2004 Ford Mustang GT Coupe �€" Screaming Yellow, 4,976 Actual
Miles, 5-Speed Manual Why This Car Is Special The fourth-generation
Ford Mustang ran from 1994 through 2004, and the 2004 model year
holds a specific place in that timeline. It was the final year of
the SN-95 platform before Ford replaced the entire lineup with the
retro-styled S197 in 2005. That transition made the last of the
Fox-4 body Mustangs something of an afterthought at the time, but
two decades later, low-mile examples of the 2004 Ford Mustang GT
are getting harder to find and harder to ignore. This particular
2004 Ford Mustang GT coupe has covered just 4,976 actual miles in
twenty-plus years. That number puts it in a category that has
nothing to do with restoration �€" this is a car that was simply
not driven. The Screaming Yellow paint, the dark charcoal interior,
the undercarriage, and the drivetrain are all in the condition they
left the Dearborn Assembly Plant. There is no story to unwind here,
no previous damage to disclose, no wear to explain away. The
mileage speaks plainly. The 2004 model year was also the 40th
anniversary of the Mustang, and Ford offered a special 40th
Anniversary package that year. The VIN on this car decodes to a
standard GT coupe built at Dearborn, not the Anniversary package,
which actually works in its favor for buyers who want a clean,
honest GT without the commemorative badging adding noise to the
story. What you get instead is a well-optioned Mustang GT with the
hood scoop, the side stripes, the dual exhaust, and the Mach
1-style wheels �€" a car that looks the part without needing a
special edition label to justify it. Features List - 4.6L 2-valve
Modular V8 - Tremec 5-speed manual transmission - Screaming Yellow
exterior - Dark Charcoal vinyl interior - 4,976 actual miles - GT
functional-style hood scoop - Side body stripes - Dual exhaust with
rear fascia cutouts - Power windows and power door locks - Mach
1-style 17-inch aluminum wheels - Sport bucket seats - Pony
interior badging - Clean, dry undercarriage Mechanical The
4.6-liter two-valve Modular V8 was the standard engine for the 2004
Ford Mustang GT, rated at 260 horsepower and 302 lb-ft of torque
from the factory. Ford introduced this engine family to the Mustang
in 1996 as a replacement for the pushrod 5.0, and by 2004 it was a
proven, well-understood platform. The two-valve version has a
reputation for durability when maintained properly, and at under
5,000 miles, this engine has barely been broken in. The timing
chain, seals, gaskets, and rotating assembly have essentially no
service life on them. The transmission is the Tremec T-45 5-speed
manual, which was the correct gearbox pairing for the two-valve GT.
It connects to a live rear axle with a limited-slip differential
�€" a standard feature on the Mustang GT �€" which keeps the power
honest going out of corners. With mileage this low, the practical
mechanical story is straightforward. There are no high-mileage
concerns to weigh. Rubber components and fluids should be inspected
as a matter of age rather than use, but the mechanical components
themselves show no meaningful wear. The undercarriage photographs
confirm what the odometer suggests �€" this car has lived a
sheltered life. Interior The interior of this 2004 Ford Mustang GT
is finished in dark charcoal vinyl, which was a practical and
period-correct choice for a performance car of this era. Sport
bucket seats hold the driver and passenger in place without the
thickness of leather, keeping the cockpit feel close and direct.
The pony badging on the seats is a detail that GT buyers of this
generation will recognize �€" the running horse embossed into the
seat back was a subtle nod to the model's identity without
overstating it. Power windows and power locks were included, which
was not universal on every Mustang of this generation depending on
the build. The door panels, center console, and dash surfaces show
no cracking, fading, or wear co
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.