Let's get one thing out of the way: This is the best Mustang ever built. Which makes it one of the best muscle cars ever built. Which makes it one of the best cars ever built, period. Which means you should probably go out and buy one, even though it costs $41,000 – a big chunk of change for a Mustang.
Your dad had the best gear back in the day. Some of it is still around, and it's still awesome. Flash back!For a normal person, the ordinary, 412-hp Mustang GT has absolutely nothing wrong with it. It's a $30,500 brawler that handles better than anything with a live rear axle has a right to. Best of all, it recalls that awesome time your dad hit up the '74 U.S. Grand Prix at Watkins Glen and got lost in the track's world-famous Bog before drinking his weight in Schlitz and helping a rowdy mob set a Greyhound bus on fire.
OK, maybe your dad didn't do that. But it would've been awesome if he did, right?
The 2012 Mustang Boss 302 offers a similar call-back to the past. It's based on the Mustang GT, albeit with a razor-sharp, track-oriented suspension; a 7500-rpm (!), 444-hp 5.0-liter V-8; a shorter (3.73:1) limited-slip rear-axle; and various aerodynamic bits aimed at increasing high-speed grip. The front brakes are 14-inch units borrowed from Ford's 550-hp Shelby GT500. Oh, and there's a killer, Annie-get-your-bell-bottoms graphics package meant to recall Ford's 1969-1970 Boss 302 Trans-Am racing special. Ask your dealer nicely, you can get a red ignition key, dubbed TracKey, that unlocks aggressive throttle programming and a blissfully lumpy old-school idle.
One more thing: It has side pipes – exhausts that exit under the rocker panels. Gurgle.



