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Travel Racer Formula Butterfinger Mustang Racer

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Owner:
SonicSculptor Send Message to Owner Message this owner
Released:
Monday, September 3, 2012
Origin:
West Virginia, United States
Recently Spotted:
Unknown Location

This is not collectible.

Use TB4HA8C to reference this item.

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Current Goal

"Reminding You to Enjoy The Drive" while caching!
 


To Visit a cache in ALL 48 U.S.
cont. States , Log the Most
Miles, & Get back Home.


See Map with Trackable.

WV, PA, OH, MD, WA, HI
, WA, CA, NV, AZ,

PLEASE Take Photos of me
with Cool Cars or at cool Places
& post pics online at

www.geocaching.com.

(pics with another Ford Mustang would be especially cool!)
(or a least a pic with your cachemobile!)



I’M RACING 3 OTHERS:
TB4HA8C - Butterfinger Ford Mustang 1995
TB4HAF9 - Crunch Chevy Camaro 1995
TB4H9TT - Reeses Mazda Miata MX5 1995
TB45VMT - Hot Wheels Chevy Camaro 1967

 ***HELP ME WIN THE RACE !!!All 4 Hot Wheels TB Racers on the Line for the Start




 

About This Item

Butterfinger Mustang Racer

The Ford Mustang is an automobile manufactured by the Ford Motor Company. It was initially based on the second generation North American Ford Falcon, a compact car.[1] Introduced early on April 17, 1964,[2] dubbed as a "1964½" model by Mustang fans, the 1965 Mustang was the automaker's most successful launch since the Model A.[3] The model is Ford's third oldest nameplate in production[citation needed] and has undergone several transformations to its current fifth generation

The Ford Mustang was brought out five months before the normal start of the 1965 production year. The earliest versions are often referred to as 1964½ models, but VIN coded by Ford and titled as 1965 models with production beginning in Dearborn, Michigan on March 9, 1964[9] and the new car was introduced to the public on April 17, 1964[10] at the New York World's Fair.[11]

Executive stylist John Najjar, who was a fan of the World War II P-51 Mustang fighter plane, is credited by Ford to have suggested the name.[12] John Najjar co-designed the first prototype of the Ford Mustang known as Ford Mustang I in 1961, working jointly with fellow Ford stylist Philip T. Clark.[13] The Mustang I made its formal debut at the United States Grand Prix in Watkins Glen, New York on October 7, 1962, where test driver and contemporary Formula One race driver Dan Gurney lapped the track in a demonstration using the second "race" prototype. His lap times were only slightly off the pace of the F1 race cars.

An alternative view was that Robert J. Eggert, Ford Division market research manager, first suggested the Mustang name. Eggert, a breeder of quarterhorses, received a birthday present from his wife of the book, The Mustangs by J. Frank Dobie in 1960. Later, the book’s title gave him the idea of adding the “Mustang” name for Ford’s new concept car. The designer preferred Cougar or Torino (and an advertising campaign using the Torino name was actually prepared), while Henry Ford II wanted T-bird II.[14] As the person responsible for Ford’s research on potential names, Eggert added “Mustang” to the list to be tested by focus groups; “Mustang,” by a wide margin, came out on top under the heading: "Suitability as Name for the Special Car."[15][16] The name could not be used in Germany,[17] however, because it was owned by Krupp, which had manufactured trucks between 1951 and 1964 with the name Mustang. Ford refused to buy the name for about US$10,000 from Krupp at the time. Kreidler, a manufacturer of mopeds, also used the name, so Mustang was sold in Germany as the "T-5" until December 1978.

Mustangs grew larger and heavier with each model year until, in response to the 1971–1973 models, Ford returned the car to its original size and concept for 1974. It has since seen several platform generations and designs. Although some other pony cars have seen a revival, the Mustang is the only original pony car to remain in uninterrupted production over five decades of development and revision.[

In 1994 the Mustang underwent its first major redesign in fifteen years. Code-named "SN-95" by the automaker, it was based on an updated version of the rear-wheel drive Fox platform called "Fox-4." The new styling by Patrick Schiavone incorporated several styling cues from earlier Mustangs.[44] For the first time since 1974, a hatchback coupe model was unavailable.

The base model came with a 3.8 OHV V6 (232 cid) engine rated at 145 bhp (108 kW) in 1994 and 1995, or 150 bhp (110 kW) (1996–1998), and was mated to a standard 5-speed manual transmission or optional 4-speed automatic.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Mustang 


 

Gallery Images related to Butterfinger Mustang Racer

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Tracking History (20278.5mi) View Map

Mark Missing 10/14/2014 Olddffart marked it as missing   Visit Log

This is an automated message.
This Trackable has been marked 'missing' by a cache owner or site administrator. Trackables are marked missing when it is determined that they are no longer located in the cache they are listed in or in the hands of the current holder. Review the most recent logs on this Trackable to learn more information about its current state.

Write note 7/1/2014 McCawfamily posted a note for it   Visit Log

Not in the comox valley TB hotel cache

Retrieve It from a Cache 6/21/2014 LTGWG retrieved it from Stump cache British Columbia, Canada   Visit Log

Will send it on it's way very soon.

Discovered It 5/10/2014 bcrockcrawler, xstitcher, & BMXer discovered it   Visit Log

Left in the cache because we are not getting close to the US anytime soon. Good luck.

Dropped Off 5/9/2014 KrysAdlers placed it in Stump cache British Columbia, Canada - 16.11 miles  Visit Log

Crashed here in a brand new cache. Hopefully someone will be going your way soon...

Retrieve It from a Cache 5/4/2014 KrysAdlers retrieved it from Ant Art British Columbia, Canada   Visit Log

Well, you went a little off course from Hawaii: you came to Canada. I found this TB in a cache outside of Campbell River, BC on Vancouver Island. Now, I know some people think Canada is the 51st state, but it isn't. Will try to send you back to the USA soon.

Dropped Off 4/25/2014 CommonSense placed it in Ant Art British Columbia, Canada - 21.53 miles  Visit Log
Visited 4/23/2014 CommonSense took it to Not EXACTLY a View of Anderson Lake (FOVM1000) British Columbia, Canada - .47 miles  Visit Log
  • Butterfinger visits Anderson Lake
Visited 4/23/2014 CommonSense took it to Lakeside British Columbia, Canada - 1.69 miles  Visit Log
  • Butterfinger at the Lakeside
Visited 4/23/2014 CommonSense took it to Valley of the Wolves 2 British Columbia, Canada - 1.06 miles  Visit Log
  • No wolves in the Valley today but a bear sighted
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