Stay up to date on Ford Mustang GT stories from top car industry writers - Hagerty Media https://www.hagerty.com/media/tags/ford-mustang-gt/ Get the automotive stories and videos you love from Hagerty Media. Find up-to-the-minute car news, reviews, and market trends when you need it most. Fri, 26 Apr 2024 14:01:12 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 Red Straw to the Rescue! Mustang GT Stolen and Recovered https://www.hagerty.com/media/member-stories/red-straw-to-the-rescue-mustang-gt-stolen-and-recovered/ https://www.hagerty.com/media/member-stories/red-straw-to-the-rescue-mustang-gt-stolen-and-recovered/#comments Sat, 27 Apr 2024 19:00:00 GMT https://www.hagerty.com/media/?p=389619

April 17 marked sixty years since the Ford Mustang’s public debut at the 1964 New York World’s Fair. The original pony car immediately became a pop-culture and automotive phenom, and it remains one of the most impactful cars in history. Click here to follow along with our multi-week 60 Years of Mustang coverage. —Ed.

It was too early for the phone to ring. One of my workers was on the line, out of breath, saying that the Mustang was gone. Stolen!  

I had left my beloved ’65 Mustang GT convertible in the fenced, locked yard at my office. The thieves managed to cut multiple padlocks, moved a 15-foot truck, and got away with my baby.

Luis Espinosa 1965 Ford Mustang GT head on
Ray Elgin/bellenbeau.com

When I was a teenager growing up in Mexico, I saw the French movie A Man and a Woman and fell in love—with the ’65 Mustang convertible. I told my mom, “I’m going to have that car one day.” Years later, I graduated from college in the U.S. and surprised my mom by showing off El Poni, my Rangoon Red ’65 Mustang GT convertible. She cried.

Fast forward a couple of decades, and El Poni was on blocks in the garage, with vermin living comfortably in the engine compartment. My wife told me I needed to fix it or sell it. I couldn’t part with the car, so I put in the time and money to build it into a show piece. I was rewarded with the biggest surprise of my life when I won the Mayor’s Trophy at the 2019 La Jolla Concours d’Elegance.

Luis Espinosa 1965 Ford Mustang GT LaJolla Concours
La Jolla Concours

A few months later, we were in the middle of the Covid pandemic, and El Poni was gone. I was heartbroken, and so were my friends and family. My wife and I drove around neighborhoods in hopes of finding the car, to no avail. We reported the theft but heard nothing.

Then, a miracle. A year and a half after the theft, I found a listing for a red ’65 Mustang GT convertible on eBay. I stared at the photos and saw that the rear window was glass instead of vinyl. Then I saw the custom armrest. Then the gold-painted air filter painted gold. I knew it was mine.

Luis Espinosa 1965 Ford Mustang GT eBay listing
The eBay listing that led Espinosa back to his baby.Luis Espinosa

Amazingly, the people selling on eBay listed their city and included a photo of the car taken in front of their condo. A detective from the Chino Police Department, who happened to own a ’66 Mustang convertible, located the car with the assistance of the California Highway Patrol. The VIN plate on the driver’s side had been punched out. To verify the VIN, the passenger-side fender—held on by 18 bolts—would have to be removed. The detective had a better idea: He asked if there was something specific that would identify the car as mine. I remembered I’d put a red plastic straw in the windshield washer bag to hold it up. And when the detective opened the hood, he exclaimed “Yep, it’s your car! Come and get it.”

I went to church and lit a candle, so grateful to have this beloved car once again.

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Mustang Member Story: The K-Code Transformation of a ’65 GT https://www.hagerty.com/media/member-stories/mustang-member-story-the-k-code-transformation-of-a-65-gt/ https://www.hagerty.com/media/member-stories/mustang-member-story-the-k-code-transformation-of-a-65-gt/#comments Fri, 26 Apr 2024 18:00:00 GMT https://www.hagerty.com/media/?p=389668

April 17 marked 60 years since the Ford Mustang’s public debut at the 1964 New York World’s Fair. The original pony car immediately became a pop-culture and automotive phenom, and it remains one of the most impactful cars in history. We’re celebrating with stories of the events surrounding the Mustang’s launch, the history of the early cars, and tales from owners. Click here to follow along with our multi-week 60 Years of Mustang coverage. -Ed.

