Replica cars — like Shelby Cobra kit cars, or those tragic Pontiac Fiero-to-Ferrari conversions — are typically based on unattainable classics and sold for a fraction of the price of the real thing. Yet one Florida company has gone against the grain: Revology, based in Winter Park, Fla. will start selling replicas of the 1964-66 Ford Mustangs that mix authentic bodies with modern technology — all for $119,500.
An interesting concept, & a little shoutout from the opening statement. Just saw this today & thought I would share.
They must not have looked in Texas because you can still get a decent shaped 64-66 Mustang for under 15K here. I know a lot of you like new technology but personally I want an old muscle car for the "oldness" of it with the lack of any emissions. A car that, if it didn`t run, could only be a couple of things. That you don`t need a scan gauge to get an idea of what might be wrong.
So they are taking a dyna core reman body, and slapping it together, and charging 120k.. the dyna-core body's list for 14999.oo
and you still are stuck with a car that has no vin until the first owner takes it to the rmv.. That's why they are using newer engines. if you live in a state that list a kit/constructed vehicle by the year it is completed.. it will have to pass 2015 emissions.. what does the 2015 gt350 mustang cost?? 53k
Here in Utah I could title that as a 65 Mustang. And thus it would be forever by law. Sweet. Now I have to forget all the other awesome cars I could get for that kind of money....
I like the newer version better, anyway and for less, except for the 15 the front now looks like a fusion. I like the fusion but the mustang should have stayed it own design.
They must not have looked in Texas because you can still get a decent shaped 64-66 Mustang for under 15K here. I know a lot of you like new technology but personally I want an old muscle car for the "oldness" of it with the lack of any emissions. A car that, if it didn`t run, could only be a couple of things. That you don`t need a scan gauge to get an idea of what might be wrong.