| Date of Review |
January 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
Revell |
| Subject |
2006 Ford Mustang GT |
| Scale |
1/25 |
| Kit Number |
2839 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Engine, Interior |
| Cons |
Chrome Wheels |
| Skill Level |
Intermediate |
| MSRP (USD) |
$13.96 |
Background
At 60 plus years and counting, the Ford Mustang is showing no
signs of middle-age aches and pains. In fact, you could say that
this pony car has been reborn with a healthy dose of the same type
of magic that made the original Mustang such a smash hit when it
was introduced at the New York Worlds Fair in April, 1964. At
the time, Ford was in need of some excitement in its line. Bolstered
by a multi-million dollar ad blitz, the Mustang almost single-handedly
changed the way Americans looked at their cars. It was the
right product at the right time.
The date was April 17, 1964. Intermediate sized muscle cars
with big block engines were gradually replacing the full sized
muscle car. Lee Iacocca, Ford's General Manager, had always envisioned
a small sports car to be the next hot item in the street wars.
Ford decided that instead of improving their lackluster intermediate,
they would do the competition one better and introduce a whole
new breed of automobile, the pony car.
Originally designed as a
two-seater in the European tradition, Iacocca realized that true
success depended on volume sales. Therefore the Ford Mustang was
introduced as a 1965 model that was based on the compact Falcon
to lower production costs.
It came with an obligatory back seat
and a multitude of options that would give the buyer an opportunity
to customize their purchase, and generate extra profits for Ford.
Plymouth faithful stress that their Barracuda beat the Ford Mustang
to market by two weeks. But it was the Mustang, which racked up
over 22,000 sales its first day and one million sales in its first
two years, that turned the market and people's attention to the
pony car. The pony car class that the Ford Mustang helped create
is the only class of muscle car that still exists today.
To find out more about the 2006 Mustang GT go
here.
The Kit
Engine:
The engine represented in this kit is a 4.6L 3V SOHC V8 motor
with a Tremec 3650 manual gearbox, comprised of over 22 parts in
gray styrene, six steps are required to assemble this GT motor. A
separate dual exhaust system is nicely reproduced as a single part,
some clean up will be required on the mold seams. The battery,
windshield washer, radiator overflow and power steering reservoirs
are molded into the engine compartment. Air Filter intake is provided
as a separate part. The serpentine drive belt arraignment
matches perfectly with the real 4.6 V8 engine. Decals are included
for the radiator shroud and underside of hood. Overall this
kit has a very nice representation of the 300 horsepower motor.
Chassis:
The Suspension is nicely represented with the larger front and
rear stabilizer/sway bars found on the GT’s. Front
independent suspension and rear control arms and axel are nicely
recreated. Front and rear disk brakes assemblies are included.
The chassis has molded in fuel line, fuel filter, brake lines,
and fuel tank.
Wheels and Tires:
The kit includes the new 17” wheel and tire combination.
These are found on the chrome tree, the production GT had an option
for these wheels to be machined aluminum, so you will need to spray
a coat of clear semi-gloss to simulate the same finish. The tree
attachment points flow into the wheel rim edge so extra cleanup
will be necessary to remove the tree attachments and therefore
loss of chrome plating in the edge the rims in fours places. The
tires represent the low profile P235/55ZR17
Interior:
The Pony’s interior includes the options for the “my
color” instrument color package with four different decal
options for the instruments. On the dash includes a very
accurate 1,000-watt audio system found in the GT. The seats
represent the fabric sport bucket option, but no pony decals are
provided for the insert portions of the seats. A stick shift, parking
brake and console lid as well as visors and rear view mirror are
all separate parts. Separate door panel are also included.
Body:
The body is outstanding, no warpage, sink marks or mold lines
are present in my example. Two separate trees of clear styrene
is provided for the glass upfront and back.
A plus to this body is its all molded in one piece, so you don’t
have to glue on the front and rear clips as most other kits. A
rear spoiler is also provided.
Decals:
The decals are crisp and in register. Options for using
either dark blue or silver racing strips are on the sheet. Four
different instrument clusters are provided as well as all the decals
for the engine compartment. A nice touch is a decal for the rear
gas cap.
Conclusion
All parts trees came wrapped separately as what is turning into
a standard practice by Revell-Monogram with its most recent kit
releases. No parts were found damages or loose from the parts
trees. Revell-Mongram really did its homework with this
Pony, I would highly recommend this kit.
I’m currently building
the Revell 1970 Boss 302 Mustang so this will look very
nice next to it. Look for this build real soon right here
on Cybermodeler.
I purchased this kit from my local hobby
shop.
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