AutoDeal Canada

Ford Mustang 2017 à vendre

20 véhicules disponibles

Prix moyen

À partir de

$15 495

Annonces

20

2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

GT PREMIUM V8 + BANC RECARO + CAMERA DE RECUL + BLUETOOTH

22 245 km
33 991 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

97 580 km
20 990 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

36 248 km
40 549 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette
Sans accident

2017 Ford Mustang

7 128 km
89 999 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette
Sans accident

2017 Ford Mustang

55 035 km
39 995 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

133 981 km
29 990 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

91 298 km
19 900 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

Shelby Gt350r

31 680 km
94 888 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

26 717 km
38 994 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette
Sans accident1 proprio

2017 Ford Mustang

GT

15 740 km
36 500 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

38 200 km
64 900 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

Convertible

93 506 km
21 495 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

166 448 km
17 995 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

39 316 km
35 495 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

76 220 km
24 900 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

52 215 km
26 900 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

2 355 km
85 900 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

28 991 km
29 900 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette

2017 Ford Mustang

EcoBoost

122 090 km
15 495 $
2017 Ford Mustang
Vedette
Sans accident1 proprio

2017 Ford Mustang

102 139 km
18 791 $

Questions fréquentes

01

Which Mustang generation offers the best performance-per-dollar on the Canadian used market?

The S550 generation (2015-2023) is the ideal entry point. A Coyote V8 GT in a 2018 or newer example — with the independent rear suspension that finally replaced the live axle — lands between $38,000 and $52,000 depending on mileage and province, roughly $20,000 to $30,000 less than a comparable new S650. The multilink rear suspension introduced in 2015 corrected the unpredictable handling of earlier solid-axle generations on road courses. The GT350 and GT350R with the flat-plane-crank Voodoo 5.2L are appreciating collector pieces; the GT500 Shelby S550 remains a track missile rarely available under $85,000. For a driver who wants daily enjoyment mixed with weekend canyon runs or track days at Shannonville, a 2019-2021 GT with under 60,000 km is the best value proposition in the used Mustang market.

02

Does the EcoBoost 2.3L Mustang deserve its reputation as the poor relation?

That reputation is undeserved in 2024. The 2.3L EcoBoost in the S650 produces 315 hp and 350 lb-ft of torque available from 3,000 rpm, making it genuinely responsive in urban traffic and rewarding on winding secondary roads. Its combined fuel consumption of 9.8 L/100 km is approximately 30 percent better than the Coyote V8. It is also lighter over the front axle, which improves cornering balance on tight Quebec roads. The real trade-off is aural: without the active valve exhaust option, the four-cylinder does not reproduce the V8's sound signature, and that emotional factor is non-negotiable for many enthusiasts. For a buyer who wants a usable daily sports coupe with attainable insurance premiums — EcoBoost rates are typically 30 to 40 percent lower than a GT — the 2.3L is a rational and genuinely satisfying choice.

03

What reliability concerns should a buyer watch for on a used S550 Mustang?

Three inspection points stand out. First, the 6R80 six-speed automatic on GT models from 2015-2017 experienced rough upshifts under load — a calibration update addresses the issue; confirm it was applied. Second, rear half-shaft mounting bolts on 2015-2016 manual GT cars could loosen under hard acceleration — a recall covered the repair, but verify it through the VIN on Transport Canada's database. Third, rear wheel bearings on track-driven examples or cars with frequent launch control use wear prematurely; ask directly whether the vehicle has been driven on circuit and inspect the bearing for play. A CarFax history report to check for structural accidents, combined with a four-wheel alignment check, rounds out the essential pre-purchase inspection for any used Mustang.

04

Can a Mustang realistically serve as a daily driver through a Canadian winter?

Technically possible, practically challenging for regions with serious winter severity. The Mustang has no all-wheel-drive option — rear-wheel drive demands a measured driving style in slippery conditions. With four dedicated winter tires (Michelin Pilot Alpin or Bridgestone Blizzak LM005 in the appropriate width), the traction control system manages packed snow and moderate icy patches adequately. The 13 cm of ground clearance is the binding constraint: more than 20 cm of fresh, unplowed snow beaches the car. Most Quebec and Ontario Mustang owners store the car from October to April and use a second winter vehicle. For drivers in Metro Vancouver or Victoria, where persistent snow accumulation is less common, a Mustang EcoBoost on proper winter tires is a workable year-round proposition.

05

Does the 2024 Mustang Dark Horse justify its price premium over a used GT500?

The two vehicles serve genuinely different objectives. The Dark Horse is a circuit-focused GT: manual-only Tremec transmission, 500 hp, six-piston Brembo front brakes, Torsen electronic rear differential, and an available track-focused handling package. Canadian pricing starts around $72,000 new. A used S550 GT500 from 2020-2023 delivers 760 hp and a well-established track reputation at a comparable price point on the used market. The Dark Horse wins on chassis refinement, modern connectivity, and accessibility as a new-car purchase; the GT500 wins on raw power and collector status. For a buyer seeking the best sub-$80,000 track tool available today, the Dark Horse new makes the more logical case. For a buyer thinking about five-year resale, the GT500 S550's collector trajectory holds a narrow advantage.