Originally Posted By: addyguy
Originally Posted By: 440Magnum
You know, of all the "best ever..." and "worst ever..." car lists, I probably AGREED with more of this one than any other I've seen.
Just a few notable exceptions. The first Corvette, the Thunderbird SC, the Bronco II. They all had their flaws, but they aren't worthy of the "100 worst" by any means.
As for my favorite maker (Chrysler) I think every single one on that list deserved it.
And the Mustang II should have been number one simply due to the depth of the insult to the name "Mustang." Back in the early 90s when I first got involved in the fledgling internet automotive mailing list/ discussion group scene, there was the Mopar Mailing List (MML- still around last I checked), the Fordnatics List, and a Mustang mailing list among a few others. The intro letter for the Mustang list pointed out that there were two actual mailing lists, the "Classic" list for 1972 and below and the "Modern" list for 1979 and later 'Stangs. It closed with: "Don't even ask about the Mustang II because nobody cares."
If it wasn't for the Mustang II, there WOULDN'T BE a Mustang at all.
Most Mustang owners are too stupid to understand that basic, factual truth.
What did the Mustang II do? It sold. They sold a LOT of them. I'm fairly certain they outsold Datsun's oddly styled bulbous 200SX. Very certain they outsold the rebadged Mitsubishis at the Dodge and Plymouth dealers. Probably even outsold the Toyota Celica. Definitely outsold the Mazda RX-3 and Ford of Europe's own Capri (sold at Mercury dealers here)
And really, when you compare it to what the '71-'73 Mustang had become, it wasn't that bad. It was closer in dimensions to the '64.5 Mustang than the '73 was.
At least it was a Ford. The Sapporo "Challenger" certainly wasn't a Dodge.
The 2.3 was fairly reliable. Gutless but probably not that far off from the L20 Nissan in the 200SX and the 20R in the Celica.
The German solid lifter 2.8 sounded mean. It didn't do much more than the 2.3 but it sounded the part.
The 302 was a disappointment too. It didn't do anything that the 267 V8 powered Monza didn't. But hey, it was a V8. There was a more disappointing version of a Mustang V8 during the Fox body era. The 255.
Originally Posted By: 440Magnum
You know, of all the "best ever..." and "worst ever..." car lists, I probably AGREED with more of this one than any other I've seen.
Just a few notable exceptions. The first Corvette, the Thunderbird SC, the Bronco II. They all had their flaws, but they aren't worthy of the "100 worst" by any means.
As for my favorite maker (Chrysler) I think every single one on that list deserved it.
And the Mustang II should have been number one simply due to the depth of the insult to the name "Mustang." Back in the early 90s when I first got involved in the fledgling internet automotive mailing list/ discussion group scene, there was the Mopar Mailing List (MML- still around last I checked), the Fordnatics List, and a Mustang mailing list among a few others. The intro letter for the Mustang list pointed out that there were two actual mailing lists, the "Classic" list for 1972 and below and the "Modern" list for 1979 and later 'Stangs. It closed with: "Don't even ask about the Mustang II because nobody cares."
If it wasn't for the Mustang II, there WOULDN'T BE a Mustang at all.
Most Mustang owners are too stupid to understand that basic, factual truth.
What did the Mustang II do? It sold. They sold a LOT of them. I'm fairly certain they outsold Datsun's oddly styled bulbous 200SX. Very certain they outsold the rebadged Mitsubishis at the Dodge and Plymouth dealers. Probably even outsold the Toyota Celica. Definitely outsold the Mazda RX-3 and Ford of Europe's own Capri (sold at Mercury dealers here)
And really, when you compare it to what the '71-'73 Mustang had become, it wasn't that bad. It was closer in dimensions to the '64.5 Mustang than the '73 was.
At least it was a Ford. The Sapporo "Challenger" certainly wasn't a Dodge.
The 2.3 was fairly reliable. Gutless but probably not that far off from the L20 Nissan in the 200SX and the 20R in the Celica.
The German solid lifter 2.8 sounded mean. It didn't do much more than the 2.3 but it sounded the part.
The 302 was a disappointment too. It didn't do anything that the 267 V8 powered Monza didn't. But hey, it was a V8. There was a more disappointing version of a Mustang V8 during the Fox body era. The 255.