| To
generations of fans, Allan Moffat's Trans-Am Mustang is simply the
greatest touring car Australia has ever seen.
Even
those too young to have personally witnessed its on-track performances
have grown to understand its unique
status, from listening wide-eyed to countless stories told by their
fathers of the
excitement created every time it hit the track.
Australian
enthusiasts had never seen anything like it when it erupted onto
the local scene in 1969. Sure, they'd already seen earlier model
notchback Mustangs driven with great skill by the likes of Pete
Geoghegan, Bob Jane, Norm Beechey and others, but Moffat's '69 Trans-Am
was like something from another planet. Here was a brand new,
state-of-the-art Ford factory racer fresh from the US where it had
been built to topple Chevrolet in the Trans-Am wars that year. Its
shark-like nose, aggressive forward
rake, ground-scraping ride height and screaming Boss 302 V8 engine
left no one in any doubt about its open-cheque performance pedigree.
Looking
very pretty early in its career
Painted
in the bright red corporate colours of big time sponsor Coca-Cola,
somehow this exotic factory racer had found its way to the other
side of the world to
be driven by a young, little known Canadian with a single-minded
determination to become Australia's first full-time professional
racing car driver. To do that, he would have to earn a lot of prize
money by winning a lot of races. He certainly chose the right tool
for the job.
In
an incredible competition career from 1969 to 1974, Moffat and his
amazing Mustang amassed 101 race wins from 151 starts (or roughly
two wins for every three starts!) and volumes of qualifying and
lap records around the country. That stunning strike rate alone
could explain this car's fanatical following, but what made its
success all the more astonishing was that Moffat was often competing
against muscle monsters with far greater engine capacity. Cars like
Bob Jane's big block 7.0 litre ZL-1
Camaro, Norm Beechey's 6.0 litre HT GTS Monaro and Pete Geoghegan's
ferocious 5.8 litre Super Falcon all towered over Moffat's humble
5.0 litres of small block V8, during the "Improved Production" days
of the Australian Touring Car Championship (ATCC) from 1969 to 1972
.
On
tighter tracks with a premium on handling the Coca-Cola Mustang
had no peer, yet on renowned power circuits like Sandown and Mount
Panorama, Moffat and his Trans-Am could more than hold their own.
This was due to the car's superb aerodynamics, seemingly limitless
reserves of braking and cornering power and its
driver's resolute determination to win.
This
hard-headed approach was often criticized by his racing peers, earned
the wrath of race stewards on occasions and polarised public opinion.
You either loved him or you loathed him, yet the ability of Moffat
and his Mustang to draw huge crowds to a race tracks was prized
by track promoters around the country.
History
records that Moffat never won the ATCC with the Mustang, after four
hard years of trying. However, such a statistic is irrelevant when
compared to the car's extraordinary success rate and countless unforgettable
performances that have each earned their place in history. There
has never been a car like Allan Moffat's 1969 Boss 302 Trans-Am
Mustang. And there never will be. Enjoy.
TRANS-AM:
A BRIEF HISTORY
The
long path that led to the creation of Allan Moffat's Mustang can
be traced right back to the release of the original Mustang in 1964.
America's first "pony car" created such a buying frenzy that it
wasn't long before Ford's major competitors in Detroit - General
Motors, Chrysler Corporation and American Motors Corporation (AMC)
- created their own interpretations of FoMoCo's sexy, compact performance
model fitted with potent small block V8 engines. Indeed, by 1970,
the need to succeed in this hip, youth-driven market had also attracted
brand divisions within these giant corporations with Lincoln-Mercury
(Cougar), Chevrolet (Camaro), Pontiac (Firebird), Dodge (Challenger),
Plymouth (Barracuda) and American Motors (Javelin) all competing
for buyers at some stage.
Showing
remarkable foresight back in 1965, America's major road racing sanctioning
body, The Sports Car Club of America (SCCA), was quick to
see the potential to
rapidly escalate Detroit's pony car war by setting up a new competition
category
for
these domestic production sedans. Commencing in 1966, the new category
was divided into two classes based on engine capacity - under 2.0
litres (Group I) and
over 2.0 litres (Group II) with a maximum engine capacity limit
of 5.0 litres. Other
key regulations included production of a minimum 1000 units of each
model, 116-inch
(2946mm) wheelbase, 2900 lbs (1315kgs) fuelled-up racing weight
and that each race be a minimum of 2.5 hours in duration.
In
another inspired move, the SCCA came up with a brilliant name for
its new series - The Trans-American Sedan Championship, or "Trans-Am"
for short. This series would go down in history as the catalyst
for some of the greatest muscle cars and ferocious 'knock 'em down,
drag 'em out' manufacturer-backed racing that the
world
has ever seen.
