who have bought the BOSS 302 Mustang, they have been wondering when they would receive their TracKey.  It is the magic red key, that changes 200 parameters in the cars systems to provide maximum performance.  It is “For Off Road Purposes Only”, but yet CARB, the California Air Resources Board, has not signed off on it.  Ford can not guarentee that the TracKey does not affect emissions, the engine’s durability or mess with on-board computer diagnostics.

Given how well California’s government works, it may never happen, and once again, the People’s Republic of Kaliforna fowls it up for the rest of us.  In a responce someone made this brilliant video which plays on the meme of changing the subtitles to a particular scene in the movie “Downfall

Have a look and be prepared to be in tears with laughter!

Mustang Launch

Sure you’ve watched cars pull massive wheelies when they launch on a drag strip, but how many do you see get up in the wheelie bars at the 1/8th mile!!  I think this car is making a bit of boost about 700 feet out!

Even Top Gear’s Jeremy Clarkson yelling POWER might say, oh, that’s a bit much maybe.

The New 2011 Mustang Five Liter Motor

The information on this has been leaking out since the day of the press event.  There are many well known websites that broke the embargo, we chose not to jump on board with that and just wait till the agreed upon time.  I know, this is a shocking turn of events in the web world of FIRST and GOTCHYA.

Here are the detail highlights of the new motor.

412 HP @6500 RPM  390TQ @4250 RPM on PREMIUM FUEL.  Horsepower drops to 402 on 87 Octane fuel.

7000RPM Redline

11:1 Comperession

83HP/Liter

Twin Independent Variable Cam Timing (Both intake and exhaust are independent and variable)

Aluminium Four Bolt main with Two Cross Bolts per main 11mm & 9mm bolts

Nodular Iron main caps

Forged Steel crank with full counterweights

Hypereutectic Pistons

Forged powder metal “I” beam rods with floating pins

Composite Intake Manifold

Crossflow cooling with intake manifold cooled first

80mm Throttle Body

34lb/hr Injectors

Main chain drives outboard cam, secondary cam drives inboard cam

5% better head flow than GT500 heads

10 pounds heavier than outgoing 4.6 3V motor.

Wide band airflow management with active knock and tip in management






Also announced was the Boss 302R:

Ford Racing is introducing the BOSS 302R, a factory-built race car ready for track days and road racing in a number of Grand-Am, SCCA and NASA classes. Each base model of the Mustang BOSS 302R will come with a 5.0-liter four-valve engine, six-speed manual transmission, a roll cage, race seats, safety harness, data acquisition and race dampers/springs, and a Brembo brake and tire package.  Price will be $79,000

Reviewed The 2010 Ford Mustang GT

 

In this review we are going to try something a bit different and have you play some selected music as you read through this.  You may see a bit of a bias towards music that comes from Detroit, so, we’d like you to play along at home by playing the clips as you read this.

 

 *John Lee Hooker – Boogie Chillun

When we finally got the opportunity to spend some time with the 2010 Mustang GT we were excited, if for nothing else to compare and contrast it to the Camaro SS we drove back in July.  While the new Camaro has been very well received, the body refreshing of the Mustang for 2010 was universally praised.  The huzzah’s was near universal, though we weren’t one of them.  

 

When the S197 came out for 2005 we WERE on board with that redesign as a great improvement, drawing on the heritage of the 1st generation Mustangs without being overtly retro.  It wasn’t one thing about the 2010 rebody that we didn’t like initially, rather, there seemed to be quite a bit of fuss over what didn’t seem like much more than a nose job and some minor restyling of the rear.  Like many other cars, the Mustang plays better in person, than in pictures.  The restyling has made the overall look of the car seem more aggressive.  There are body lines that taper both on the front and in the rear that keep the car from being as slab sided and give it some definition.  At the end of our test we didn’t have any of the reservations that we did previously about the styling, but we still questioned all the noise that was made about it when it debuted.

 

When it comes to cars like the Camaro and the Mustang, and the people that drive them, they tend to fall into two camps.  You are either a Camaro person, or you are a Mustang person.  Many of the things that we didn’t like as much about the Camaro, it feeling very wide, a bit heavy and such, are just the items that Camaro people look for.  While those same people find that the Mustang feels too narrow and lacks a heavy, substantial feel on the road.  This observation came from several different people, independent of each other, and it explains much.  


 

*Iggy – I want to be your dog

 

Now full disclosure here, I have owned two Mustangs in the past.  First was an 83 GT and the other was a 92 five liter LX notchback.  When we first got behind the wheel of the Mustang, the absolute first reaction was, “feels like home”, or to quote Chandler Bing, “it’s the thing that’s been missing from your hand”.  Even thought the last Mustang we drove was a pre-production 05 car, getting behind the wheel of the 2010 car felt much like getting in the 92.  The interior space felt much tighter on the inside than the Camaro, which we liked, there weren’t the massive blind spots in the rear three quarter view that there were in the Camaro, and two minutes into the initial drive, we felt that while the steering was over boosted, the car felt more nimble and much lighter on it’s feet.

