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HomeMedia1967 Mustang most popular search on ClassicCars.com in March

1967 Mustang most popular search on ClassicCars.com in March

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1967 Ford Mustang fastback | photo courtesy Mecum Auctions
1967 Ford Mustang fastback | Mecum Auctions photo

For the eighth month in a row, and for the 12th time in the past 13 months, the 1967 Ford Mustang was the most searched-for vehicle on ClassicCars.com during March 2016. As usual, around 20,000 people searched the site for ’67 Mustangs.

Ford expert Kevin Marti, author of the Marti Report documents that verify the histories of various Ford vehicles, thinks the ’67 Mustang’s popularity traces to Eleanor, the name of the star car in the Gone In 60 Seconds movies, both the 1974 original and the 2000 remake featuring Nicolas Cage and Angelina Jolie.

Marti noted that now that Dynacorn is producing new but Ford-licensed ’67 Mustang fastback steel sheet-metal body shells, people restoring ’67 Mustangs on their own, whether as Eleanor tributes or as restro-mods or even as factory-spec restorations, can get new bodies to put around the mechanical components from a ’67 Mustang survivor.

'67 Mustang advertised on ClassicCars.com
’67 Mustang advertised on ClassicCars.com

A quick check shows there are advertisements for 112 Mustangs from model year 1967 on ClassicCars.com. Asking prices range from $9,500 to $259,900, the latter being sought for a GT500 “Panamera Executive,” a fastback with a stretched silhouette designed to provide enhanced room for rear-seat passengers.

“The ’60s Mustangs were innovative for their time and it is no surprise that such a fine example of automotive design is extremely popular within the classic and collector car marketplace right now,” said Roger Falcione, founder and chief executive of ClassicCars.com. “With thousands of Ford Mustangs for sale on ClassicCars.com, we are excited to be the place that actively brings these buyers and sellers together and helps keep these cars relevant.”

Not only is the ’67 Mustang the most popular search on ClassicCars.com, but the 1965 and 1966 Mustangs were the third and fourth most searched-for cars last month.

“That wouldn’t surprise me,” Marti responded. “I would have guessed the ’65 would have the highest number of hits, just because of the sheer numbers of them and that they were the original.

“And when people say, ‘I want to get a Mustang convertible someday,’ they usually want a ’65 or ’66.”

The dozen most searched-for cars on ClassicCars.com during March were:

  1. 1967 Ford Mustang
  2. 1968 Dodge Charger
  3. 1965 Ford Mustang
  4. 1966 Ford Mustang
  5. 1977 Pontiac Trans Am
  6. 1957 Chevrolet Bel Air
  7. 1970 Dodge Charger
  8. 1968 Chevrolet Camaro
  9. 1967 Chevrolet Impala
  10. 1963 Chevrolet Corvette
  11. 1968 Ford Mustang
  12. 1958 Ford F100

 

Since January 2015, only the 1957 Bel Air (twice) and the 1968 Charger (once) have unseated the ’67 Mustang from the top of the most-searched list. Frequently, that trio has comprised the top three in the search statistics.

1977 Pontiac Trans Am | Leake Auctions photo
1977 Pontiac Trans Am | Leake Auctions photo

However, in March, the Chevrolet fell to sixth behind the ’67 Mustang, ’68 Charger, the 1965 and 1966 Mustangs, and the 1977 Trans Am. The Trans Am wasn’t among the top 12 in January and was only 11th in February.

“We’ve seen a rising interest in the Trans Ams at the auctions in 2015 and early 2016, and on our marketplace with a notable increase in the number of buyers searching for these vehicles,” Falcione said.

“The Smokey and the Bandit effect with Burt Reynolds in attendance at Carlisle Auctions last year and at Barrett-Jackson in January may have triggered the rise in interest. However, I think the interest in these vehicles represents more than that, and I anticipate Trans Ams  will continue to be strong into the latter half of 2016 and beyond.”

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Larry Edsall
Larry Edsall
A former daily newspaper sports editor, Larry Edsall spent a dozen years as an editor at AutoWeek magazine before making the transition to writing for the web and becoming the author of more than 15 automotive books. In addition to being founding editor at ClassicCars.com, Larry has written for The New York Times and The Detroit News and was an adjunct honors professor at the Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Arizona State University.

3 COMMENTS

  1. used to own a 67 mustang fully worked bought for 500 dollars mint condition 4speed possi holly 4 barrel dual feed love that car burned plenty rubber beat lot of cars wish i still had it oh it was black on black

  2. I had 2 1967 Mustang fastbacks one with a 289 4 speed and the other with the 390 4 speed , what I would give to have either one of them now. contrary to the article Eleanor is not on my list of favourites, but the 67 GT is GTA’s second.

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