Ford Mustang 'popularity'

Ford Mustang 'popularity'

Author
Discussion

entropy

Original Poster:

5,441 posts

203 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
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I'd expected Ford Mustangs to be rare cars even when sold officially in the UK but go to most towns and its possible to spot at least one or two Mustangs these days.

So what's the attraction to Mustangs - even if it's not a V8?

Leon R

3,206 posts

96 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
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Well they only started selling them in the UK in 2014 so it makes sense that they have been a rare spot until recently.

mikey_b

1,819 posts

45 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
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Strange question - why shouldn’t they be popular?

Seems likely that they’re popular because quite a lot of people like them enough to buy them. What would you have them buy instead?

S16KBW

483 posts

65 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
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Me and some mates did the NC500 last summer using my R53 mini and a mates Mustang, we counted 8 different mustangs we saw in the same week on the NC500, didn't see another R53 mini though biggrin

Mandat

3,887 posts

238 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
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I'm currently on my second Mustang, after upgrading my 2017 model to the newer facelift model in 2019.

Being a niche sports car, they are not as prevalent as other more mainstream cars, although I do regularly come across other Mustangs when out and about.

The biggest attractions for me are:
  • V8 5.0 engine
  • Muscle car heritage
  • Road presence
  • Relatively cheap (compared to equivalent RS, AMG, M, etc cars from other manufacturers)
Edited by Mandat on Wednesday 2nd February 15:12

Truckosaurus

11,291 posts

284 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
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I think it has sold reasonably well for something that has a non-premium badge and wouldn't appeal to lots of people who would be in the market for other sportscars like the MX5 or Z4.

They seem to hold their value well (even before the current bubble) so the demand is also there for used ones.

ashenfie

711 posts

46 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
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Based on what's happening with BMW/Merc etc, I suspect there days are numbered with the UK

Truckosaurus

11,291 posts

284 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
quotequote all
ashenfie said:
Based on what's happening with BMW/Merc etc, I suspect there days are numbered with the UK
Probably true of every ICE engined model. Although they might do an EV Mustang coupe to fit in with the electric Mach-E (one of my parent's neighbours has a yellow/orange coloured Mach-E and it looks pretty decent for that sort of thing).

Zetec-S

5,874 posts

93 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
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The Mustang is a pretty iconic badge so it already has a bit of a "following" over here anyway, a big part down the the role they've had in movies over the years.

Ford also have an advantage over the other big US brands in that it's well established in the UK and very popular already. No different buying experience than a Fiesta or Focus, people generally recognise and trust the badge, which makes the Mustang an interesting and equally safe alternative to European offerings. I couldn't imagine Dodge or Chevrolet breaking into the UK market with the Challenger/Viper or Camaro as they don't have the presence that Ford do.

Jim on the hill

5,072 posts

190 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
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Surely a Mustang is a dream car for most petrol heads along with an Alfa. Even to the non petrol head Mustangs are different, exciting and make you smile.

J4CKO

41,560 posts

200 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
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They are pretty cool and not overly "Yee har" for an American car, RHD and a big V8, whats not to like, apart from they arent all that quick for the power output vs a hot hatch these days.

sidewinder500

1,144 posts

94 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
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J4CKO said:
They are pretty cool and not overly "Yee har" for an American car, RHD and a big V8, whats not to like, apart from they arent all that quick for the power output vs a hot hatch these days.
You probably haven't driven one, as their power delivery and responsiveness up to the redline is completely different to any hot hatch..., and as not being all that quick, well... unrestricted up to 170 mph and power in every rev range, show me that hot hatch (unmodded!) that can keep up...
Agree on the other points, of course

Jim on the hill

5,072 posts

190 months

Wednesday 2nd February 2022
quotequote all
sidewinder500 said:
J4CKO said:
They are pretty cool and not overly "Yee har" for an American car, RHD and a big V8, whats not to like, apart from they arent all that quick for the power output vs a hot hatch these days.
You probably haven't driven one, as their power delivery and responsiveness up to the redline is completely different to any hot hatch..., and as not being all that quick, well... unrestricted up to 170 mph and power in every rev range, show me that hot hatch (unmodded!) that can keep up...
Agree on the other points, of course
Who wants a hot hatch over the age of 20. Muscle cars are just so much fun.

rolster

91 posts

85 months

Thursday 3rd February 2022
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I have a left hand drive 2017 GT in France and the appeal to me, now i am well in my fifties, is its comfortable, you dont sit too low to the deck, lots of room inside for driver and passenger. Pain in the whatsits taking anyone in the back seats though, but then i am not sitting there! I use it as my daily driver so have an auto box and enjoy the heck out of it. Its a very comfortable long distance cruiser ie GT for the weekends, but dont expect to throw it around corners like an lotus, or such, as you will end up swapping ends. It has a nice soundtrack and plenty enough power to overtake and get a move on on autoroutes. The boot is massive even if the entrance is quite wierd, i can get my bicycle in the boot without putting the seats down and with the seats down my sectioned (3 sections) 5.4m sea kayak goes in without a fuss. Here in France generally people make a fuss over the car and are polite at junctions etc where as i had the oposite in the past with 911's and Ferrari's. The real bonus though is the servicing costs being Ford costs are very palitable and cheaper than my last Volkswagon Eos as is the insurance.