Fast forward to today and Porter finally has a car he’s ready to offer to customers – the UBB1000 Mustang. To be exact his company actually offers four different Mustangs, from the UBB500 Mustang all the way up to the UBB1100 Widow Maker Mustang, but the bread and butter of the lineup is the 1000. The car pictured here is one example, and it’s also the one that Porter let us drive. He tells us it’s the first time anyone in the media in the United States has been granted seat time. Gulp.
Before we got behind the wheel, though, Porter gave us a brief walk around the car. Each UBB1000 starts out as a fully loaded Shelby GT500, but you won’t mistake this for a standard production model from Ford. A new carbon fiber front fascia, vented hood and rear fascia have all been sourced from TruFiber, the ducktail spoiler comes from Cervinis and the 18-inch wheels are built by Forgeline. The smoked headlights and taillights (an add-on requested by this particular customer) look cool, but will likely get you a fix-it ticket in most states. There are also the requisite badges and graphics strewn throughout the exterior that can be found on every special edition Mustang, but Porter says that for the most part there is purpose to every component. “Anything we’ve got on the car is there for a reason,” he tells us. “I’m really not into have all the scoops and other stuff on the car that doesn’t do any good.”
Overall the design is simple and cohesive, and our only complaint is that all of the parts are off-the-shelf pieces. To Porter’s credit he’ll personalize a Mustang to a customer’s taste, as evidenced by this car’s throwback Eleanor-style paint scheme. However, anyone can build themselves an identical looking car, and we wish the UBB1000 had a more distinctive look like a Roush, Saleen or Roush Mustang.
Moving onto the interior the UBB1000 Mustang, there isn’t much changed from the stock GT500. Our test car featured the stock GT500 seats (leather or clock Recaro seats are available as an option) with the leather inserts swapped out to match the exterior as well as an Alcantara-covered steering wheel, a short-throw shifter, new gauges with a 360 km/h speedometer (this particular car was destined for the Middle East) and faux carbon fiber surrounding the instrument panel and center console.
Like with the exterior, we felt that the interior needed more of a unique look to separate itself from what any owner could put into his or her own car. There’s nothing really wrong with the standard GT500, but for $120,000, the base cost of the car, we were hoping for something a little more unique. The fake carbon fiber definitely has no place on a car costing six figures.
Open the hood and the first thing you notice is the massive Whipple 4.0-liter supercharger system sitting atop the 5.4-liter V8. The huge blower compresses massive amount of air into the engine, which produces 1,000 horsepower and 860 lb-ft torque. Amazingly, though, the UBB1000 is surprisingly easy to drive at slow speeds. The twin-plate clutch doesn’t require a Herculean effort and the throttle tip-in isn’t so aggressive that you actually travel at slow speeds without lurching forward. It’s amazing how much more drivable high horsepower cars like this one have become over the last few years.
Get on the throttle, though, and a beast awakens from under the UBB1000′s hood. Thanks to the twin-screw supercharger, torque is instantly available in the lower part of the rpm band and downshifting becomes a moot point. We have to admit that that we explored the deeper levels of the throttle in stages, in part not wanting to swap ends in a customer car, but more than anything the car is terrifying to drive at more than half throttle. We found it hard to truly get a sense of how fast the car is, simply because accelerating for more than a couple of seconds will put you well past the legal speed limit. The UBB1000 is truly a car that needs to be experienced on the track, whether the drag strip or the road course.
One thing that did surprised us is how much traction the UBB1000 Mustang had given the output of the supercharged V8. Much of the credit goes to the sticky Toyo Proxes R888 tires. Amazingly, Porter has managed to fit 305/35/18 tires and 10.5-inch wide wheels on all four corners, providing a wide contact patch of rubber to lay the power down. The ability to implement such wide tires is due to the suspension system built by Cortex, with the coilovers specially designed to allow extra clearance for the 10.5-inch wheel even in the front.
Equally impressive is the ride quality of the UBB1000. While some aftermarket Mustangs are set up jarringly stiff, the UBB1000 can carve corners just as well as it can provide a comfortable ride. The credit again goes to the Cortex suspension system that can be adjusted via the strut towers for the front or in the trunk for the rear. Each car is also fitted with a watts linkage and adjustable caster/camber plates for even more improved handling. The stock 14-inch Brembo brakes remain in place, as Porter says they still do a fine job of bringing the car to a stop. They performed admirably during our time in the Mustang, but we still wonder if an improved setup would be required for doing laps at the track.