Commencing
in early 1966, Ford boss Lee Iococca's burning desire for his beloved
Mustang to win the first Trans-Am series prompted him to contract
respected sports car racer/manufacturer Carroll Shelby to prepare
a small batch of '66 notchback Mustangs designed specifically for
Trans-Am competition. Shelby had already achieved road racing success
for Ford with his 289ci V8-powered GT350R Mustangs in
the SCCA's B/Production sports car class, so he knew what was required
to build a
Trans-Am winning version.
In
fact, Shelby had already supplied Pete Geoghegan with a lot of GT350R
development components -including engine and suspension hardware
- for his record-breaking
1965 Mustang in Australia.
As
a result of Shelby's efforts, Ford's Mustang claimed the coveted
'66 Trans-Am Manufacturers Championship over its nearest rival Chrysler,
which had fielded some potent Plymouth Barracudas.
Ford
contracted Shelby to build and run another batch of notchback Trans-Am
Mustangs to defend its title in 1967. SCCA added more rounds and
altered the scoring system so that only manufacturers earned points,
with no separate championship for drivers. This attracted private
teams running GM's all-new Camaro (as GM officially had a corporate
ban on motor sport) and even prompted one of Ford's own brand divisions,
Lincoln-Mercury, to enter a factory team of Cougars prepared by
Bud Moore. This move ignited a fierce season-long brawl between
the two Ford camps (Moffat drove for Moore in four of these races),
with Shelby's Mustang team ultimately claiming a narrow points
victory
over the Cougar squad. Although Ford claimed its second straight
Trans-Am title, such inter-brand fighting was considered counter-productive
and the Cougar team was immediately disbanded at the end of the
year.
By
1968, the Trans-Am series had, in only two seasons, enjoyed a meteoric
rise
in status. Expected stiff competition from "back door" GM factory
teams running Chevrolet Camaros and Pontiac Firebirds, plus some
new AMC-supported Javelins, prompted Ford to raise the bar in its
efforts to claim a hat-trick of Trans-Am titles. To
that end, it replaced its powerful and reliable 289ci (4.7 litre)
"Windsor" V8 with a new 5.0 litre small block called the "Tunnel
Port" 302 - a move that would prove disastrous.
On
paper at least, the new engine looked the goods with its rugged
four-bolt main bearing cylinder block, forged crank/rod/piston combo
and dry-deck cylinder heads. The new "Tunnel Port" heads (so named
because their inlet tracts were arrow straight and so huge that
the inlet valve push-rod shafts had to literally "tunnel" right
through the centre of the ports rather than between them) were designed
for big power at high rpm.
However,
the new engine's peaky performance characteristic and lack of low
down torque made it difficult to drive on road courses. And its
appalling reliability, which resulted from the need to rev the engines
sky high to make them breathe properly, resulted in as many as six
blow-ups on some race weekends!
As
a result, Ford lost its Trans-Am title to arch rival GM, thanks
to the efforts of Roger Penske, his new gun driver Mark Donohue
and their potent Chevrolet Camaro team. Ford's defeat was so humiliating,
the corporation immediately laid plans for an all-out attack to
win back its title in 1969, by creating what was arguably the definitive
Trans-Am race car - the mighty Boss 302 Mustang.
Ford's
potent new Trans-Am weapon was odds-on favourite to win the '69
Trans-Am, as Ford backed not only Shelby's two-car operation but
also brought Bud Moore back into the fold to run another pair of
Boss 302s. Competition would come from Roger Penske's two-car Chevrolet
Camaro team, plus factory-backed entries from Pontiac (Firebird)
and American Motors (Javelin).
However,
despite Ford's huge pre-season effort and a strong start to the
season (four
wins, two 2nds) the blue oval was again toppled by the Penske/Donohue/Camaro
combo, which ended up winning eight of the 12 races. Ford's failure
was blamed on several factors, the most significant being the durability
of the Firestone tyres used by Moore's team and a huge mid-season
multi-car wreck at St Jovite, Canada that caused catastrophic damage
to three of the four factory team Mustangs. Despite Kar Kraft's
best efforts, the patched-up cars were never able to duplicate their
formidable pre-crash form.
In
1970, the Trans-Am pony car war reached its peak. Although Ford
drastically reduced its racing budget and cut back to a single two-car
Mustang team for Bud Moore, the involvement of Detroit's other big
three car makers was never greater. General Motors, Chrysler and
American Motors all committed serious factory backing to top-grade
teams with star drivers running Chev Camaros, Pontiac Firebirds,
Dodge Challengers, Plymouth Barracudas and Javelins. At season's
end, Ford finally claimed back its Trans-Am title with its prized
Boss 302 Mustang.
