
If you have driven a modest but secretly potent Mustang hatchback from the seventies, or have ridden in the Shelby Mustang GT, or own and pamper a classic six-banger or other Mustang of any value, you might scoff at the likelihood of a Mustang recall If you have worked on, souped up, cherried out, or just seriously appreciated the renowned muscle car that will not die, you might find no use for the Mustang recall. These cars are legends, no doupt and for many fans they are the greatest cars ever.
Or if you have seen the latest Mustang commercials, like the one which features, of course, the unmistakably, notoriously stunning visceral Mustang growl and the S197 raising hell through a cornfield, or the ad which is hot as hell with its featured engine roaring, accelerating, and down shifting as it jams and races over country roads, past a close-up pastured pony, and into a lighted city and pulls into an enclosed, echoing space, skirting to a throaty halt and morphing into its ancestor Mustangs the text reads either "The Legend Lives" or "Built for XYZ"...your senses will not be able to wrap around any other concept or speech (no talking in these Mustang ads--gorgeous!) about any mandatory Mustang recall.
However...yes, there is a however, for even the kids at play need to have someone lookin' over them with safety and other protocol...if the Mustang recall is important enough to those buying or looking in to buying the new S197, the 351, an older V-6, or other condition, year, or model, and therefore is discussed and identified (by recall issue, year, etc.) in numerous top-notch sites--for the Mustang enthusiast in particular or the car-lover or potential car-buyer in g






