Boss Motorsports

The year is 1969 and the muscle car era is in full swing. Boss Motorsports emerges as a small garage out on the farm in Blue Anchor, NJ. Instead of turning wrenches on John Deere Tractors, Kyle, the founding father of Boss Motorsports, is tuning his 1969 Mercury Cougar XR-7. Inspired by the work of Ford Motor Company and the Boss moniker used on the Mustang, he uses his legal education to strike a business deal with Ford. Using that deal, he produces his first car that pays homage to the Ford Torino Talladega and Mercury Cyclone Spoiler. Being early in development, with few resources, many Ford parts were utilized in the original 1969 Boss Vehicles.
The original car was a basic model meant to put V8 power into the hands of the working man. It was powered by a Ford 390 CI V8 with a 4 barrel carburetor.
The motor produced a respectable 300+ HP from a base engine, but there was more to be had. The next version was a step up, offering more horsepower from more motor. This model was powered by another FE V8, the 427, also with a 4 barrel that gave the HP rating a boost to 325.
Finally, Kyle wanted a drag strip monster to terrorize the big block muscle cars of the day. He couldn't get his hands on a Boss 429 due to the restricted production run, but he managed to shoehorn another FE family engine into 10 of the original Boss I vehicles: the 428 Super Cobra Jet V8 which laid down almost 500 HP with some Boss Motorsports tuning. It put that power to work through a 5 speed manual transmission and wide sports tires.
These small batch cars sold in small numbers from the small town satellite tuning branch of Ford Motor Company. There would probably never be a standalone Boss Motorsports vehicle, but there was work being done in the engine department for 1970.
The original car was a basic model meant to put V8 power into the hands of the working man. It was powered by a Ford 390 CI V8 with a 4 barrel carburetor.
The motor produced a respectable 300+ HP from a base engine, but there was more to be had. The next version was a step up, offering more horsepower from more motor. This model was powered by another FE V8, the 427, also with a 4 barrel that gave the HP rating a boost to 325.
Finally, Kyle wanted a drag strip monster to terrorize the big block muscle cars of the day. He couldn't get his hands on a Boss 429 due to the restricted production run, but he managed to shoehorn another FE family engine into 10 of the original Boss I vehicles: the 428 Super Cobra Jet V8 which laid down almost 500 HP with some Boss Motorsports tuning. It put that power to work through a 5 speed manual transmission and wide sports tires.
These small batch cars sold in small numbers from the small town satellite tuning branch of Ford Motor Company. There would probably never be a standalone Boss Motorsports vehicle, but there was work being done in the engine department for 1970.