However,
Detroit's support of the Trans-Am series collapsed at the end of
the season. Ford, GM and Chrysler simultaneously pulled their
factory backing over the winter, leaving Roger Penske's AMC Javelin
squad as the only works team competing in the 1971 series - which
they duly won. The mass manufacturer withdrawal was blamed on pony
car sales that had slowed dramatically due to rising fuel and insurance
costs. Also, the Trans-Am series had become so competitive that
the huge racing budgets required made it no longer cost-effective
as a marketing tool. American Motors withdrew for 1972 and the era
of the Trans-Am pony car factory wars was over.
However,
we need to back track to 1968, when the Trans-Am series was big
business and planning was underway for the 1969 Boss 302 Mustang,
to understand how Allan Moffat's immortal Mustang became a reality.
GOING
ALL OUT: THE BOSS 302
The
Trans-Am rules were similar to the "Series Production" rules which
applied to the annual Bathurst 500 mile (800km) endurance race in
Australia at the time. Put simply, the emphasis was on US car manufacturers
producing a minimum number of the model they wished to race (ie
1000 units in fully street legal form
available for public sale) for that model to be eligible to compete
in the
Trans-Am
series.
By
the late 1960s, Trans-Am inspired muscle cars had become not only
hot showroom sellers but also potent marketing tools in a very competitive
US car market. Fortunately,
when it came time to create the 1969 Boss 302 Mustang, Ford had
employed just the right people at just the right time. Early in
1968, self-confessed racing nut Semon "Bunkie" Knudsen, who had
been driving GM's back door racing activities, accepted Henry Ford
II's offer to become president of Ford Motor Company. Among the
key people Knudsen poached from his former employer was
stylist Larry Shinoda to head up Ford's Special Design Centre.
Even
though the new 1969 Mustang styling was already set in steel when
he arrived, Knudsen still saw plenty of opportunities to revamp
Ford's pony car line to create the
best looking and best handling road car ever to have come out of
Detroit. The Boss 302 would also form the basis of Ford's new Trans-Am
racer, with credible engineering and styling links between road
and race cars that would translate directly
into a stampede of showroom traffic.
The
inspired work of Ford's engine, drivetrain and suspension technicians
certainly achieved Knudsen's goal in an engineering sense, but it
was Shinoda's innate feel for what was required visually that made
the new Boss 302 Mustang such
a knock-out in street trim.
Firstly,
he made a fundamental shift from the traditional notchback body
previously used by Trans-Am teams to the gorgeous lines of the new
fastback shape. He also eliminated the fake air scoops from the
hips of the rear quarter panels to enhance the Boss 302's "competition-only"
street cred. He fitted aerodynamic front and rear spoilers, at a
time when such science was only just starting to be explored in
competition. He added Lamborghini Muira-style "sports slats" to
shade the rear window, liberal use of satin-black paint highlights
front and back, striking full length "C" stripes down the flanks
which paid homage to the Le Mans winning GT 40s,
sexy
Magnum 500 rims and the new low profile 60-series tyres which were
only just
coming into vogue.
Shinoda
was so in tune with the youth market, he even came up with the name
"Boss" which was a popular expression used by hip west coasters
at the time to describe something that was really cool or fashionable.
If there was ever a car for its time, the Boss 302 Mustang was it.
And its public release in April 1969 was perfectly timed to coincide
with the commencement of the 1969 Trans-Am season.
Ford
was clearly hell bent on revenge. As mentioned earlier in this story,
for 1969 it committed enormous financial and technical resources
to provide full factory backing for not one but two race teams guaranteed
to push the competition - and each other - to the limit. One team
was headed by Carroll Shelby with cars for Peter Revson and Horst
Kweck. The other was run by Bud Moore, who had given Shelby's Mustang
squad such a scare with his Mercury Cougar team in the '67 Trans-Am
series. His potent driver pairing was Parnelli Jones and George
Follmer in two more Boss 302s.

HOW
THEY BUILT MOFFAT'S TRANS-AM
At
the commencement of the Boss 302 race program, Ford's in-house race
car fabrication and engineering facility "Kar Kraft" (KK) located
in Brighton, Michigan built two prototype Trans-Am Mustangs specifically
for evaluation by the Shelby Racing Company and Bud Moore Engineering
race teams. KK had only recently played a central role in the design
and development work on Ford's big budget GT
40 sports car program, which had resulted in a much celebrated Le
Mans 24-Hour race victory in 1967. Therefore, it made perfect sense
to exploit such formidable in-house expertise in trying to win back
the Trans-Am title.
