After almost twenty years of the same core platform, Ford decided to take to the drawing board in 1999 for the design of the fifth-generation Mustang. While people worried whether Y2K was the bane of all existence, Ford was planning the future Mustang, dubbed the S197.
A decade earlier, the Mustang was almost extinct due to front-wheel-drive popularity as rear-wheel-drive sales declined. With enthusiasts protesting this new FWD Mustang, it was enough attention for Ford to restart the design process and name the new FWD coupe the Ford Probe.
For the 1994 model year, the “Fox-body” design was left in the dust and a new Mustang emerged, the SN95. Although it looked completely different than its foxy predecessor, it still shared that same core platform.
Hau Thai-Tang, then-Chief Nameplate Engineer, was given the task to lead the development team for the fifth-generation Mustang coded the S197. Recently retired J Mays, who succeeded Jack Telnack as Ford’s global vice president of design in ’97, was in charge of the appearance of the fifth-gen Mustang.
Now that this new Mustang was undoubtedly rear-wheel-drive, it was time to figure out what platform to base it on. Ford’s rear-wheel-drive platforms consisted of the Panther platform used for the Crown Victoria and the midsize DEW98, which carried the Lincoln LS and upcoming ’03 Thunderbird.
Based on size, the DEW98 was the obvious choice for the starting point. Previous complaints from Mustang owners included understeer, partly due to the less than ideal weight distribution with 57 percent over the front wheels. With a bigger base, designers wanted to figure out who how to better distribute the weight of the new pony.
In 1999, a pair of Mustang FR500s built by Ford Racing featured the 5.0-liter “Cammer” crate engines. Besides the twin-cam V-8 engine, the pair of FR500 Mustangs seemed to be even more of a stretch from the new SN95 Mustang GT with a five-inch wheelbase extension that shifted the front axle forward relative to the engine. Seeing how the FR500 demonstrators performed and handled, Ford adopted the longer wheelbase (six inches longer) for the next Mustang, which decreased the weight distribution to 54 percent.
For the 1994 SN95 model, retro cues were reintroduced with tri-bar taillights, side scoops, and a running pony gracing the grille.
Mays believed that the fifth-generation Mustang needed to stand out, one that would grasp buyers’ attention. Obviously it still needed to scream Mustang, but distinct enough to separate itself from the pack of sports cars.




