1965 Ford Mustang Drawings
What if…the Mustang had been penned by a company other than Ford?

By Frank Peiler

Little did anyone know that the Ford Mustang would be such a big hit. The first-ever pony car spawned a segment that would soon include the Chevrolet Camaro, Pontiac Firebird, Mercury Cougar, AMC Javelin, and Dodge Challenger, to name a few.

Sure, the Plymouth Barracuda was introduced before the Mustang, but it was really just a Plymouth Valiant with a fastback greenhouse. The ‘Cuda wouldn’t become a “real” pony car until its redesign for 1970.

Pony Car Milestone: Ford Rolls Out 50th Anniversary Mustang

Ford-Mustang_1965_1024x768_wallpaper_01
Lee Iacocca and Don Frey stand with the original Mustang as Ford designed it.

No question, Mustang was a hit. But imagine for a moment that a carmaker other than Ford had taken a crack at designing it. What if AMC, Chrysler, General Motors, or Studebaker-Packard had undertaken the task of designing the original Mustang? The following drawings represent what I think those companies might have done with the same source material.

 

AMC

-1

-2

I based this car on the Rambler American 2-door hardtop.  By extending the wheelbase and front clip forward of the cowl, chopping the top and blanking out the C-pillars, I came up with a “Mustang” that looks surprisingly like the original.

 

 Chrysler

-3

-4

 

Chrysler would have used the Valiant as a starting point for the Mustang.  Here I extended the front clip but largely retained the greenhouse save for more-rakish rear glass. A Mustang-like rear deck completes the transformation.

 

General Motors

-6

-7

The guys at Chevrolet might have used the upcoming second-generation Corvair as a basis for their Mustang. After all, the Mustang I concept was a rear engined two-seat sports car, so the rear engined Corvair was a perfectly logical choice.  Most of this car’s design elements are derived from the Mustang I, but with an extended nose.

 

Studebaker-Packard

-9

-8

 

The designers at Studebaker-Packard wouldn’t have had a lot of options when it came to finding a host chassis for their Mustang. The most logical choice would probably have been the Avanti. Combining the sloping Avanti nose with a Mustang-like grille wouldn’t have been easy–as my drawing demonstrates. (I don’t like it either.)  I do like the way the notchback rear deck turned out, though.

Check out Frank’s other “What If…” posts:

1956-57 Continental Mark II

1955 Chevrolet

1940 Continental

1957 Mercury Turnpike Cruiser

1957 Packard

Bring Back the Rambler!

Cord 810

Also see:

Mustang II: The Right Car at the Time?

Share this: