writer: Dr. Jamie Meyer
photographer: Dr. Jamie Meyer
The story of Charlie Merfa's gorgeous '93 Mustang GT starts out like so many. Inspired by the performance of his hometown 5.0 superstar, Mike Murillo, Charlie walked into his local San Antonio Ford dealership and bought the GT brand-new. It was his first Mustang, and he knew exactly what he was getting. While the bright-red paint set the car off, the raging 5.0 mill under the hood backed up the looks. Of course, the modifications began in earnest. But, unlike many first-time 5.0 owners, Charlie has never stopped upping the ante on this streetable supercar.
With some basic bolt-ons and good driving, Charlie quickly had an 11-second street car. It was a good thing, because San Antonio is crawling with street racers. Charlie recommends Military Drive on any Sunday night if you're in town looking for some action (not that we encourage that sort of thing). It was the lessons of the street that Charlie learned early on that spurred this car to such great heights.
What followed for this GT reads like a snapshot of 5.0 history for every hot part ever made. First came the Vortech superchargers. Charlie had an A-Trim, which he quickly upgraded to the S-Trim. That was good enough for 10.50s with the stock bottom end and bolt-on heads. He tried a Cartech turbo system with a T-71 head unit early on, but the tune wasn't there with the stock computer, so he returned to the Vortech blowers. Next up was a T-Trim with a 306 that put Charlie in the 9.80s. That was good for a while, but you know how the street often drives the car.
When Charlie swapped in a 347 stroker mill that was built for speed, he also upgraded to a Y-Trim Vortech. Now the car was knocking on the 8-second door, with consistent 9.00s. With the XX-Trim Mondo, the GT smashed into the 8.80s, but that combination was short-lived. With a ProCharger F-3 supercharger under the hood, Charlie ran 8.60s, but the balancer bolts failed, wasting the effort.
For the car's latest configuration-which you see before you-Charlie worked with Pro Turbo Kits to have a serious turbocharger arrangement put together. Of course, Mike Murillo gets full credit for making everything under the hood work together. That turbo is what Charlie refers to as a "cheater 106-mm necked down to 101-mm." Regardless of what you call it, there's one heck of a lot of compressed atmosphere being slammed through that small-block Ford to run 8.20s at well over 170 mph.
With those kinds of speeds, Charlie knows his days of street driving and small-tired racing are limited. To his credit, he has already laid out plans to have the car back-halved to accommodate a new four-link suspension and larger 31x10.5W tires. As the car sits, Mike Murillo says it will run 7.80s given some more testing. With the bigger tire and more cage work, 7.50s are in this street racer's plan.
For 2003, you'll be able to find Charlie duking it out at the Clash of the Titans as well as a select number of FFW events.