In
mid-1968, shortly after commencement of 1969 Mustang production,
an internal factory order was placed for two '69 428 Cobra Jet fastbacks,
minus paint, seam sealer or sound deadener. These two cars were
delivered to Kar Kraft in September '68, then completely stripped
and rebuilt from the ground up to full Trans-Am race specifications,
under the supervision of KK chief designer/engineer Lee Dykstra.
Ford
engineers, working closely with the Shelby and Moore race teams,
then used these prototypes to conduct intensive race track engine
evaluation (see engine specs) and chassis development work over
several months.
When
the definitive specification for the 1969 Trans-Am race cars was
finalised, another
internal order was placed at Ford's Dearborn plant in December '68
for seven more '69 Mustang fastbacks, to be assembled minus paint,
seam sealer and sound deadener, which were destined for Trans-Am
duty. However, unlike the two KK-built prototypes which started
out as R-code big block Cobra Jets, the seven new cars were no frills
M-code (carrying sequential VIN numbers from 9F02M148623 to 9F02M148629)
351 V8s with four speed transmissions. Allan Moffat's Trans-Am started
out as one of the cars in this special batch, carrying VIN No. 9F02M148624.
Of
these seven cars, one was sent to Kar Kraft, three others were shipped
to Shelby Racing Company and the remaining three to Bud Moore Engineering
- Moffat's car was one of the three Bud Moore cars. The sole fastback
sent to Kar Kraft was a unique hand-built racer finished in a gorgeous
black with gold stripe paint scheme, for tuning legend Smokey Yunick
to run in NASCAR's 'Baby Grand' stock car series. The other six
cars were built to Trans-Am specifications by the two race teams,
based on Kar Kraft's chassis design blueprints. The engine, drivetrain
and suspension components resulting from the intense 1968 track
development program were also supplied to the two teams for individual
assembly.
BODY/CHASSIS
UNIT
By
1969, the stakes were so high in Trans-Am racing that only those
manufacturers prepared to adopt a "win at all costs" approach could
expect any chance of success. Ford Motor Company, under the
direction of its new boss Knudsen, embraced such a
corporate philosophy with unbridled enthusiasm. This can be seen
in the extent of specialised design and fabrication that went into
each of the six Boss 302 race shells, which amounted to a very liberal
interpretation of the Trans-Am regulations. This of course was made
possible by the ambiguous wording of the SCCA rule book, which allowed
Trans-Am race engineers considerable creative freedom.
The
first step in Kar Kraft's chassis preparation was minimising weight.
Even though the SCCA rule book for the '69 Trans-Am series specified
a minimum weight of
2900
lbs (1315 kgs) for Group II 5.0 litre cars, the aim was to build
the cars as light as
possible and then bring them up to meet the minimum weight limit.
This was done by securing lead or steel ballast down low at various
key points in the chassis, to
move the car's standard 55.9% front v 44.1% rear weight distribution
nearer to the
ideal 50/50 split.
This
process of moving weight rearward was further enhanced by relocating
the battery from the engine bay to the boot and discreetly lowering
the engine by around 50mm and moving it back as far as the firewall
would allow. Mounting these heavy items as low as possible also
had the effect of lowering the car's centre of gravity (CoG) for
greatly improved handling and cornering capabilities. The same thinking
applied to construction of the fuel tank. This was made out of two
flanged halves (ie
upper and lower shells). However, a Boss 302 racer featured a much
deeper bottom section than standard to drop the fuel load as close
as possible to the road. This idea was duplicated in the Bathurst-style
"drop tanks" seen on Torana L34 and
A9X racers in the mid 1970s.
Lean
& low: go the Moffstang!!
The
Mustang bodyshells had already begun a weight loss program on the
production line, as they were built without any weather sealing
or sound deadening compounds. Kar Kraft then removed any brackets
not required for competition and either drilled a zillion holes
in any component that had to remain, or re-made it in aluminium.
Not a single nut or bolt was overlooked in this weight loss process,
right down to the internal window winding mechanisms which even
had shorter crank handles to save
weight.
Although
acid dipping was strictly outlawed under SCCA rules on safety grounds,
the practice was in fact widespread in Trans-Am to trim fat from
a race car. It
required submerging a metal component in an acid bath for a specified
length of time to eat away a small amount of excess metal. However,
if not strictly controlled, too much time in the acid vat could
leave some components dangerously weak - hence the SCCA ban.
