Ford's Most Reckless Muscle Car Build
Ford's Most Reckless Muscle Car Build describes a Ford muscle-car project engineered for homologation and racing dominance rather than everyday drivability. The article says Ford pursued supremacy in NASCAR and developed an extreme muscle car produced in very small numbers to meet legal racing requirements, resulting in a few units released on public roads. It notes the car was not intended for mass production and therefore lacked refined low-speed manners, but claims it delivered on track performance during the classic muscle-car era. The background contrasts Ford’s push with Chrysler’s 426 Hemi V8, introduced in 1964, which powered Daytona 500 success and was banned for 1965 before returning in 1966 under NASCAR rules. The piece details output figures for both the Chrysler 426 Hemi (425 hp and 490 lb-ft) and Ford’s 1969 Mustang Boss 429 with its 429 cubic-inch semi-Hemi engine (375 hp and 450 lb-ft).



