
"At this year's SEMA Show in Las Vegas, Ringbrothers unveils a reimagined 1969 Ford Mustang Mach 1, the KINGPIN. The car emerges from the Ringbrothers workshop in Wisconsin and stands as the result of over 5,500 hours of work. Each panel and surface has been redesigned, aligning a 20th-century silhouette with the engineering and image of a contemporary performance vehicle."
"While Ringbrothers' KINGPIN remains recognizable as a Mustang, its surfaces read as newly drawn. The bodywork, sculpted with , carries an even tension, with crisper lines and a heavier volume. The handcrafted panels are finished in BASF's Bootleg Black, a tone that absorbs light rather than reflecting it, allowing the car's geometry to define its presence. Accents in 'Grab-Her Green' punctuate the dark shell as a subtle revision of Ford's classic Grabber Green hue."
Ringbrothers reimagined a 1969 Ford Mustang Mach 1, completing over 5,500 hours of work in their Wisconsin workshop. The original unibody was replaced with a Roadster Shop FAST TRACK Stage III chassis, and the body was widened two inches at the front and three and a half at the rear with the wheelbase extended forward. Handcrafted panels exhibit crisper lines and heavier volume, finished in BASF's Bootleg Black with 'Grab-Her Green' accents. Carbon fiber components refine airflow and reduce mass, while 3D-printed and billet-machined details integrate aesthetic and mechanical aims. A Wegner Motorsports 5.0-liter Coyote V8 with a Whipple supercharger produces more than 800 horsepower sent through a six-speed manual.
Read at designboom | architecture & design magazine
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