Although
it is not clear how much - if any - "chemical milling" the '69 Boss
302 racers were subjected to, it was an incredibly effective weight
loss process that could remove more than one hundred kilos of excess
weight. This tempted some teams to dip all components, including
engine blocks and entire bodyshells! Acid dipping or not, the weight
loss program for the Boss 302 racers was very effective, which included
significantly thinner window glass and bolt-on panels (bonnets,
boot lids, door skins, guards etc) stamped from thin gauge sheet
metal.
Must
have been using our competitors products in those days :-)
However,
weight loss was only part of the Kar Kraft process. Lessons learned
from running stock-bodied sedans at 200mph on the NASCAR super speedways
and Kar Kraft's
own GT 40 Le Mans program had exposed the considerable performance
gains to be made from cars with good air penetration.
This
was prevalent in sedans with inherently wedge-shaped silhouettes
like the '69
Mustang fastback. However, Kar Kraft took that a step further by
trimming 25mm from the height of the radiator support panel; the
engine bay inner guards were then tapered down from the firewall
on each side to match. This substantially lowered the front aerodynamic
profile of a Boss 302 race car. The inner halves of the rear wheel
housings were also discreetly moved in-board by as much as 75mm
on each side to provide adequate clearance for the 12-inch wide
rear racing tyres, as only minimal flaring
of the external wheel arch lips was permitted.
To
maximise torsional rigidity, the shell was fully seam-welded and
two sturdy braces were connected to the front suspension towers;
one spanned directly across the engine bay between the two towers
(which Moffat didn't use) and another braced the towers rigidly
to the firewall. The base of the towers were also treated to some
substantial reinforcing plates as fitted to the road going Boss
302.
Inside
the cabin was a fully welded tubular steel roll cage, which blessed
the Trans-Am Mustangs with the strength of armoured tanks. Although
the Kar Kraft cage designs of the Shelby and Moore teams differed
in detail, they were fundamentally similar in that they extended
beyond the cabin front and rear to integrate each suspension mounting
point into the overall cage structure. This lack of chassis flex
would ensured accurate and consistent suspension tuning and performance.
SUSPENSION
Kar
Kraft engineers also went to town on the Boss 302 underpinnings,
designing and
manufacturing a suspension system based on the road car that was
not only immensely strong but also blessed Ford's '69 Trans-Am warrior
with the finest traction and handling in the business.
The
front suspension subframe was notched about 20mm on either side
where it bolted to the chassis, which had the effect of raising
the sub-frame further into the car
and permitting a lower static front ride height. This left only
25mm of belly clearance above the road surface and was another important
gain in lowering the centre of gravity for optimum handling and
cornering power. It also explains why (in
combination with the tapered front sheetmetal) a standard 1969 Mustang
looks so high
at the front compared to Moffat's Trans-Am version!

From
left to right is Pete's 67 Mustang, McKewon in the 911,
Norm
in the HTGTS 350, Moff in the Moffstang and Bob in the
ZL-1
Camaro
Front
suspension was based on the architecture of the road car, but was
considerably beefed up for Trans-Am duty. Forged steel stub axles
on thick cast uprights were mounted between strengthened upper and
lower swinging arms, with revised pick-up points for geometry best
suited to the lowered ride height and camber change characteristics
of wide racing rubber. Adjustable rose joints and solid metal bushings
featured throughout, with competition coil springs, adjustable Koni
shocks and adjustable anti-roll bar and a quick-ratio 16:1 steering
box.
Rear
suspension rules required that the road car's live axle/leaf spring
arrangement also be retained. As a result, Kar Kraft's superb "full
floater" nine-inch rear axle assembly (ie a full floater design
ensured a broken axle would not result in a wheel parting company
at speed) was located by race-tuned leaf springs and a pair of traction
bars sitting directly above the springs and parallel to the road.
These not only eliminated spring wind-up/axle tramp under hard acceleration,
but also served as rigid trailing arms for positive fore and aft
axle location.
Lateral
control of the rear axle assembly was provided by Kar Kraft's beautifully
fabricated panhard rod. Like the front end, the rear suspension
was equipped with adjustable Koni shocks and an anti-roll bar. The
static rear suspension ride height of around 90mm which, when matched
to the 25mm front ride height, explains why Kar
Kraft's Boss 302 Trans-Am race cars looked like they were literally
being pulled down onto the track surface by magnetic force!
The
net result was a superbly balanced and responsive chassis that blessed
the Boss 302 Trans-Am racer with astonishing levels of traction,
cornering grip and braking power which belied its modest engine
capacity.
This
was confirmed during a special track test conducted by the US
Road and Track magazine at the time. One of the factory cars
driven by George Follmer covered the standing quarter mile in a
scant 12.9 seconds, generated just over one g of cornering force
and almost halved the Boss
302 road car's 130km/h braking distance from 90 metres to just 54!