When the 289 in my 1965 GT Mustang was ready for a rebuild after 15 years of driving, I made a decision not unfamiliar to owners of original Mustangs: If I was going to pull the car’s motor and have it overhauled, why not take the next step and upgrade the driving experience? Rather than opting for a stroker kit, a roller cam, or some other modern engine upgrade, however, I decided to do something a bit more historic: a period-correct conversion of my car’s original 225-hp A-code into a replica of the high-performance, solid-lifter K-code 289. In fact, while my mechanic and I were at it, why not push the replica idea to the next step and give the car a “Cobra 289,” the 306-hp version of the engine Carroll Shelby tweaked for the GT350?

Now, this kind of transformation has been an enthusiast option that goes all the way back to 1965. It’s been the subject plenty of magazine and online articles and videos, and you can buy replica K-code 289s on eBay.

Dan Flores 1965 Ford Mustang GT 289 badge
Dan Flores

The coupe was far and away the most common body style of those original Mustangs. Ford moved more than a million coupes in the first generation but barely 100,000 fastbacks, and two-thirds of those sold in 1965. After the first year’s novelty, fastback sales plunged drastically.

For those of us who were on the scene then, none of this is a mystery. The coupes were minimally less expensive than the fastback or convertible, but that wasn’t the reason 80 percent of all 1965–66 Mustangs were coupes. Rather, the ’60s generation simply preferred the original, the version Lee Iacocca sprang on the world in the spring of 1964, the car that won the Tiffany Award for Excellence in Design. At a time when many Mustang buyers owned only one car, coupes offered a slight advantage in rear seat headroom and trunk space over fastbacks. They even possessed a slight performance edge as they were the lightest of the three body styles. As dazzling as the sleek fastbacks seem now, as fetching as convertibles are in the market, in the 1960s, it was easy to be smitten with the Mustang coupe. Only after about 1968 did the fastback Mustang begin to replace the coupe in our collective affections.

In high school and college I owned three Mustangs—a pair of Springtime Yellow ’66 coupes and a Candy Apple Red ’68 fastback. But none of those cars approached the special qualities of the car I bought in 2004 to salve my Mustang nostalgia. What I had always swooned over was an original GT, the first performance/cosmetic version of the Mustang. Offered only with the two top engines, Mustang GTs got disc brakes, quicker steering, and stiffer suspensions, along with eye candy like round gauges with 140-mph speedometers, fog lights, trumpet exhausts through the rear body, and racing stripes.

Dan Flores 1965 Ford Mustang GT profile
Dan Flores

The GT cars were beautiful regardless of body style, but another original Mustang truth is that the majority of factory GT cars were coupes. Most weren’t strippers, though. As period road tests (like the one Motor Trend did of a ’66 GT) and books on Mustang history offer as evidence, a common look for the original GT Mustang was a coupe with a two-tone body, with rocker panel racing stripes matched to a black or cream vinyl top designed to set off a complementary paint color. It was a striking aesthetic combination then, and still is now.

This was the Mustang that had always entranced me. What I found and bought in 2004 was one of the first run of Mustang GTs built. It came out of the San Jose plant in May 1965, the second full month of GT production, as a two-toned coupe with white stripes and cream vinyl top gracing a Silver Blue body. Driven off the truck onto the Al Cheney Ford lot in Santa Cruz, California, the car was absolutely loaded. Beyond the GT package and A-code 289, its options included Cruise-O-Matic, air conditioning, power steering, Rally-Pac gauges, styled-steel wheels, dual red-band tires, an Equalock differential, deluxe two-tone interior, deluxe steering wheel, deluxe seat belts, a console, radio, a vinyl top, banded tinted glass, the convenience group, backup lights, an interior-controlled side mirror, a passenger side mirror, and two-speed wipers. Despite lacking the ultimate option—the Hi-Po engine—with delivery and dealer prep, this car was a $4000 showroom starlet, rare altitude for a factory Mustang.

Dan Flores 1965 Ford Mustang GT interior
Dan Flores

Then there was its subsequent history. As a loaded GT, it had clearly impressed its early owners enough that when it came to me 40 years down the line, not only were its factory engine and transmission still in place, it still sported all its date-coded tinted glass. Equally indicative of a rare, no-hit lifetime, fore and aft it wore its first set of dealer license plate frames from that initial Santa Cruz sale at Al Cheney Ford. Fingering the patina on its worn ignition key, a friend offered that when that key was bright and new this car would have been cruising California’s Highway 1 with the Beatles’ latest, Rubber Soul, playing on its radio.

