2008 Ford Mustang Review
2008 Ford Mustang defined the pony car segment in 1964 and was a runaway sales success. It helped create a niche that exploded in popularity with the Camaro, Firebird, Barracuda, Cougar, Javelin, and Challenger. They’re all gone now, leaving the Mustang with no direct competition, at least for now.Fortunately, today’s Mustang, introduced three years ago, is a superb example of the genre. The Mustang GT comes with a 300-hp V8 and is an absolute hoot to drive, making all the right sounds, hanging onto corners tenaciously, and delivering thrilling acceleration performance. The American pony car has never been better than the current Mustang GT.
The Mustang is available as a coupe or convertible. The Mustang V6 Deluxe is a nice cruiser and its 4.0-liter V6 engine is a solid performer, all for around $20,000. But the Mustang GT is what the Mustang is all about and the basis of the legend.
The Mustang V6 Deluxe coupe ($19,250) comes with cloth upholstery, one-touch power windows, power mirrors and door locks, keyless entry, air conditioning, AM/FM/CD stereo with auxiliary input jack, tilt steering wheel, cruise control, rear window defroster, a split-folding rear seat, and 215/65R16 all-season tires on steel wheels. Its 4.0-liter overhead-cam V6 generates 210 horsepower. A five-speed manual transmission is standard; a five-speed automatic is optional ($995). The V6 Premium coupe ($20,480) upgrades to painted machined aluminum wheels with chrome spinners, plus a six-way power driver’s seat, and 500-watt audio system with six-disc CD changer and MP3 capability.The V6 Deluxe convertible ($24,075) and V6 Premium convertible ($25,305) are equipped the same as the coupes, except they delete the split-folding rear seat and add a power folding top.
The GT Deluxe coupe ($25,840) adds to the V6 Deluxe a six-way power driver’s seat, in-grille fog lamps, a rear spoiler, sport suspension, and 235/55R17 performance all-season tires on painted aluminum wheels. Its 4.6-liter overhead-cam V8 produces 300 horsepower. A five-speed manual transmission is standard; a five-speed automatic is optional ($645). The GT Premium coupe ($27,020) adds a 500-watt six-disc CD changer and Aberdeen leather-trimmed sport seats. The GT Deluxe convertible ($30,665) and GT Premium convertible ($31,845) are equipped similarly.
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