Horse Force car on MotorTrend.com

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About the motor, thats just what happens when you swap a new generation of motor into an old car.
Back in 1992, a 70s mach1 with an EFI pushrod 5.0HO would have been sweet. Now if you run across one, its dated and considered slow.
In 1998, a 70s car with a modular 4.6 would have been considered sweet.
Hell, even when the coyote came out, a car with a gen1 coyote was pretty sweet. Then ford came out with the gen2, and gen3 and now a car with a gen1 swapped into it isn't as attractive.

And thats the reason I wouldnt bother "upgrading" to a coyote in any of my old cars. Those sort of projects don't age well.
I stick with a similar generation engine as what the car came with.
 
About the motor, thats just what happens when you swap a new generation of motor into an old car.
Back in 1992, a 70s mach1 with an EFI pushrod 5.0HO would have been sweet. Now if you run across one, its dated and considered slow.
In 1998, a 70s car with a modular 4.6 would have been considered sweet.
Hell, even when the coyote came out, a car with a gen1 coyote was pretty sweet. Then ford came out with the gen2, and gen3 and now a car with a gen1 swapped into it isn't as attractive.

And thats the reason I wouldnt bother "upgrading" to a coyote in any of my old cars. Those sort of projects don't age well.
I stick with a similar generation engine as what the car came with.
Interesting view on Coyote motors. I have a friend currently swapping a Coyote motor (from a truck) into a 73 Mustang Vert. Actually, he's grafting in the entire front end suspension and steering from an earlier 2000 and something Mustang, I don't remember the exact year or model.
 
Is it a real movie? I wanna check it out! LOL! Search doesn't yield much at all!
 
Is it a real movie? I wanna check it out! LOL! Search doesn't yield much at all!
Unfortunately, it's not a real movie. They themed the build based on a fictional movie they created (which doesn't exist lol) specifically to build the car as a "movie car." Yes, very meta.
 
Unfortunately, it's not a real movie. They themed the build based on a fictional movie they created (which doesn't exist lol) specifically to build the car as a "movie car." Yes, very meta.
I literally can't even.

The car looked cool enough on its own. The whole fake movie part of the story takes away from it.
Thats down on the level of people who buy pre-ripped jeans, or buy fake mud to splash on their mall-crawlers to pretend they went offroading.
 
I can dig the phony movie thing, like a multimedia art project. Its not meant to fool anyone, just to be fun. A friend an I had a similar idea 20 years ago for his Mach1 having been in a Guatemalan action flick in the 70s (like a Central American version of most any Seagal movie). Even had a friend to act as the son of the movie star. Great plan, no time to do it.

The pre-ripped jeans is like buying a nice survivor old truck and 'sanding' some fake patina into it...in places that make no sense.
 
It does say "The movie is unreal" meaning literally it's unreal.
Funny thing is I posted this as a half hearted gag on April 5th and it got no responses. Now it has come alive.
The car is pretty cool, but that's as far as it goes. It was done I believe for AutoRama with a fake story line.
 
I am game for the wide-body treatment but those modifications mean they should have really eliminated the speedline down the side… or have it trail off. As it is when you look down the car the line snakes and is a mess. Can’t get on board with the side-pipes either, but still there is some cool stuff there.
 
I am game for the wide-body treatment but those modifications mean they should have really eliminated the speedline down the side… or have it trail off. As it is when you look down the car the line snakes and is a mess. Can’t get on board with the side-pipes either, but still there is some cool stuff there.
Yeah I agree, but I don't really think it was done by true professionals in the car art world.
 
The phone on the center console is reminiscent of the Bat Phone, kind of. Placement is different, color is different. Shape is the same. I guess one out of three ain't bad.

