Now I Know Why I Can't Like The Mustang: I'm A Camaro Guy

After my first drive in a Chevrolet Camaro SS, I find myself wishing it was the Pony Car we can buy in the UK, rather than the Mustang...
Now I Know Why I Can't Like The Mustang: I'm A Camaro Guy

The Ford Mustang is - decades on from the launch of the original - no longer a forbidden fruit for us Brits. In 2015 the first examples of the sixth-generation Pony Car with - gasp - a steering wheel on the right-hand side landed in Britain, giving petrolheads that complication-free slice of V8 Americana they’ve been missing for all these years.

At the time, I was ecstatic. And then I drove one.

Now I Know Why I Can't Like The Mustang: I'm A Camaro Guy

It wasn’t the slightly vague steering or the wallowy yet weirdly firm damping that disappointed me. No, I hadn’t expected a masterclass in driving dynamics. What I wanted was simple coupe thrills, only to have my hopes dashed by the one part of the equation I thought I could rely on. The engine.

What I was expecting was a big, lazy V8 that made a great noise, only to find that the Coyote V8 needed quite a bit of revving to get the best out of it, sounding weirdly flat and uninspiring, and being hooked up to a less than brilliant six-speed manual gearbox. And as fun as Line Lock is, I can’t help but think software-controlled burnouts are just un-American.

The facelifted sixth-gen Mustang with its louder exhaust improved the noise stakes while also bringing chassis improvements (and a much higher price tag), but I still don’t find myself drawn to it. Now, though, I finally understand the problem: it turns out I’m a Camaro guy.

Now I Know Why I Can't Like The Mustang: I'm A Camaro Guy

On a trip to California last year, I had a bit of time in a Camaro SS Hot Wheels 50th Anniversary Edition. A $4995 option which was also available for the 2LT Camaro, it adds all sorts of visual upgrades like racing stripes, special paint, and 20-inch wheels, and all that does indeed make for a wicked-looking coupe. But I was more interested in the engine.

It took only a part throttle application shortly after picking it up to find that the 455bhp, 455lb ft V8 was much more to my liking than the Mustang’s Coyote lump. It’s the same pushrod LT1 V8 used in the base Corvette, and it has multiple personalities.

It’s moody and rumbly at low revs, lets out a delicious howl in the mid-range, and is creamily smooth at the top end. This is the kind of engine that livens up every journey, no matter how dull. Even the gearbox is better - the cogs themselves are too long, but there’s no arguing with the heavy, very mechanically satisfying ‘thunk’ of every shift.

Now I Know Why I Can't Like The Mustang: I'm A Camaro Guy

That could have been the end of it. I’d have happily punted up and down Highway 1 in that car, being greedy with the throttle away from every single traffic light and bouncing the noise of the LT1 off various rock faces. But it turns out the SS is a fine steer when you put it on some Canyon roads.

Yes, it is nose heavy, and yes, something like a BMW M2 is more satisfying to drive on twistier bits, but the Camaro SS is very well sorted. The suspension verges on being too stiff, but body control is generally good. The front end is willing, and there’s far more traction from the rear than you might expect. There’s something nice about the weight of the steering, too - it’s heavy, but it’s a natural-feeling heft that - along with the chunky gear change - makes driving the Camaro feel like it actually takes effort.

Now I Know Why I Can't Like The Mustang: I'm A Camaro Guy

Like the Mustang, the Camaro does have flaws. Despite appearing to be vast on the outside, the inside is conspicuously pokey. The window lines are bizarrely high, hampering visibility, and crucially, hampering your ability to open a window and rest an arm on the door while you’re cruising around. Which just seems the right thing to do in this car.

Then there’s the infotainment screen, which for some bizarre reason is angled slightly down. When the light is in just the wrong place, all you can see is your passenger’s trousers. To cap it off, the navigation system itself isn’t brilliant.

The Mustang does a lot of this ‘normal car’ stuff much better. It’s better packaged, and more useable day-to-day. But for all the attributes that should be the most important for someone buying a car like this, the Chevrolet has the Ford beaten.

Now I Know Why I Can't Like The Mustang: I'm A Camaro Guy

It’s a car of multiple talents. It has that feel-good V8 sense of occasion, while also standing up as a decent sports car. Finally, as an object, it just makes you smile. I even (whispers it) quite like the big-mouthed facelifted version.

Ford’s decision to stick a steering wheel on the right-hand side of the Mustang and ship it to the UK is something to be celebrated. But I find myself wishing we were in a parallel universe where instead, Chevrolet did the same with the Camaro.

Comments

Basith Penna-Hakkim

I rather take this gen Camaro over the new Camaro because the new one is hideous

02/10/2019 - 18:48 |
6 | 0

They are the same gen just a facelift

03/07/2019 - 20:59 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

[DELETED]

02/10/2019 - 19:23 |
6 | 12
Anonymous

The camaro is more capable off the factory floor but to say the coyote engine is uninspiring? Thats a stretch! I own one of these albeit procharged but theres simply no other engine like that coyote v8. Its literally one of the baddest v8 engines ever. I have over 850rwhp on a stock engine. Even n/a eith bolt on mods that coyote is a beast; more so when compared with a lt4 engine with similar modifications. The stock dampers on the mustang suck and ive upgraded my 2015 with ridetech coilovers but drive a 2018 mustang gt with the pp2 package and let me know your thoughts.

02/10/2019 - 19:25 |
8 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

I could not agree more

02/10/2019 - 19:31 |
0 | 0
Ian Price

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

The ls motors(yes I know it’s an LT1 but everyone calls the gen 3+ small blocks ls motors no matter what they are) are better than the coyote. Not only are ls motors cheaper but the parts are cheaper and parts are everywhere. They are more reliable than the coyote especially when turning high hp numbers. The ls can also make more power than coyote motors easily. Sure the coyote is smaller so you have more power per cubic inch but in the end power per cube doesn’t matter

03/07/2019 - 20:59 |
0 | 2
Anonymous

Hey Matt, bet your panties bunch up a lot.

02/10/2019 - 22:41 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

You can buy a right hand drive in Australia later this year. $84000 though!

02/10/2019 - 23:38 |
0 | 0
K sarito

Love the 5th gen even if its hard to see out of. And it sits low and almost every time i get in it i smack my head on the door seal over the top window ( i am 6’3 ). Regardless i still love my camaro ss.

02/11/2019 - 01:52 |
0 | 0
Ben Anderson 1

I find myself wishing it was the Pony Car we can buy in the UK

www.chevrolet.co.uk

V8 is £42,000
i4 is £35,000

02/11/2019 - 12:59 |
0 | 0

Are crate engines a big thing in the uk?

04/28/2019 - 04:37 |
0 | 0
peter 15

FYI you said I wish the pony car was in the uk not the mustang but the mustang is the pony car.

02/11/2019 - 15:02 |
2 | 2

Pony car is a term for a class of car. A camaro is a pony car along with a firebird. They aren’t big enough to be considered muscle cars so they are pony cars

03/07/2019 - 21:03 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

But can you get a $40,000 dollar camaro with 710 horses under the hood? Didn’t think so.

02/12/2019 - 11:12 |
0 | 0
aut0matic

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

What mustang can you get with 710 hp for 40k?

02/13/2019 - 16:02 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Oh!

03/07/2019 - 22:35 |
0 | 0

Topics

Manufacturers

Sponsored Posts