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厕所强奸 - National Hot Rod Association

The Super Mustang

Not really a dragster and certainly not a Funny Car, the Tom McEwen-driven Super Mustang was a super oddity that certainly was not one of Ford's "better ideas," but remains a car well remembered by many drag racing fans.
27 Apr 2018
Phil Burgess, 厕所强奸 National Dragster Editor
DRAGSTER Insider
McEwen

Several of you, tongues firmly planted in cheek, chastised me for not including the 鈥渙ther鈥 Super Mustang in last week鈥檚 homage to Mustang Funny Car bodies. I did include Ron Pellegrini鈥檚 Super Mustang early Funny Car but 鈥 purposely -- not the crazy Tom McEwen not-a-dragster-not-a-Funny-Car Super Mustang, so I will address that car this week, cribbing from an article I wrote for National Dragster a while back.

sm5.jpgThe Super Mustang dragster was commissioned by Ford as a promotional tool in the winter of 1966 and ran only a few times after its debut at the 1967 Winternationals. McEwen was at the wheel for the super-slick dragster鈥檚 short life span, and how he ended up there in the middle of a Hall of Fame career is just part of the intriguing story behind this machine.听

Ford was a big supporter of the A/FX class, which would morph into Funny Car eliminator. By 1966, it had an all-star lineup in its A/FX Mustangs with guys like Bill Lawton, Dick Brannan, Tommy Grove, Darrell Droke, and Gas Ronda were behind the wheel of the potent pony cars.

But according to the book Extreme Muscle Cars: The Factory Lightweight Legacy, written by Brannan, Bill Holder, and Phil Kunz, Ford didn鈥檛 sponsor the A/FXers in 1967, 鈥渃hoosing instead to concentrate on production car performance and image.鈥

Though Ford again ramped up its drag racing involvement in 1968 with the famed Cobra Jet invasion at the Winternationals, 1967 was a transition year while those cars were assembled, and from that void somehow was born the Super Mustang. McEwen describes it as a 鈥減et project鈥 by the team that designed the first Mustang production car.

Ford commission the famed Logghe brothers 鈥 Ron and Gene 鈥 to build the car at their Logghe Stamping Co. shop in Fraser, Mich., a car that Ford expected might someday be the 鈥淭op Fueler of the future.鈥

Way back in 2010, I tracked down Brannan and talked to him at length about the car, which he reports was first the brainchild of the Ford Styling Department, originally built as a promotional tool but later handed off to Special Vehicles, where Brannan worked with Ford Drag Team Manager Chuck Foulger.

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The ever-innovative Logghes threw the engineering book at the car, building a 150-inch chassis with a sophisticated rear suspension 鈥 most slingshot dragsters of the era had solid-mounted rear ends and no suspension 鈥 made up of a Posi-Traction rear end suspended by a pair of coil-over shocks, traction bars, and an anti-sway bar.

A swoopy body was conceived at the Ford Design Center and its shape perfected in Ford鈥檚 wind tunnel. A bubble canopy covered the cockpit, blending seamlessly into a rear section that covered the rear slicks. It was one sexy-looking piece.

sm4.jpgFord debuted the car at a pre-race press conference in which Jacques Passino, Ford Division鈥檚 special vehicles manager, said that the car鈥檚 primary purpose was to explore conditions that exist at the dragstrip at speeds about 200 mph and shared a message that鈥檚 eerily familiar to Ford鈥檚 involvement in recent 厕所强奸 safety initiatives. 鈥淎ll of our experience has taught us that we belong in drag racing and that the concrete improvements we can give the sport because of our size and resources will be beneficial to everyone,鈥 he said. 鈥淲hat we learn will be used to develop safer drag cars. We feel this is a responsible approach to the sport.鈥

So, how did McEwen end up being Ford鈥檚 handpicked guy to drive its new wundercar?