With the UBB1000 Mustang producing four digits of horsepower, the inevitable comparison is to the 2012 Shelby 1000, which produces either 950 or 1100 horsepower depending on trim. The two cars are amazingly similar in their specifications, and while Porter doesn’t have a 50 year heritage or the name recognition, he is quick to point out that the UBB1000 costs $80,000 than the starting price of the Shelby.
Before we got behind the wheel, though, Porter gave us a brief walk around the car. Each UBB1000 starts out as a fully loaded Shelby GT500, but you won’t mistake this for a standard production model from Ford. A new carbon fiber front fascia, vented hood and rear fascia have all been sourced from TruFiber, the ducktail spoiler comes from Cervinis and the 18-inch wheels are built by Forgeline. The smoked headlights and taillights (an add-on requested by this particular customer) look cool, but will likely get you a fix-it ticket in most states. There are also the requisite badges and graphics strewn throughout the exterior that can be found on every special edition Mustang, but Porter says that for the most part there is purpose to every component. “Anything we’ve got on the car is there for a reason,” he tells us. “I’m really not into have all the scoops and other stuff on the car that doesn’t do any good.”
Overall the design is simple and cohesive, and our only complaint is that all of the parts are off-the-shelf pieces. To Porter’s credit he’ll personalize a Mustang to a customer’s taste, as evidenced by this car’s throwback Eleanor-style paint scheme. However, anyone can build themselves an identical looking car, and we wish the UBB1000 had a more distinctive look like a Roush, Saleen or Roush Mustang.
Moving onto the interior the UBB1000 Mustang, there isn’t much changed from the stock GT500. Our test car featured the stock GT500 seats (leather or clock Recaro seats are available as an option) with the leather inserts swapped out to match the exterior as well as an Alcantara-covered steering wheel, a short-throw shifter, new gauges with a 360 km/h speedometer (this particular car was destined for the Middle East) and faux carbon fiber surrounding the instrument panel and center console.
Like with the exterior, we felt that the interior needed more of a unique look to separate itself from what any owner could put into his or her own car. There’s nothing really wrong with the standard GT500, but for $120,000, the base cost of the car, we were hoping for something a little more unique. The fake carbon fiber definitely has no place on a car costing six figures.
Open the hood and the first thing you notice is the massive Whipple 4.0-liter supercharger system sitting atop the 5.4-liter V8. The huge blower compresses massive amount of air into the engine, which produces 1,000 horsepower and 860 lb-ft torque. Amazingly, though, the UBB1000 is surprisingly easy to drive at slow speeds. The twin-plate clutch doesn’t require a Herculean effort and the throttle tip-in isn’t so aggressive that you actually travel at slow speeds without lurching forward. It’s amazing how much more drivable high horsepower cars like this one have become over the last few years.
Get on the throttle, though, and a beast awakens from under the UBB1000′s hood. Thanks to the twin-screw supercharger, torque is instantly available in the lower part of the rpm band and downshifting becomes a moot point. We have to admit that that we explored the deeper levels of the throttle in stages, in part not wanting to swap ends in a customer car, but more than anything the car is terrifying to drive at more than half throttle. We found it hard to truly get a sense of how fast the car is, simply because accelerating for more than a couple of seconds will put you well past the legal speed limit. The UBB1000 is truly a car that needs to be experienced on the track, whether the drag strip or the road course.
One thing that did surprised us is how much traction the UBB1000 Mustang had given the output of the supercharged V8. Much of the credit goes to the sticky Toyo Proxes R888 tires. Amazingly, Porter has managed to fit 305/35/18 tires and 10.5-inch wide wheels on all four corners, providing a wide contact patch of rubber to lay the power down. The ability to implement such wide tires is due to the suspension system built by Cortex, with the coilovers specially designed to allow extra clearance for the 10.5-inch wheel even in the front.
Equally impressive is the ride quality of the UBB1000. While some aftermarket Mustangs are set up jarringly stiff, the UBB1000 can carve corners just as well as it can provide a comfortable ride. The credit again goes to the Cortex suspension system that can be adjusted via the strut towers for the front or in the trunk for the rear. Each car is also fitted with a watts linkage and adjustable caster/camber plates for even more improved handling. The stock 14-inch Brembo brakes remain in place, as Porter says they still do a fine job of bringing the car to a stop. They performed admirably during our time in the Mustang, but we still wonder if an improved setup would be required for doing laps at the track.
With the UBB1000 Mustang producing four digits of horsepower, the inevitable comparison is to the 2012 Shelby 1000, which produces either 950 or 1100 horsepower depending on trim. The two cars are amazingly similar in their specifications, and while Porter doesn’t have a 50 year heritage or the name recognition, he is quick to point out that the UBB1000 costs $80,000 than the starting price of the Shelby.
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