From the LA Times:
Bullitt: Chasing the detective’s mystique
Personally and professionally, I try very hard to separate Steve McQueen the actor — who was never better than in “Papillon” — and McQueen the motorsports idol, the patron saint of petrol, the king of cool, the hero to millions of gray-heads lost in an automotive time warp. Give me a break. I have no doubt that McQueen was a very hip cat. He smoked weed. He drove a Jaguar SS. He absolutely rocked a black turtleneck in a way Tom Cruise could never hope to.
But honestly, people, let’s grab a shovel and bury Steve McQueen. The poor man is working harder now than he ever did when he was alive. He is among the highest-earning dead celebrities — endorsing Tag Heuer watches, for instance — and the mawkish, ghoulish obsession with McQueen has gone so far that a pair of his Persol sunglasses — glasses he might, might have worn in “The Thomas Crown Affair” — sold at auction for more than $60,000. McQueen-omania has officially jumped the shark.
McQueen’s brown Ferrari Lusso sold at Pebble Beach last year for $2.3 million, which is easily twice what it would be worth without the McQueen provenance. The person who bought this car, whoever he or she is, is speculating on the rising value of all things McQueen, and I find that kind of distasteful. This is not dancing on McQueen’s grave; it’s doing the Lindy Hop.
Perhaps the biggest deal the dead McQueen struck recently was his arrangement with the Ford Motor Co. You may remember the 2004 commercials where a digitally reanimated McQueen steps out of a cornfield and jumps into a Mustang and roars off. For 2008, Ford has decided to reanimate the cinematic Mustang. Behold the Mustang Bullitt, a slightly tweaked, de-badged Mustang GT, painted Dark Highland Green and dipped with shameless McQueen nostalgia.
To say I wanted to despise this car is putting it mildly. For starters, it’s just another, not very imaginative riff on the Ford Mustang GT, aimed at goobers who’ve got it so bad for Steve they can’t help themselves. It seems exploitative, in other words. Also, Ford has a bad habit of promising that a Mustang special edition — GT500, Cobra, Shelby, whatever — will be a limited run and then making more if the orders come in. Ford actually already made a Bullitt Mustang in 2001. The press release for the 2008 Bullitt has weaselly language in it: “A limited production run of 7,700 units is planned.” Uh-oh.
So I was pleasantly surprised when I drove the car and found that I really, really liked it. Stunned, actually. This Bullitt — with a 4.6-liter, 315-hp V8 and a five-speed shifter between the seats — is way better than the axle-winding lunatic I drove a few months ago, the 500-hp Shelby GT500. You know, sometimes more horsepower is not the answer, particularly when the question is an obsolete chassis with a live rear axle.
What’s in a Bullitt? First, there’s the dark green paint, which looks terrific, no question (buyers can also get the car in black but that seems like getting a Rolls-Royce without the flying lady). The car is de-badged: no chrome pony, no Ford ovals. The only identifying marking is the word Bullitt in the cross-hair design on the faux filler cap in back. The car is gorgeous, with no scoops, spoilers or ventilating air dams.
The bit of genius in the car, though, is the wheel-and-tire package: five-spoke cast-aluminum “Euroflange” wheels — whatever that means — in a gray satin finish, with machined rims of bright alloy. These wheels are a convincing imitation of period-correct Cragar mag wheels. Wrapped around these rims are relatively tall 50-series performance tires. The designers needed tires with taller sidewalls to resemble the bias-ply tires of the ’60s Bullitt; the additional benefit is a smoother, more compliant ride. Also, with a little extra give in the tires, the suspension could be firmed up. The Bullitt has a tighter spring-and-shock package, an upgrade Mustangs generally need and enthusiast owners usually order out of the Ford Racing catalog.
Under the hood, a cold-air intake and slightly raised redline (to 6,500 rpm) add up to an extra 15 horsepower over the stock GT (and 325 pound-feet of torque at 4,250 rpm). Making the Bullitt a little quicker off the line, engineers subbed out the stock 3.31:1 rear axle with a 3.73:1 ratio.
And it’s quick, all right, not overpoweringly so, but certainly enough to get your attention. But more important, it’s all so well matched and balanced. The clutch and shift work flawlessly together, the engine is smooth and tractable. And it’s got an amazing sound. Ford’s powertrain boffins got a digitally remastered version of the film to re-create the bleak, resonant cackle of the original Bullitt. Dare I say awesome?
Throw in a strut tower brace here, some machine-turned alloy appliqués in the interior over there, and quicker than you can don a cardigan, you’ve got a Bullitt, which actually does look like the car from the movie. I don’t know if McQueen would be proud, exactly, but I know he’d be happy to cash the check.
2008 Mustang Bullitt
Base price: $31,075
Price, as tested: $33,500 (est)
Powertrain: 4.6-liter, three-valve, OHV V8; five-speed manual transmission; rear-wheel drive
Horsepower: 315 at 6,000 rpm
Torque: 325 pound-feet at 4,250 rpm
Curb weight: 3,500 pounds (est.)
0-60 mph: 5 seconds
Wheelbase: 107.1 inches
Overall length: 187.6 inches
EPA fuel economy: 15 miles per gallon city, 24 mpg highway
Final thoughts: Ballistic Steve
Filed under: Auto Gallery | Tagged: Bullitt, Ford, Mustang, Steve McQueen
Hi, enjoyed your post. I picked one up a couple of days after it hit the dealership. After owning 3 previous GT’s this one is by far the best driver… and you can’t beat the subdued look. Plus the fact that only true car buffs recognize it on the street!
Not sure this will be a hit as much as the first bullitt attempt about 8 years ago.