Still on the trail of unearthing facts about the candy apple red two seater Mustang fastback which I saw in person at the Greenfield Village Sports Car show in '64 (boy am I old!). Just a few weeks ago, I saw a story in a magazine on a customizer who created that specific car (failed to note magazine name). The guy was apparently a free lance customizer who went from one project to another. It was not clear who paid for the car to be built but I think Ford evalauted it and the two plus two fastback that was later used as the basis for the Shelby GT350 was the result, though it was a four seater. The sad thing is that the guy lost so much money on different cars he was building that he committed suicide. Does anybody know if the candy apple red two seater fastback survives to this day? I also saw pictures in one of the Mustang history books of a two seater '65 Mustang convertible built in clay model form by Ford which proves Ford was considering a two seater front engined Mustang (not counting the two seater mid-engined Mustang I which had nothing to do mechanically with the production Mustang). I don't know why Ford rejected building a two seater Mustang; maybe because a shorter wheelbase would have made for squirrely handling; or because they thought that would pitch them up against the Corvette and the Mustang didn't have the powerplant yet to contest the Corvette.