The game changer 1964 Mustang Dad Should Have Bought That 1964 1/2 Ford Mustang Instead of turning heads and joining the muscle-car craze, he bought a practical Volvo. BY DAVE RANDPUBLISHED: AUG 29, 2024 Image Unavailable, Please Login FORD The Ford Mustang is celebrating a special birthday this year. This perpetually youthful car—the one that started the pony-car craze—is now a sexagenarian. It’s 60 years old. Hard to believe. The car has been around as long as things like Pop-Tarts, Lava Lamps, and (but not quite) Madonna! It’s difficult to overstate what an impact the introduction of the Mustang made back in 1964. To say it was a sensation with the public doesn’t quite capture its initial reception, but maybe the numbers do. Image Unavailable, Please Login 2025 Ford Mustang 60th Anniversary Capped at 1,965 It sold 22,000 the first day. For context, in one day the Mustang outsold every Mini, Jaguar, Alfa Romeo, and all but one Genesis for all of 2023, in many cases by a wide margin. Released in April 1964, it still managed to sell 263,434 copies by year’s end despite the shortened sales period. Within 18 months, over one million Mustangs had been sold—extraordinary numbers, especially when you consider that Ford had only expected to sell 100,000 that first year. Part of the secret of its success can be explained in the original print ads. Along with a striking photo of a white coupe shot in profile against a black background, there were four numbers prominently featured: 2368, the price of the car. Image Unavailable, Please Login AUTOMOTIVE HISTORY PRESERVATION SOCIETY For that low entry point, you got a sporty coupe that was unlike anything the country had seen before. Plus, the marketing was great, by promoting “Mustang is designed to be designed by you.” Ford had positioned the car so that just about anybody could see themselves in it. If you just wanted a small, stylish commuter, a more performance-oriented variant, or an upscale version as a mini-Thunderbird, the car would fit your lifestyle and taste. It was a car that appealed across social hierarchies. It was simply the hot car to have. But more than anything, it was the way the car looked. At that time, if you wanted something really stylish you paid for it, with inexpensive cars tending to look it. But the Mustang was a car that was as stylish as anything on the road and one that most could afford. Advertisement - Continue Reading Below The Mustang II seemed more the result of a product planner’s spreadsheet than true to the original. This was fundamental to its success: it looked more expensive than it was. With distinctive proportions—being credited for the trend toward the long hood and short rear deck look—it was also deceptively simple in its design. It didn’t rely on anything dramatically different or controversial, yet appeared fresh and new just the same. This, despite the fact that the Mustang was based on very humble Falcon components. This practice of putting a more expressive body on a conventional chassis would become commonplace in the industry. The success of the Mustang obviously inspired a whole rash of competitors in a few years, or as fast as other manufactures could react. It changed the industry, but the car that led Ford to build it in the first place was one of the casualties. Image Unavailable, Please Login You Can Build Your Own “Eleanor” Piece by Piece The Chevrolet Corvair had been gaining sales partially by the sporty Monza variant, appealing to a younger demographic, and Ford realized both the potential of the market and that they had nothing to compete with it. And while some claim it was Ralph Nader’s criticism of the Corvair in his book Unsafe at Any Speed, it was really the impact of the Mustang and GM’s decision to refocus their resources on a more direct competitor, the Camaro, that put an end to the Corvair. Over the past 60 years there have been many variants of the Mustang, as it morphed into vehicles very different from the original and not always for the better. Image Unavailable, Please Login FREERS PHOTOGRAPHY LLC Ford Mustang production reached 10 million in 2018. Initially, it got more aggressive, emphasizing performance, with larger engines and more power as it entered the muscle car era. When the second-generation Mustang II was introduced in 1974, the goal was to right size the car to compete more with the foreign competition and deal with escalating fuel prices. Here was a car that had none of the inherent grace of the ‘64, and although a car of its time, seemed more the result of a product planner’s spreadsheet than the heir to the legacy of the original. Image Unavailable, Please Login It's Camaro vs. Mustang...even in China But maybe I’m a little prejudiced. For in 1964 my father was in the market for a new car, and I remember going with him for a test drive in the new Mustang. I don’t recall the color of the car or really any of the other details about it. TOM MURPHY But I remember sitting in the back seat as we headed down a street while onlookers, one by one, slowly turned their heads to stare at the car, and how that felt. My father eventually bought something else, a Volvo 122S, which was perhaps more sturdy and practical. But I was disappointed because I wanted him to get the Mustang. It was, after all, the hot car to have.
and something for Chevrolet guys; a new design display coming this October to the Corvette Museum -> Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login - Andrew Collins
Given the number of sources I follow, it's always a bit of a surprize when I see something completely know to me that's relativelt current. Today's example is the Huyndai Storia van. I saw TWO of these last week, caught the badges and did some looking as I thought it must be a new model. Nope been out more than 2 years...This is pretty slick with down turned "horse shoe" tail lights. Best new van I've seen in years... Image Unavailable, Please Login
Cab forward and too good looking for the north American market... too bad the monopoly men wont allow it.