The car came to me with a ten-year-old, mostly cosmetic restoration familiar to anyone who watches auto-garage TV. The engine had gotten a rebuild, and the car had been resprayed in its original color and given a new interior. Aesthetically, it was gorgeous. Beneath the skin, as a mechanic who looked at it for me said, it was “bone stock.” I proceeded to replace the woodgrain appliques on the dash with real wood and attended to various faults as they surfaced. But in its new home at the foot of the Rockies in Santa Fe, New Mexico, for its next 20,000 miles I mostly just drove it. Eventually, a tired and protesting suspension, grabbing brakes, faltering compression, and oil smoke on start-up signaled the time for a full mechanical restoration.

In good tune, a 289 Mustang is a lovely road-trip or daily-driver car. Few of us really use collector cars that way, though. I mostly drive my classics on local roads to enjoy their acceleration, their throttle response, and the analog way they react to driver inputs. An A-code 289 is still torquey enough to run light-to-light with modern city traffic, but no one would call it scintillating on an empty road. No one did in the day, for that matter. Motor Trend’s road test of a ’66 GT yielded a 0–60 time of 9.5 seconds and the quarter-mile in 17 seconds, at 81 mph. Riding in the Silver Blue coupe the first time, my wife’s reaction was, “So this is mainly a car that sounds nice, huh?”

Dan Flores 1965 Ford Mustang GT rear 3/4
Dan Flores

So, with a loaded and very sound ’65 GT in need of a mechanical restoration, the time was at hand for whatever upgrades I envisioned for it. Why not impart, then, the kind of performance those GT cosmetics and red-band tires had always implied? Why not give this GT that one option it didn’t get in 1965?

A historical upgrade seemed proper, anyway. This was a car so straight out of the ’60s it begged for a period hop-up. I turned the restoration over to Steve Chiulli of Green Monkey Coachworks in Santa Fe. Operating from my obsessively researched build plans, Chiulli launched a mechanical restoration that took nearly eight months. Saving the replica Cobra 289 engine for the moment, here’s what we created.

An entirely new suspension was part of the work, so we started by mimicking one of the handling tricks Shelby’s shakedown driver, Ken Miles, developed for the GT350: dropping the pivot point for the control arms one inch to keep the wheels upright in fast cornering. This gave the finished car the raked stance of the 1965 GT350. We used another Shelby/Miles trick to get additional stiffness, adding the more robust “export brace” and a “Monte Carlo bar” to the engine bay. As with GT350s, red Koni shocks became a part of the rebuilt suspension. We then traded out the leisurely 3.00:1 A-code final gearing for a much shorter 3.80:1 ring-and-pinion limited-slip differential. With the A-code’s 8-inch differential, that was the closest match to the 3.89:1 Shelby utilized in the 8.75-inch diff of the GT350. Finally, following Ford’s lead when it mated the K-code with Cruise-O-Matic, we gave the transmission a general uprating along with a shift kit.

Converting my A-code 289 into a replica Hi-Po, then Shelbyizing it to GT350 specs, was the heart of this rebuild. And critical to the beating heart of the Ford high-performance 289 was its solid-lifter camshaft. We sourced one for my engine from Comp Cams, whose Nostalgia Plus K-Kit promised a “tight lash with the distinctive sound and character of Ford’s 271-hp 289.” Installing this re-creation Hi-Po cam in my rebuilt 289 block involved machining the A-code heads to accommodate a K-code valvetrain, including recessing the spring seats for the stronger valve springs and machining for screw-in rocker arms. New flat-topped pistons provided the K-code’s high compression. That done, we replaced the cast A-code intake with an aluminum hi-riser, then changed out the 480-cfm Autolite four-barrel for a remanufactured 600-cfm Autolite. Shelby used a 715-cfm Holley on manual GT350s, but his automatic cars retained the 600, so we did, too.

Dan Flores 1965 Ford Mustang GT engine
Dan Flores

On the exhaust end, Tri-Y headers replaced the A-code manifolds, then fed through MagnaFlow glasspack mufflers to the standard GT trumpet exhausts. Rather than the original dual-point distributor, we added spark with an electronic MSD unit with mechanical advance and a Flamethrower coil. Other additions involved replacing base 289 motor mounts with K-code motor mounts and installing a K-code harmonic balancer and high pressure oil pump with the larger Cobra oil pan. Classic 1965 Cobra valve covers provided the final touch.

The result is a luxury GT Mustang wrapped around the performance drivetrain of a GT350, and it runs and drives like a sports car.