When I used to work at a Ford dealership (SoCal) as a tech back in the late 70s through the 80s I owned a 1978 Cougar XR-7, my first new car purchase. One late afternoon I was leaving the dealership at the end of the work day, and our service manager was in the outdoor lanes. It occurred to me, as I was getting ready to exit via the service lanes, that I had an AT&T desk phone on the front seat, as I had just purchased my own handset and was going to return the rental phone (remember those days?). As I began to roll out the driveway I reached over and picked up the hand set and pretended to be talking to someone on the phone just as he was waving goodbye to me. Because both of my hands were busy (one steering, one holding the phone transceiver to my head), I gave him a "head bob" with a smile. The look on his face was incredulous. He was under the (correct) assumption that I had enough banked to not work for two years if I did not want to (the idea being I was not trapped or enslaved like many other folks I worked with), and he believed I came "from money" (another correct assumption). Back then very few people had car phones (ship-to-shore portable devices that were incredibly expensive to buy, install, much less operate). I had a good snicker with that one little prank. The rumor mill began to go nuts about how I was going to be buying out the dealer (not true) because I was loaded (parents, yes. Me, not quite that much, but comfortable - not ship-to-shore phone comfortable though). Fun days...

Bat phone is red, at the very front of the center console, for those that care <g>...


1683742276634.png
 
The phone on the center console is reminiscent of the Bat Phone, kind of. Placement is different, color is different. Shape is the same. I guess one out of three ain't bad.

When I used to work at a Ford dealership (SoCal) as a tech back in the late 70s through the 80s I owned a 1978 Cougar XR-7, my first new car purchase. One late afternoon I was leaving the dealership at the end of the work day, and our service manager was in the outdoor lanes. It occurred to me, as I was getting ready to exit via the service lanes, that I had an AT&T desk phone on the front seat, as I had just purchased my own handset and was going to return the rental phone (remember those days?). As I began to roll out the driveway I reached over and picked up the hand set and pretended to be talking to someone on the phone just as he was waving goodbye to me. Because both of my hands were busy (one steering, one holding the phone transceiver to my head), I gave him a "head bob" with a smile. The look on his face was incredulous. He was under the (correct) assumption that I had enough banked to not work for two years if I did not want to (the idea being I was not trapped or enslaved like many other folks I worked with), and he believed I came "from money" (another correct assumption). Back then very few people had car phones (ship-to-shore portable devices that were incredibly expensive to buy, install, much less operate). I had a good snicker with that one little prank. The rumor mill began to go nuts about how I was going to be buying out the dealer (not true) because I was loaded (parents, yes. Me, not quite that much, but comfortable - not ship-to-shore phone comfortable though). Fun days...

Bat phone is red, at the very front of the center console, for those that care <g>...


View attachment 76596
Good story.
I remember when my Dad had a phone in his car. He worked for the local county council and they provided him with a car phone. That would have been mid 60's I remember the unit took up much of the "boot" (trunk to you).
 
Unfortunately, it's not a real movie. They themed the build based on a fictional movie they created (which doesn't exist lol) specifically to build the car as a "movie car." Yes, very meta.
My car is themed after a fictional movie where I am the main character racing a blue 1971 Mach 1 in the 24hr of Le Mans ;) :unsure: :D

I am game for the wide-body treatment but those modifications mean they should have really eliminated the speedline down the side… or have it trail off. As it is when you look down the car the line snakes and is a mess. Can’t get on board with the side-pipes either, but still there is some cool stuff there.
I agree that the lines don't go well with their wide body mods. It is more or a race car theme so that's why I give them a pass.
 
My car is themed after a fictional movie where I am the main character racing a blue 1971 Mach 1 in the 24hr of Le Mans ;)
I think we've all seen that movie...playing on the backs of our wide-screen eyelids.
 
I literally can't even.

The car looked cool enough on its own. The whole fake movie part of the story takes away from it.
Thats down on the level of people who buy pre-ripped jeans, or buy fake mud to splash on their mall-crawlers to pretend they went offroading.
I see your point, and I can imagine a lot of people are put off by the fact that it’s a fake movie car from a fake movie. That said, I also think it’s kind of cool and imaginative, as it’s not something you see often. They’re doing the exact same thing Disney does in their theme parks… a completely fake environment with a made-up narrative. And I do love me some Disney environmental engineering where you can be in the scorching central Florida sun one minute, walk into a Mayan pyramid, and be in a chilly Mexican village at night the next. Fake feels forced sometimes, but if you do it right, it can be pretty damn cool.
 
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