"Most
impressive," commented the magazine staffers at the conclusion of
the test. "It
is our nature, maybe even our profession, to second guess and point
out ways various people and companies could improve their products.
For once, nothing. We
don't know how one would build a better Trans-Am car."
Amen
to that.
BRAKES
Manufacturers
competing in the Trans-Am were allowed to upgrade the braking system
for racing, provided the components were sourced from the parent
company or its
divisions. Kar Kraft engineers found what they needed for front
brakes in Ford's Lincoln luxury car division, by adapting huge 11.96-inch
diameter ventilated rotors and four-spot Kelsey-Hayes callipers
designed to stop multi-tonne land yachts like Lincoln's obese Continental.
These big stoppers were fed healthy doses of cooling air
from large intakes mounted behind the grille. The road car's rear
drums were also removed and upgraded with the standard road car's
11.3-inch front disc brake hardware. External adjustment of front
to rear brake bias was also possible via a
proportioning unit mounted under the floor adjacent to the rear
axle.
The
combination of Lincoln front brakes and Ford rears resulted in different
wheel stud patterns front and rear, but under Australian racing
rules all four wheels had to be interchangeable. Moffat had to re-drill
his wheel centres so that they could be bolted to either end.
Circa 1972 with ROH wheels and dummy scoops fitted
(Forced by CAMS)
WHEELS/TYRES
Trans-Am
rules specified a maximum wheel width of only eight inches. The
Boss 302 racers
rolled on a set of super lightweight magnesium wheels, either the
American Racing rims or later the UK-built Minilites. Tyres were
fat treaded racing rubber - 5.00 x 11.30 front and 6.00 x 12.30
rear.
ENGINE
The
heart and soul of any Boss 302 Mustang - be it road or race car
- is the big
breathing, high revving 5.0 litre small block V8 engine under the
bonnet. This
was an engine specifically designed with one thing in mind and even
today
ranks
as arguably the toughest small block pushrod production V8 ever
to come out of Detroit.
The
Boss 302 evolved as a result of the spectacular failure of the Tunnel
Port 302 in 1968, not only with race reliability but also the fact
that Ford never got around to proving to the SCCA that it had indeed
produced the minimum 1000 of those exotic units needed to qualify
for Trans-Am competition! Like all manufacturers competing in the
series, Ford's Engine and Foundry division engineers were faced
with the challenge of cost effectively producing a race engine on
a mass production assembly line. Clever use of existing "regular
production" engine components would be needed to
meet such a requirement.
After
plenty of mixing and matching, it was discovered that the big breathing
cylinder heads from the all-new "Cleveland" 351ci (5.8 litre) small
block V8 (named after the city in Ohio where the new engine was
produced) featured the same bolt pattern and bore spacing as the
four-bolt main "Windsor" cylinder block used as the basis of the
Tunnel Port 302. The new mass-produced cast iron Cleveland heads
were well suited to high performance applications and in many ways
were superior to the Tunnel Port heads.
The
Cleveland items featured a canted valve design (ie inlet and exhaust
valves inclined towards the combustion chamber from opposite directions)
which ensured unimpeded gas flow due to an excellent configuration
of the inlet/exhaust porting. The huge 2.23-inch intake and 1.71-inch
exhaust valves (which were in fact slightly larger than the exotic
Tunnel Port) and semi-hemispherical combustion chambers were further
evidence of the new Cleveland's big lung capacity and competition
breeding. Although some of the water jacket passages would need
to be slightly modified to suit, the marriage of 351 Cleveland heads
with 302 Windsor block became the basis of Ford's new Trans-Am killer.
However,
before this new combo could be approved, in late 1968 it was vigorously
track tested against two other engines still under consideration
by Ford for use in the 1969 Trans-Am series - the unloved
Tunnel Port 302 and the more exotic Gurney- Westlake-headed 302.
Although the Gurney-Westlake version, with its all-alloy casting
and integral inlet manifold) proved the fastest of the three, followed
by the Boss and the Tunnel Port, the Boss version was given the
nod due largely to its use of existing production componentry and
the subsequent ease of producing it numbers to satisfy Trans-Am
requirements.
The
Boss 302 engine was produced in both road and full race specifications.
110 special race versions were cast, featuring four-bolt bottom
ends, "dry-deck" head
sealing (ie crushable o-rings that seated in grooves at the top
of each cylinder bore as opposed to conventional head gaskets) and
a different oiling system design to suit the new Cleveland heads.
