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Ford Mustang Concepts

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Found this article on CarBuzz about concept Mustang designs.  Crazy when you really think about how things could have gone.  I mean some of these are just plain BAD.  The one that most resembles an actual production Mustang is that horrendous 65 body with FOUR DOORS.  Thank you very much Ford for not green-lighting that one. 
They have a certain futuristic feels as most concept renderings do but some of them were straight spaceships.  To see this evolution and how the Mustang could have been just another one of the world’s ugliest cars and maybe not have made it out of the early 70s is very interesting.  As a Mustang fan myself, I am just a tad nervous to see what the future holds.

In the meantime, I can recommend you search for a real Stang here-

Mustangs For Sale

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These are the concepts that never left the corral. Thank God… 🙂
In Mustang’s storied 50-year existence, numerous concepts and prototypes never made the jump to production. Over the decades, the Lee A Iacocca commissioned pony car has maintained its original characteristics of sporty affordability. Yet as everyone’s favorite secretary’s car evolved, plenty of ponies were sacrificed throughout the generations. Ford is celebrating these forgotten Mustangs, opening its archives ahead of the 2015’s model expected debut at the 2014 New York Auto Show where it first took a bow.
In the early sixties Ford designers played around with sporty coupe themes based on the Falcon resulting in the Avventura, Avanti and Allegro, whose fastback profile was eventually adopted by the Mustang MkIII. The Allegro Design study was where the Stang’s basic proportions: long hood, short deck, and compact greenhouse, were born. Two-seater studies followed along with the 1962 Mustang I, a mid-engine coupe concept that bore aesthetic cues of the 1966 GT40. In 1965, Ford produced a four-door concept, considered to be its first major styling faux pas, and in 1966 a station-wagon concept followed.
The Mach 1 and Mach 2 Concepts represented the last of the Sixties prototypes, and in 1970 the Mustang Milano broke cover in Chicago, whose extended nose found its way onto the 1971 model. The final three Mustang Concepts include the 1980 Ghia-penned RSX rally special based on the third-gen Fox-body Stang, the “Bruce Jenner” and “Rambo” concepts from 1990, and the 1992 Mach III Concept, which offered clues as to the fourth-gen’s design direction.
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade
The Ford Mustang Concepts that Missed the Grade


 

source: CarBuzz 8/30/13

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