For those who have never driven a Cobra or a Mustang outfitted with the high-performance 289 engine (I hadn’t), it’s a revelation. Whirring solid-lifters and a shorter axle make for a noisier drive than in ordinary Mustangs, but the snarling throttle response, ability to rev beyond 6000 rpm, and strong acceleration pull at any speed are exciting, even half a century later. Rebuilt this way, a Mustang that had been a pretty but sedate commuter now steers, brakes, corners, accelerates, and sounds like a performance sports coupe. I’m a convert.

Dan Flores 1965 Ford Mustang GT fender wheel badges
Dan Flores

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Mustang Member Story: A Showroom-Fresh GT https://www.hagerty.com/media/member-stories/mustang-member-story-a-showroom-fresh-gt/ https://www.hagerty.com/media/member-stories/mustang-member-story-a-showroom-fresh-gt/#respond Sat, 20 Apr 2024 18:00:00 GMT https://www.hagerty.com/media/?p=388835

April 17 marks 60 years since the Ford Mustang’s public debut at the 1964 New York World’s Fair. The original pony car immediately became a pop-culture and automotive phenom, and it remains one of the most impactful cars in history. We’re celebrating with stories of the events surrounding the Mustang’s launch, the history of the early cars, and tales from owners. Click here to follow along with our multi-week 60 Years of Mustang coverage. -Ed.

In 1979, while living in Columbus, Montana, my wife and I purchased our first Mustang, a rust-free ’66, and spent several thousand dollars having it restored to show quality. The car spent many months in and out of various garages for extensive work—an engine and transmission rebuild, new brakes and fuel system, new interior, and a beautiful new paint job.

Five days after picking up the Mustang from the paint shop, our daughter was driving it to meet a bus at school when an oil truck turned left in front of her and she hit the truck broadside. Luckily, our daughter wasn’t seriously injured, but the accident totaled the Mustang.

I wanted another Mustang, so I started searching almost immediately. I looked at several 1965–67 models, and while many looked good from the outside, up on the lift I noted severe problems. I wanted a straight, rust-free original, and after nearly four months of looking, I found a 1965 GT—an original A-code with a 289 V-8 and automatic transmission. The car looked sharp in its original Springtime Yellow paint with black GT stripes.

Larry Gross 1965 Ford Mustang GT hood up at show
Larry Gross

Over next five years, we drove it periodically on sunny days, but in 1985 we relocated to northern Ohio, and I drove that ’65 across the country with no problems. In 1990, after another move, to southern Ohio, we put the Mustang in storage, driving it 100–200 miles a year just to keep it running. In 1998, those periodic drives stopped and the car sat unused until 2016, when we decided to give the Mustang to our 40-year-old son, who had wanted it for many years.

Over the next 13 months, we had the car completely restored, and today it is again a beautiful GT that looks like it just came off the showroom floor.

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Ford’s New Supercharger Kit Juices V-8 Mustangs to 810 hp https://www.hagerty.com/media/news/fords-new-supercharger-kit-juices-v-8-mustangs-to-810-hp/ https://www.hagerty.com/media/news/fords-new-supercharger-kit-juices-v-8-mustangs-to-810-hp/#comments Tue, 19 Mar 2024 18:00:00 GMT https://www.hagerty.com/media/?p=383250

In the world of muscle cars, more is always better, especially when it comes to power. Ford Performance Parts just announced a new supercharger kit for Mustangs equipped with the 5.0-liter Coyote V-8 that will juice the output of the engine to 810 hp and 615 lb-ft of torque.

The supercharger kit, which costs $9995 and carries part number M-6066-M8800 on the Ford Performance Parts website, consists of the following: A 3.0-liter Whipple twin-screw supercharger, dual-pass intercooler, 92mm throttle body, colder spark plugs, port fuel injectors from the Shelby GT500, a Ford Performance exclusive tune, and the Tomahawk calibration delivery tool.

Worth noting: The power figures provided by Ford are for Mustang GTs and Mustang Dark Horses equipped with active exhaust; without that option, which comes standard on Dark Horse but is a $1225 option on the GT, your power will be down 10 hp, to a mere 800. Unsurprisingly, adding this blower also requires you to run premium (91+ octane) fuel.

Still, those figures are a big step up from the stock performance numbers. Sans supercharger kit, a Mustang GT pushes 480 hp and 415 lb-ft (or 486 hp and 418 lb-ft with the fancy exhaust), so we’re talking gains of 320 to 324 hp and around 200 more lb-ft of torque. The Dark Horse manages 500 hp from its V-8, making this package worth an extra 310 hp. Just shy of 10-large to gain around 40 percent more power? Seems like a steal to us.

Unfortunately, the package won’t be legal in California. As for the other 49 states, have at it—and keep it between the mayo and the mustard, please.

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