These were equipped with lightweight valve sets, super strong valve
springs, screw-in rocker studs, steel guide plates for the solid
lifter camshaft pushrods, 1.73:1 aluminium roller rockers and improved
top end oiling.
Considering
the sustained high rpm required to get the best out of the new engine
in racing conditions, Ford engineers equipped the new Boss 302 with
an induction system that could more than satisfy its thirst. Sitting
up top was not one but two gigantic 1050cfm (or 1235cfm) Holley
Dominator four-barrel carburettors mounted in
line on a short runner, single plane alloy inlet manifold. A special
off-set distributor was also required to clear the front carby.
These giant fuel jugs were fed cool, dense air via a fully enclosed
airbox connected to twin inlet pipes mounted behind the grille.
By comparison, the road version came with a single 780cfm Holley.
Easter
Bathurst 1972. Pete Beats Moff by 6/10ths of a second and the race
is proclaimed the greatest ever in
Australian history.
A
variety of induction systems were trialled during the Boss race
engine's development. This included a quartet of twin-choke downdraught
48mm IDA Weber carburettors which proved so successful on Moffat's
car in Australia
(Moffat's
carbs were enlarged to 51mm chokes).
Also
developed was a high rise-style alloy inlet casting called the "Cross-Boss"
that mirrored that of GM's "Cross-Ram Trans-Am" unit used by Camaro
racers. Ford's Cross-Boss featured two giant Holley four-barrels
mounted in an offset arrangement (ie one at the right front, one
at the left rear) of the engine but was less effective than the
in-line design.
Below
decks was a forged steel, cross-drilled crankshaft with anti-frothing
windage tray, high volume oil pump with triple pick-ups and a big
capacity baffled sump to combat oil surge. Thick connecting rods
with much meatier big end supports were coupled to 12:1 forged alloy
pistons (road versions used 10.5:1 compression ratio).
Large
diameter, equal length tubular steel exhaust headers dumped the
spent gases through huge, unmuffled side pipes. A large capacity
aluminium coolant radiator and
oil cooler kept the lid on engine temps.
In
1969, Ford teams claimed a fully race-prepared Boss 302 engine was
producing over 470bhp (350kW) by mid season and could endure up
to a staggering 8000rpm in the heat of battle. Mustang racers often
complained that the Boss 302 had inherited some of the Tunnel Port's
lack of low and mid-range torque because of its enormous breathing
capacity, but no one ever complained about its formidable top-end
punch!
Not
surprisingly, Ford's official power ratings for the factory rev-limited
Boss 302 road car were capped at a modest 290bhp (216kW) @ 5800rpm.
While many accept that these quoted power figures were primarily
aimed at keeping the insurance companies happy, those in
the know claim the street Boss was good for
as much as 350bhp (260kW) - especially with the 6150rpm factory
rev limiter disconnected!
Moffstang
with Fuel injected 'Superfalcon' 351 protruding
TRANSMISSION/DRIVE-TRAIN
Two
versions of the Ford Top Loader four speed gearbox were available
on the Boss 302 road car. A wide-ratio version (2.78 1st gear) was
standard issue and a close-ratio (2.32 1st gear) unit was optional.
Top Loaders with a variety of ratios were available for the race
cars.
1969
Boss Mustangs came equipped with a nodular iron cased nine-inch
differential assembly and indestructible 31-spline axle shafts.
Standard rear axle ratio was 3.50:1 with optional 3.91 and super
short 4.30 gear sets. A remote oil cooler and Traction-Lok limited-slip
centre were also available as options. The race cars were fitted
with a pair of
differential oil coolers, which were located under the car just
in front of the rear axle and relied on underbody air flow for cooling.
COCKPIT
The
driver's compartment of a Boss 302 racer was bare and business-like.
For Trans-Am duty, all the standard carpet, seating and interior
trim were removed bar the dashboard pad, which was retained with
a new purpose-built instrument panel directly in front of the driver.
Other driver aids included a deeply dished sports steering wheel,
a hip-hugging competition bucket seat which sat the driver virtually
on the floor, a padded head rest attached to the roll cage and a
full multi-point seatbelt harness. This could be tightened very
firmly by a special ratchet-style tensioner system used in Airforce
fighter jets, which was operated by a small crank handle located
next to the driver on the transmission tunnel. There was also an
auxilliary switch box for the car's main control systems mounted
on the tunnel and an on-board fire extinguisher system. The rear
edge of the driver's door was secured internally by additional bonnet
pin-style clips top and bottom, to ensure the door would not spring
open due to impact damage in the heat of battle. This was a cockpit
built for serious combat.
