Have you ever had something in your life that you have gotten rid of, then wind up regretting that move? Sure you have. Maybe it was your Star Wars action figure collection or a Michael Jordan rookie year signed card. Better yet, I bet there is a Mustang in your life that you wish you had never sold. Other than the Michael Jordan card, I have those regrets myself.
Sometimes the decisions to sell a Mustang are for good reasons—a new baby, a house payment, or maybe to send your kids to college. Michael Synatzke sold his 2004 Mach 1 in 2012 to purchase a home for his young family. The real bummer was that he sold the car to a fellow Mustang Driver who promised to give Michael first crack at buying the Mach 1 back, and that offer came on the day he was closing on his new house. So, as you guessed, he had to pass on getting his Mach 1 back.
Synatzke’s Mach 1 story starts in 2006 when he bought it from an older couple who had their fun in the Competition Orange Mustang. The only issues with the car were scuffs on the door sills. Otherwise, the Mach 1 was completely stock and well cared for.
Like most Mustang Drivers, Synatzke soon followed the familiar theme of more power and modifications. Getting under the Mach 1’s four-valve cam covers led to Bullet cams (specified by NA SVT) on a set of ported Cobra heads. The lower intake was also ported and polished by NA SVT and raised a half-inch with a spacer. The stock throttle body was placed on the shelf, replaced by an Accufab twin 60mm unit connected to a C&L cold-air kit. MAC long-tube headers and an off-road H-pipe tie into a SLP cat-back exhaust with four-inch polished tips. Michael’s combination made a healthy 341 horsepower and 308 lb. ft. of torque at the rear tires.
H&R springs and Bilstein shocks and struts helped deflate the off-road look of the Mach 1’s factory stance. Rolled fenders kept the Nitto 335/30/18 rear and Nitto 275/35/18 front rubber from being gouged. Steeda X2 ball joints were a big help when dropping the Mustang. Steeda also got the call for lower control arms and strut tower bracing.
Synatzke discovered that the car lot owner travelled through Texas every six months or so to purchase cars for his Kansas lot. More surprising is the fact that, in its two-year absence, the Mach 1 gained only 3,000 miles and, other than a missing hand-held tuner, the car returned to Synatzke’s garage intact. The one new addition to the Mach 1 is the unique dark and light Rovos Durban wheels. Why one side satin silver and the other side satin black? Why not? Some people seem to love the black wheels, others silver.
Some don’t notice the silver wheels, thinking they’re factory. Either way, the combination got our eye and we’re sure Synatzke is happy he got his Mach 1 back.