RE: Ken Block Mustang 'Hoonifox' unveiled
RE: Ken Block Mustang 'Hoonifox' unveiled
Friday 1st May 2020

Ken Block Mustang 'Hoonifox' unveiled

Ford's eighties Fox body Mustang becomes Miami Vice-inspired Gymkhana machine for 2020



Ford’s Fox body Mustang has provided the base for Ken Block’s latest Hoonigan Racing drift car, a machine that mixes Blue Oval motorsport heritage with a Miami Vice theme for dramatic results. The wide-arched Hoonifox has been designed by Hollywood graphic artist and creator of the new Batmobile, Ash Thorp, with influences ranging from global motorsport aerodynamics to the flamboyant fashion of 1980s America. Suffice to say it takes a fairly restrained Mustang body shape and makes it absolutely mental.

First thing’s first, the new powertrain. We’re not given many clues at this early design stage, but Block has said it’s a return to something more traditional than the highly boosted 2.0-litre of his last Cossie drift car. Given Block’s comments, a naturally aspirated V8 feels like the most obvious choice for the all-wheel drive machine, but we’re not able to peer deep enough into the rendered Hoonifox’s intake to count the trumpets, so it may indeed be something else, like a turbocharged six-pot. Expect a preposterous output either way.


Despite being isolated from each other during lockdown, designer Thorp and Block have been regularly conversing about the design, with Thorp taking his client’s requests for something decidedly retro and mixing in his own motorsport influences. There are lines taken from GT racing cars, DTM aero pieces and American muscle features on the finished, carbon-bodied design, which gets its name from the widely known internal designation of ‘Fox body’ for the eighties Mustang platform.

Several finishes have been rendered, including a Miami Vice Countach-esque white one, a more predictable all-black one and, thanks to Thorp’s own affection for the eighties, a few more vibrant versions that are said to be inspired by Thorp’s childhood clothes. None dial back the enormous, muscular form of the Hoonifox design though, which is exactly the point. Block’s Hoonigan lineage has included everything from an F-150 pick-up to a Mk2 Escort, but all have one thing in common: lunacy.

When lockdown lifts and Block’s team can get to building the Hoonifox, it will eventually star in the eleventh of his Gymkhana series. Whatever the final specifications of this Mustang-based creation, expect enormous angle, plenty of noise and a whole lot of tyre smoke. Some things never change. 



Author
Discussion

LotusOmega375D

Original Poster:

9,196 posts

180 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
Just because it’s got some white on it, doesn’t mean it has anything to do with Miami Vice. Also I think the Countach was only in one episode. The lead actor’s white Testarossa would be a better reference. Phil Collins also had a white Lamborghini Jalpa in one episode, didn’t he?

soad

34,474 posts

203 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
Isn’t that simply a digital rendering? hehe

ZX10R NIN

30,337 posts

152 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
Watch the full vlog & you'll see why the Countach was referenced.

Meridius

1,608 posts

179 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
Makes me think of that Pikes Peak Peugeot 405 more than anything else.

ACW

61 posts

254 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
"For me the wing is like the bass player in a band" err...

thecremeegg

2,092 posts

230 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
Love it!

BOBBY G

483 posts

237 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
I hope he does the driving over fluorescent tubes thing. The videos are so good and fresh. I hope he makes loads more.

steveb8189

516 posts

218 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
soad said:
Isn’t that simply a digital rendering? hehe
Yes, but unlike most diigtal renderings this is probably extremely close to how it will look in real life.

emperorburger

1,484 posts

93 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
Struggling to see any Miami Vice connection.

anonymous-user

81 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
Anyone I ever met who liked K Block was never an enthusiast. Almost as bad as people who bang on about De Loreans because of that film.

TheAnimal

3,473 posts

220 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
LotusOmega375D said:
Just because it’s got some white on it, doesn’t mean it has anything to do with Miami Vice. Also I think the Countach was only in one episode. The lead actor’s white Testarossa would be a better reference. Phil Collins also had a white Lamborghini Jalpa in one episode, didn’t he?
Well corrected. Liam Neeson also had the black Testarossa. Entire PH team - please stay home and watch all episodes of Miami Vice. It’ll be the best thing you ever did during lockdown.

rastapasta

2,510 posts

165 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
at least with the whole covid lockdown it will take him a while longer than it usually does to stack it.

PhantomPH

4,043 posts

252 months

Friday 1st May 2020
quotequote all
article said:
We’re not given many clues at this early design stage, but Block has said it’s a return to something more traditional than the highly boosted 2.0-litre of his last Cossie drift car. Given Block’s comments, a naturally aspirated V8 feels like the most obvious choice for the all-wheel drive machine, but we’re not able to peer deep enough into the rendered Hoonifox’s intake to count the trumpets, so it may indeed be something else, like a turbocharged six-pot. Expect a preposterous output either way.
Press release or did you just not watch the video before writing this?

100% clear in the video what engine is used (and why) as you get lots of angles of it. Check it out, count and then you'll be able to write some detail into your article! winksmile

redroadster

1,886 posts

259 months

Saturday 2nd May 2020
quotequote all
Like his videos great skill and planning ,I like retro cars so can't wait to see him blast it .

MCBrowncoat

1,712 posts

173 months

Saturday 2nd May 2020
quotequote all
tommy1973s said:
Anyone I ever met who liked K Block was never an enthusiast. Almost as bad as people who bang on about De Loreans because of that film.
laugh Come on man, that's not as bad as every fast late '90's / early '00's JDM car EVER people only knew about because of Gran Turismo fking Two

Petrolism

462 posts

133 months

Monday 4th May 2020
quotequote all
I for one always enjoy any effort we see from Ken Block's builds and driving. Action footage and cool cars (no matter the guise in which they're marketed) like these this costs a fortune to make, that few if any others have a chance of making and broadcasting to the masses.

To do it all at no cost to those interested, is a gift to all those who enjoy this sort of thing and gifts should be accepted with grace, not complaint.
It's a guy living his dream and sharing it with us...

Long may Ken Block's productions keep being churned out. Beats wasting hours searching for random stuff on YouTube.

Edited by Petrolism on Monday 4th May 04:37