1973 Ford Mustang Fastback �€" Resto-Mod Build with Blueprint 347
V8 and Over $75,000 Invested Why This Car Is Special The 1973 Ford
Mustang holds a specific and often underappreciated place in
Mustang history. It was the last of the original 'classic' Mustangs
before Ford completely restyled the car into the much-maligned
Mustang II for 1974. That makes the 1973 model year the closing
chapter on nearly a decade of the body style that started it all.
Ford sold just over 134,000 Mustangs that year across all body
styles, and the fastback �€" formally called the SportsRoof �€"
remains the most sought-after configuration of the bunch. The long
roofline, the aggressive rear quarter treatment, and the overall
proportions of the SportsRoof body are what most people picture
when they close their eyes and think 'Mustang.' What you have here
is not a preserved survivor and it is not pretending to be one.
This 1973 Ford Mustang has been fully transformed into a serious
resto-mod over a two-year build process with more than $75,000
invested in the work. The philosophy behind a resto-mod like this
is straightforward: keep the iconic shape, throw out everything
that made the original drive like a 50-year-old car, and replace it
with hardware that can actually keep up with modern traffic �€" and
then some. Every major system on this car has been addressed, from
the engine and transmission to the brakes, suspension, fuel
delivery, exhaust, interior, and paint. This is the kind of build
where the money spent is visible at every point of contact. The VIN
on this car decodes to confirm it is a 1973 Ford Mustang SportsRoof
(fastback body style), built at the Dearborn, Michigan assembly
plant �€" the same facility where the very first Mustangs rolled
off the line in 1964. Dearborn-built Mustangs carry a certain
historical weight for that reason alone. Features List - Blueprint
Engines 347 cubic inch stroker V8, rated at 347 horsepower - Tremec
TKO 5-speed manual transmission - Edelbrock intake manifold -
2.5-inch Flowmaster dual exhaust - Power disc brakes (front and
rear) - Power steering - Upgraded suspension with subframe
connectors - Aluminum radiator with dual electric cooling fans -
17-inch American Racing Shelby-style wheels - Dakota Digital VHX
gauge cluster with tachometer - Alpine double-DIN stereo -
Sequential Shelby-style LED tail lights - Complete new black vinyl
interior - Center console - Sport steering wheel - Dual functional
hood scoops - Front and rear spoilers - Shelby-style quarter panel
vents - Custom PPG exterior paint - Chrome rear bumper Mechanical
The engine is a Blueprint Engines 347 cubic inch stroker V8
producing 347 horsepower. Blueprint Engines, based in Kearney,
Nebraska, builds their engines on CNC-machined short blocks with
forged rotating assemblies and runs each engine on a dyno before it
ships. The 347 stroker is built on the Ford small-block
architecture �€" essentially a 302 block with a longer-stroke
crankshaft that brings displacement up to 347 cubic inches �€" and
it is a well-proven combination in the Mustang world. Topped with
an Edelbrock intake manifold and a carburetor with a matching air
cleaner assembly, the engine compartment is neatly laid out and
clearly the work of someone who thought about how the finished
product would look as well as perform. Power routes through a
Tremec TKO 5-speed manual transmission, which is a significant
upgrade over any period-correct gearbox. The TKO series was
engineered specifically for high-torque small-block applications
and is rated to handle up to 600 lb-ft of torque depending on the
specific build. It offers tighter gear spacing than the old
Toploader units and includes an overdrive fifth gear, which makes
highway cruising at modern speeds practical without thrashing the
engine. This is not a show car that gets trailered to events �€" it
is set up to be driven. Stopping power comes from power-assisted
disc brakes, a critical upgrade on a car this age
ClassicCars.com has been recognized as one of the fastest-growing private companies in the United States, successfully making the Inc. 5000 list in both 2015,
2016, 2017 and 2018. This prestigious accolade represents the continued growth of the company, and ClassicCars.com's dominance as the world's largest online marketplace for
buying and selling classic and collector vehicles.
The Stevie Awards, the world's premier business awards recognized
ClassicCars.com's first-class Customer Support team with a Stevie Bronze Award in 2019, celebrating the team's skills as exemplary customer support specialists.
In 2016 The Journal, brought to you by ClassicCars.com, was celebrated as the SECOND MOST INFLUENTIAL automotive blog in the world by NFC Performance.