3k73
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 7, 2012
- Messages
- 184
- Reaction score
- 8
- Location
- British Columbia,Canada
- My Car
- 71 Mcode mach-1
73 Qcode Sportsroof
73 Hcode convertible
73 Hcode Sportsroof
I would that it is worth it. A very choice example.
I've always heard the Boss 351 was the quickest factory Mustang of the era. What are you basing your answer of "It just isn't so" on? Not saying you are wrong, just wondering.It might be cheaper than a Hemi-Cuda, but it will never carry the same weight in collector circles as a Hemi-Cuda either...unfortunately.
The main problem is that Ford introduced the 429 to the Mustang line far too late and in too-few numbers to have had any chance to build a reputation as the 426 hemi did over the 5 (or so) years Chrysler offered it in various cars.
In Ford circles, the 428 CJ has the "wow" factor and to the uninitiated, is the "better" of the two CJ's (428 vs 429...sorry 351-guys, I don't consider a 351 a CJ no matter what Ford says).
The 429 is far more advanced and much more durable than the 428 ever was, and produced equal if not more power. There is much debate as to the actual quickest factory-produced classic Mustang: A 428 CJ powered '69, or was it a 429 CJ powered '71? Some like to even say a BOSS 351 holds the "quickest" title...but it just aint so.
The 429 appeared in '70 and by then the super-car craze had already peaked and was on the way out. If Ford had produced the 429 CJ/SCJ twins in '69-'71, I think the mighty 429 would have garnered enough favorable press to be forever known as the Hemi-killer, and our big-block 71s would be that much more desirable and valuable.
However, by the time ther 429 came around in the Mustang, nobody really cared about these kinds of cars anymore. That is why so few 71 Hemi-Cudas and 429 Mustangs were actually made: Nobody really cared or wanted them, hard as it is to belive these days.
And there's the pre-production blue Boss 351 (see page #10 for a very similar pre-pro Mach 1) that was seen in press photos as a Boss 302, complete with a bit of info about Bill Stroppe's performance touches to it.
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