2015 Ford Mustang gets first 4-cylinder engine since 1993
2015 Ford Mustang is sleeker, crisper, and more modern than the outgoing model, Voelcker writes. The 2015 Ford Mustang will also get its first four-cylinder engine since a 105-horsepower 2.3-liter four was dropped after the 1993 model year.
Ford Motor Co. CEO Alan Mulally sits in the driver seat of its all new 2015 Ford Mustang on ABC's Good Morning America in New York Thursday. The new Mustang will have independent rear suspension for the first time in 50 years.
Brendan McDermid/Reuters
You may or may not be aware that the new 2015 Ford Mustang has now officially been unveiled.
Perhaps you saw it this morning on Good Morning America, or came across some of the other coverage that's emerged over the last couple of days.
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The entirely restyled Mustang is sleeker, crisper, and more modern than the outgoing model, which dated back to aÌýÌýlaunched for 2005.
Beside the new sheet metal and redesigned interior, there are two pieces of news: The Mustang now, for the first time in 50 years, has independent rear suspension--and it also gets its first four-cylinder engine since a 105-horsepower 2.3-liter four was dropped after the 1993 model year.Ìý
°Õ³ó²¹³ÙÌý, necessarily; it's for slightly less inefficient performance.
It's a sign of the times that 22 years later, the same displacement--plus a turbocharger--could put out as much as triple the power.
Ford hasn't released specifications for the 2.3-liter EcoBoost four, but it's expected to deliver more than 305 hp, along with 300 pound-feet of torque.
The four will actually be the mid-level engine, however, at extra cost; the base engine remains a 3.7-liter V-6, which will produce at least 300 hp and 270 lb-ft of torque. There's also a 5.0-liter V-8, at more than 420 hp and 390 lb-ft.
Transmissions are a standard six-speed manual gearbox, with a six-speed automatic offered with paddle shifters.
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As for that rollout, Motor Authority has charted the various leaks over the last few days.
¹ó¾±°ù²õ³Ù,ÌýAutoweekÌýmagazine put theÌýÌýon the cover of its next issue;ÌýÌýof an early issue off the press.ÌýÌýexacerbated the leak with clearer images, then fan siteÌýÌýouted the GT version, badges and all.
°Õ³ó±ðÌýÌýadded a hastily-produced video, and finally,ÌýÌýdemolished whatever was left of media decorum and provided an entire high-resolution gallery of the Mustang GT model.
None of the media mess really matters to the car's fans, eager for every last scrap of information.
But while the 2015 Mustang hardly qualifies as aÌýÌýcar, we're confident that in this era of increasingly tight corporate averageÌýÌýrules--from now through 2025--all models of the new pony car will get better EPA ratings than their predecessors.
Whether the Mustang suffers from the same dissonance betweenÌýÌýasÌýÌýand some of itsÌýÌýremains to be seen.