The VW Noah Concept was done in 1995 by Thomas Ingenlath. Possibly an inspiration? Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
I think what strikes most is the expansive glass area. I was comparing it to a VW Eurovan, and it drops a full 5" lower on the Hyundai; very elegant & light. For me this is a big improvement over the current "tank top" SUVs and (notably) last Camaro. This is not an ANGRY van. John, you and I are roughly the same age; the comparison I would make here is the '49/'50 Ford customs. The norm was chopped top. This is more (Sam Barris?) sectioned but not chopped. Those were my favorite cars in my youth - Alas, I imagine that the current crop of designs only reflects the divide in our current social behavior. In your experience, what drives design? Current "mood" or "better future"?
Yes we’re close in age, and that drives my design sense. Growing up in Detroit, the Motor City, was a big influence on my design sensibility. The custom cars of my youth also played a role in developing my taste. The Alexander Bros were locals here in Detroit, and Barris, Winfield and Roth were my West coast hero's. Those ‘50 Ford Shoeboxes and chopped Mercs gave a unique proportion with a thicker body to upper relationship. During the ‘80’s, uppers had more glass and airy uppers. The BMW 2002 from the ‘70’s were the classics of that school of design. Beginning 2000, glass got shallower and shallower till the latest Camaros. My personal thoughts were those Camaros destroyed the brand in the name of ‘styling’ appearance. You can’t see out of them the belt is so high. Sitting in a bathtub as it were. Design is a fashion business if anything. Belt lines rise and fall like dress hemlines. While I have a history of ‘cheating’ my sketche’s roof heights, the glass to body relationship has reached its feasible limit as far as I’m concerned. I was always Mr. Big Wheels up to a point. Some of theDonks and hi rider trucks have taken that design to an extreme as well. What goes around comes around. There was much discussion around high belt lines and shallow glass. It made people feel safe and secure in our troubled society. Remember that Bank Vault show car Ford did under J Mays? Hummers as well. Society feels unsafe at the moment. Tank slit uppers rule until driverless cars completely eliminate glass altogether. Stay tuned.
Sitting in a bathtub sums up the new MB SL63 design perfectly. Every choice they made ended up being a negative. Image Unavailable, Please Login * Buried the driver. * Added two more seats. * Dropped rear wheel drive. * Dropped the security of a folding hardtop. * Added more weight. * Added ONE THIRD more to the price. * Added a harsh ride What they left behind > Image Unavailable, Please Login
Lest there are those who may have forgotten this gem......... Silly? Absurd? Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login
An exceptional re-creation of Pete DePaolo’s 1925 Indianapolis 500-winning “Immortal Banana Wagon Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login Extra reading : https://www.chron.com/cars/article/The-Banana-Wagon-1582817.php and the original... would you have guessed it was yellow? Image Unavailable, Please Login image credit: Griffith Borgeson, The Golden Age of the American Racing Car, Bonanza Books 1966
Yes, people would articulate their sense or lack thereof of feeling secure. No one wants to be in a fishbowl.
Diablo restomod key @eccentrica_cars in conjunction with @formawerx. Not listed on their website but apparently if you dm them I'm sure they'll let you drop a couple (?) thousand on it. Images from Eccentrica instagram https://www.formawerx.com/collections/all Image Unavailable, Please Login In the car Image Unavailable, Please Login Image Unavailable, Please Login I love me a good solid key whether it's for a car or home. Not too crazy on multiple engravings or holes on some of their other options, but I do enjoy their cheapest option ($270) that works with any car before the year 2000. Image Unavailable, Please Login
Embarrassed to be the one to post them.......some hints and camo shots of the Ferrari EV..........(why do I feel........dirty.....?) https://electrek.co/2024/09/11/ferraris-first-ev-spotted-testing-video/