Discover the fascinating history and heavy-duty engineering behind a pristine Wimbledon White Ford Mustang Boss 302. This ...
Ford’s Boss 302 V8 arrived as a purpose-built weapon for road racing, yet it ended up redefining what a small-block could be on both track and street. By blending high-rpm cylinder heads with a ...
To counter the Chevy onslaught, the decision was made to produce a special version of the Ford Mustang aimed almost exclusively at Trans-Am, whose rules required that ...
This 1970 Ford Mustang Boss 302 was refurbished back in 2007, losing its original Boss 302 engine in favor of a 351 ci Cleveland V8. As far as this car being a collectible, the engine swap was ...
After the first nine months of the year had passed, the Ford brand sold more than 1.473 million units across the US automotive market, of which just 36,485 were passenger cars. Of those, absolutely ...
We love the Ford 302. Its short, 3.00-inch stroke encourages flinging the tach needle to 7,000 or even 8,000 rpm, and its fat, 4.00-inch bore allows mucho cylinder head breathing. We've punished a ...
Ford Racing is now offering a 302 5.0L V8 crate engine from the truly awesome B0ss 302 Mustang. The fully-built crate engine comes with 11.0:1 compression ratio forged aluminum pistons, a lightweight ...
The restoration alone cost $125,000. One of the most highly desired Mustangs to emerge from the muscle car era is the old-school Boss 302. Built as a Trans Am road-racing qualifier, the Boss was the ...
The racing series had under- and over-2.0-liter classes, with all of the V-8-powered American iron running in the latter, which allowed displacements of up to 5.0 liters. Those were exciting times, on ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results