The
Moffstang in 1974, its year of retirement, in Brut 33 Sports Sedan
livery.
Allan
Moffat regarding the modifications made to his beloved Mussy in
a class that was VERY liberal to say the least: "From
memory we also might have put some of the original panels in storage
and replaced them with fiberglass ones and experimented with a dry
sump system, but we did nothing to hurt the integrity of the car.
That's why David Bowden has such a precious original example of
1970s Australian motor sport history today. "
DAVID
BOWDEN: RESTORING A LEGEND
AMC
has featured several examples from David Bowden's definitive stable
of famous Australian competition muscle cars, but he readily admits
that Allan Moffat's Mustang is the "cornerstone" of his priceless
collection. For many years, Bowden could only dream of owning such
a car, until an offer to buy it from none other than the man himself.
"We
were at Bathurst for the ATCC round in 1995, " Bowden recalls. "We
had just completed the restoration of Pete Geoghegan's Super Falcon
and taken it there for Pete to drive around in front of the field
on the parade lap. Anyway, Allan (who was providing TV commentary)
turned up to have a look at the car in the pits. You can imagine
how the crowds started to swirl around with Moffat, Geoghegan and
the Super Falcon together in the one spot!
"Allan
had a close look over the restoration and his eyes went about a
foot wide. He said to me 'this is what the Trans-Am needs, you come
down to Melbourne next week and we'll do a deal. I want you to buy
the Trans-Am.' The car was in storage at Holman-Moody in the US
at the time, so I flew down to Melbourne during the week and bought
the car without even seeing it. It was a once in a lifetime opportunity."
The
Mustang had been in the US for some time but had not found the "right"
buyer. The car was loaded with spare parts
and safely packaged up by Lee Holman before it was shipped back
to Australia, arriving at the Brisbane docks two months later. Moffat
also sent a whole heap of parts like spare cylinder blocks, the
inlet manifold for the quad-Weber carbs, etc to assist Bowden with
the restoration.
"When
we got the car back from the States it was fitted with a Bud Moore
manifold and single Holley four-barrel which they had to run in
the 1970 Trans-Am series," Bowden says. "That was how Allan was
trying to sell it in the US, because Americans just couldn't relate
to a Trans-Am Mustang with four Webers on it."
The
body restoration burned up around six months at Omega Auto Bodyworks
at Caloundra. In addition to getting the steel panels gun-barrel
straight and applying a new skin of Coca-Cola red war paint, Bowden
insisted that the substantial wheel arch flares (fitted to the car
when competing as a Sports Sedan in Brut 33 colours) be replaced
with the smaller, more handsome flares seen during its "Improved
Production" days. The end result is superbly authentic.
The
Boss 302 engine also needed a full rebuild, following a post-restoration
test drive at Lakeside that revealed a bent connecting rod. Bowden
says Moffat generously supplied a brand new set of factory con-rods
he had "under his bed" and the engine was rebuilt at Jeff Barnes
Performance by Clive Noonan, who would later became Bowden's full-time
mechanic.
"The
Moffat Mustang is the cornerstone of our muscle car collection,"
Bowden claims. "It's just the best muscle car Australia has ever
had. This car just has to stay in Australia. Mate, even if I was
going broke I still would not sell that car overseas. I could never
live with myself. I also made a promise to Allan when I bought the
car that apart from me, he would be the only person allowed to drive
it and I have stuck to that promise. On many occasions my good mate,
the late Pete Geoghegan, said he would really like to drive it,
just to get a taste of what he'd been up against during
those great battles of the past, but I had to refuse even his request.
"There's
just something very special about it. I still get a tingle every
time I open the garage door and when I drive it (during display
laps at Historic race meetings) I feel like an impostor. You know,
everyone's waving madly at you and it makes you feel like you're
Allan Moffat, but of course you know you're not. I shudder to think
how hard Allan must have driven it.
"My
greatest memory of seeing the Mustang in action was the ATCC final
at Oran Park in 1971. It was super-human the way Moffat drove the
car that day. Bob Jane in the 427 Camaro was so lucky to win. That
was just some of the best race driving I have ever seen. Moffat
was at his best in this car when he was wild. The wilder he got,
the better he drove it and that's why he and Jane used to have such
incredible battles."
©
Chevron Publishing
Want
to read the whole story with an extremely in depth interview with
Moffat about why this beautiful Mustang, that always sits next to
us in the office, is so special and how it got to Australia in the
first place?
Big
glossy photos and a bonus Bowden's Own pull out poster of the mighty
Moffstang are also included.
check
out
www.chevron.com.au
and
order issue number 16 of Autralian Muscle Car.

Amazing
stuff.
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