The Mustang has evolved from being a bangers car which was only good in a straight line.  That’s not to say that it’s going to be dicing with say a Porsche Boxster or a Lotus Elise as the best handling car on the market, not by a long shot, that said, it’s better than you’d expect.  Much was said by the enthusiast press who’s focus is on Sports Cars about the Mustang continuing to have a straight axle rather than an Independent Rear Suspension, and the fact that memo’s have surfaced how the IRS system would have only added $100 to the cost of the car.  This is really a 1% problem.  Only 1% of the people who buy the car will notice, or even care about the fact that it lacks an independent rear.  Ford has spent some time refining the ride and handling of this car and unless you are a hard core auto crosser or out doing track days, it’s fine.  The enthusiast crowd who has historically been drawn to this car is the drag race community and they are more than happy that the IRS was not the choice as it’s durability in those conditions can be a bit dodgy.  Is it a serious GT car, no, but is it a serviceable GT car, yes.

 

There has also been some conversation about the lack of a six speed manual for the Mustang.  The only advantage a six speed may offer is a slightly higher overdrive gear in sixth, but at 75-80MPH the engine is turning 2200-2300 RPM’s .  The advantage in MPG would be minimal. We were a bit disappointed in the milage that we did get from the Mustang on the highway. A couple of different efforts where we set set the cruise at 75 and drove for some distance only netted 23 mpg, mixed driving was just shy of 20.

As an every day car it works well. the driver and passenger have plenty of room, the back seat has a surprising amount of space.  With the drivers or passengers seat set in what would be a normal position, there is room enough for a 5’11” person to sit.  That person may not want to ride back there for a couple hours, but for a normal length drive it’s fine.  The trunk has a good amount of room as well.  It swallowed, without a problem our bi-weekly run to Costco, Trader Joe’s and Meijer’s.

The body wasn’t the only thing to get a refresh for the 2010 model year, the interior also got a refresh.  The gages still have a 60’s retro look to them, but are easier to read. The quality of materials, along with their fit and finish also received a major upgrade.  Interiors are one of the areas I’m most critical on.  While the body styling may capture you and be the initial infatuation, it’s the interior that you have to live with.  I have said, and maintain, that if manufacturers spent an extra $100-$200 on the interior they could get $1000 worth of pricing.  The Mustang is no different.  When you get to a $30,000 price point there should be NO hard plastic surfaces, AT ALL!  That said if we are comparing the Camaro interior to the Mustang interior, the materials are much better in the Mustang. 

The Mustang comes with Ford’s SYNC system and it works as advertised, save one issue.  The SYNC system doesn’t particularly like the iPod Touch with the 3.0 operating system.  This is an issue we have experienced in multiple Ford vehicles, and after spending some time in various forums there is a software update that was in beta testing as we finish this and should be available after the first of the year.  The issue is the system is forever trying to index your iPod.  We had a 45 minute drive and it never did.  If it does ever complete it’s indexing, it doesn’t remember it and will have to start all over again the next time you start the car.  This is only a problem with the Touch though, as the iPod Classic worked just fine.





 

White Stripes – Fell In Love With A Girl

What matters most to people interested in Mustang’s and Pony Cars in general is the lump in the front.  When for the 2005 Ford upgraded the 4.6 SOHC motor to a three valve head, there was a huge sigh of relief from the performance community.  

The two valve, two cam motor while serviceable, compared to the Five Liter pushrod motor it replaced, it was hated and even vilified.  Not because it wasn’t a pushrod motor, more that it wasn’t really any better for horsepower and the torque was missing all together.  Other than the four valve four cam Cobra motor, in naturally aspirated form, it was only in 2005 that the torque levels approached what they were in 1995, the last year for the the 5.0 motor in the Mustang.  In those ten years though the car packed on some three to four hundred pounds and it can be felt.

While the thee valve motor has good torque, it doesn’t quite have that plant your lower back into the seat push that the five liter cars of days past did.  Here the Camaro is worlds better then the Mustang, though it SHOULD BE as it has a just shy of a 97 cubic inch displacement advantage.  The Camaro kicks in 100 more horsepower and torques than the Mustang, AND at a lower rpm which is noticeable when driving on the street. 

Salvation is at hand though.  For 2011 there are two new motors coming for the Mustang, a V6 that will nearly match the three valve V8 in power and an all new Five Liter “Coyote” V8 that will match or exceed the Camaro in power.  We look forward to driving both versions to see if they address our issues.  In fact if you are thinking of buying a new Mustang I would say hold off till the new motors are released.  Not only will they have more power, but they will have better fuel mileage as well.

 

MC5 – Kick Out The Jams

As much as I liked and was impressed with the Camaro, I like the Mustang better, but I admit I AM a Mustang person.  The Mustang is much like Detroit, it’s raw, it’s much maligned and it’s unapologetic about who and what it is, you will either get it and bond with it, or you won’t.  The best thing you can do with the Mustang GT is to roll down the windows, put your foot to the floor, shift it like you sold it, listen to the siren song that is a Detroit V8, channel your inner MC5 on and yell at the top of your lungs “KICK OUT THE JAMS MOTHER FU@KERS!!!!!!