goose.jpgMcEwen had bounced around to a lot of cars in the early 1960s 鈥 owning a few, partnering in others, and being a hired gun in still others 鈥 before landing what he called a dream ride in Ed Donovan鈥檚 vaunted Donovan Engineering Special in early 1964. (Within just a few weeks, Donovan, whom everyone called 鈥渢he Mole,鈥 gave McEwen his famous 鈥淢ongoose鈥 nickname.) Later that year, McEwen jumped ship to drive for Lou Baney 鈥 one of the sport鈥檚 early impresarios 鈥 in his Yeakel Plymouth dragster, sponsored by the dealership where Baney was the general manager. Baney was a major wheeler-dealer (he was the one who convinced the Plymouth Dealers Association to sponsor McEwen鈥檚 ill-fated rear-engine Hemi 鈥機uda) and in 1966 purchased the Brand Ford dealership, making the continuing use of a Chrysler powerplant somewhat hypocritical, so by Indy of 1966, the team, with 鈥渢he Old Master,鈥 Ed Pink, tuning, switched to Ford鈥檚 new SOHC powerplant, joining Connie Kalitta and Pete Robinson.

brandford.jpgUnfortunately for McEwen, the Ford engine was stuffed into their old Woody Gilmore chassis and cobbled together to make it work. The Brand Ford car didn鈥檛 handle well, and with Pink getting a slow handle on a new tune-up for the finicky Ford, McEwen tried to compensate with killer reaction times but left many a red-light hanging on the Tree. Finally, as the losses piled up, everyone became frustrated, and, before he knew it, 鈥渢he Mongoose鈥 was replaced by, of all people, his nemesis, Don 鈥渢he Snake鈥 Prudhomme, who was coming off his first season as an independent in the B&M Torkmaster car. The parting with the Brand Ford team was amicable, according to McEwen.

McEwen, however, had made friends at Ford in his time running its engine, including Brannan and Foulger.

sm3.jpgThe Super Mustang鈥檚 chassis was completed in December 1966 and trailered to Florida, where Kalitta shook it down, sans bodywork. The car was shipped to California, where the bodywork was added prior to its Winternationals debut. Kalitta and Tom Marsh built the injected 427 SOHC engine.

McEwen, who had never even sat in the car before it showed up in California, didn鈥檛 fit properly in the cockpit, and the rear suspension was troublesome.听

鈥淚t was real small, real tight trying to get in there, and my head was mashed by the canopy,鈥 recalled McEwen. 鈥淚t wasn鈥檛 real comfortable.鈥

Regardless, the car definitely looked better than it ran, charting just an 8.60 at 180 mph. By comparison, Kalitta won the event with his cammer, running a best of 7.17 at 218 mph.听

鈥淒espite all of the money and brains behind the project, it was, to put it bluntly, a dog,鈥 said McEwen.

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According to Brannan, the canopy blew off on one of the passes during the Winternationals, but they repaired it and returned to Pomona after the event and 鈥渇ooled with it for a while and had it running pretty good,鈥 though he could not recall its best numbers.

鈥淚t was an 鈥榦ff-budget鈥 project to begin with and never really had the financial support it needed to continue,鈥 said Brannan. 鈥淚t was viewed by some as a bit of a white elephant. It didn鈥檛 perform real well and would have taken a lot of development work to make it competitive.鈥

Before long, the car was unceremoniously parked, McEwen moved on to drive the Bivens & Fisher Checkmate dragster (which quickly set the national record), and the Super Mustang was relegated to Ford displays at car shows, where it was a real crowd-pleaser, according to Brannan.听

sm7.jpgIn a story called 鈥淭he Ten Big Mistakes in Drag Racing,鈥 printed in the October 1970 issue of Drag Racing USA, former National DRAGSTER Editor Mike Doherty rated the Super Mustang No. 4. 鈥淟acking dragster horsepower and Funny Car identification, with its enclosed cockpit dragster body and frame, the super expensive Super Mustang was retired before it was even warmed up, and is now reportedly occupying a stall in Dearborn next to the inventory of unsold Edsels,鈥 wrote Doherty, also somewhat tongue in cheek.

The car later was sold and went through a number of owners (including, reportedly, Mickey Thompson) before Don and Joan Lyons of Dowagiac, Mich., purchased it in 2003 and restored it to its original condition. They displayed the occasionally at car shows, then sold it in 2009 at a Monterey, Calif., auction for $154,000. I have no idea where it鈥檚 at now, other than on these pages.

Whether you liked the car or not, despite its lack of success it鈥 still a car that marked another interesting milestone along the way in the history of our sport.

Phil Burgess can reached at听pburgess@nhra.com

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