The 1967 model year brought the first redesign of the original pony car, Ford's wildly successful Mustang. It was a subtle update. Wheelbase remained the same at 108", but a couple inches were added in length and width. Notably, room was added under the hood to allow installation of Ford's FE big block motors.
Body styles on offer remained the same: a notchback or fastback coupe, and a convertible.
The base motor remained the 200 cubic inch Thriftpower OHV inline six, rated at 120 SAE gross horsepower. The 289 V-8 was on the menu in three flavors: a two-barrel Challenger making 200 horsepower, a four-barrel Challenger Special rated at 225 ponies, and the snarling "K-code" Cobra hi-po variant that swung 10.0:1 pistons and slurped high octane fuel to belt out 271 horses. Finally, the 390 cubic inch Thunderbird V-8 topped the options list with a rated 320 SAE gross horsepower.
This Lime Gold 1967 coupe would have had the two-barrel Challenger 289 small block. Motor Trend tested a '67 coupe with the four-barrel Challenger Special and recorded a zero-to-sixty time of 9.5 seconds and a quarter mile run of 17 seconds flat at 81mph through the traps, while noting a tested fuel economy of 15 miles per gallon.
This one was photographed in November of 2018 in Los Alamos, New Mexico using a Fujifilm X-E1 and a Zeiss Touit 32mm f/1.8 lens.
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