1966年福特野马改装成特斯拉,具备可用的“完全自动驾驶”功能。
1966 Ford Mustang Converted into a Tesla with Working 'Full Self-Driving'

原始链接: https://electrek.co/2026/05/02/tesla-1966-mustang-ev-conversion-full-self-driving/

萨克拉门托一家特斯拉汽车零部件店老板成功地将一辆1966年福特野马改装成了一辆完全功能的电动汽车,使用了特斯拉Model 3的动力系统,耗资约4万美元,历时两年。改装包括Model 3的双电机设置(约400马力)、15英寸触摸屏,以及令人瞩目的、可用的“完全自动驾驶”(受监督)功能——据信这是首次在非特斯拉汽车上实现FSD。 改装过程涉及小心地安装Model 3电池,并将Model 3的地板和座椅部分嫁接到野马的底盘上,保持了车辆的原始尺寸。最终的车辆拥有令人印象深刻的效率——258瓦时/英里——与标准Model 3相当,并且加速至60英里/小时大约需要3.5秒。 除了新奇之外,该项目展示了特斯拉技术的便携性,并挑战了该公司在向其他汽车制造商授权其FSD软件方面遇到的困难。它还突出了不断增长的电动汽车改装市场,为专业改装提供了一种具有成本效益的替代方案。

黑客新闻 新的 | 过去的 | 评论 | 提问 | 展示 | 工作 | 提交 登录 1966 福特野马改装成特斯拉,配备可用的“完全自动驾驶”(electrek.co) 14 分,Brajeshwar 1 小时前 | 隐藏 | 过去的 | 收藏 | 2 条评论 帮助 dmix 7 分钟前 | 下一个 [–] 人们一直在用特斯拉进行这些改装。回复 sublinear 14 分钟前 | 上一个 [–] > 这表明特斯拉的硬件和软件堆栈比该公司许可方面的斗争所暗示的更具可移植性。 除非我错过了什么,否则这是文章中完全没有根据的说法。 个人项目和改造与制造完全不同。回复 考虑申请 YC 2026 年夏季批次!申请截止至 5 月 4 日 指南 | 常见问题 | 列表 | API | 安全 | 法律 | 申请 YC | 联系 搜索:
相关文章

原文

A Tesla auto parts shop owner in Sacramento spent about $40,000 and two years converting a 1966 Ford Mustang into a fully functional Tesla — complete with the Model 3’s dual-motor drivetrain, 15-inch touchscreen, and working “Full Self-Driving” (Supervised).

It’s likely the first non-Tesla vehicle to run FSD, and it achieves 258 Wh/mi — roughly matching the efficiency of an actual Model 3.

From Facebook Marketplace find to Tesla-powered classic

Yaro Shcherbanyuk, the owner of Calimotive Auto Recycling in Rancho Cordova, California, found the 1966 Mustang on Facebook Marketplace in the summer of 2022. Calimotive specializes in Tesla and Rivian parts, so Shcherbanyuk had access to the components — and the knowledge — needed for an ambitious build.

He worked on the project for roughly two years alongside his father Viktor and brother Daniel. The family initially considered fitting the Mustang with a Model S drivetrain, but once the car was stripped down, Shcherbanyuk realized the Model 3 battery was nearly a perfect fit.

Advertisement - scroll for more content

The team grafted three sections of the 2024 Tesla Model 3’s floor and seats into the Mustang’s body, shortening the battery case to fit without altering the car’s original dimensions. The result is a classic Mustang shell sitting on top of a Model 3 dual-motor setup good for roughly 400 horsepower and 471 lb-ft of torque — enough to push it from 0-60 mph in about 3.5 seconds.

‘Full Self-Driving’ in a 60-year-old car

The most remarkable part of the build isn’t the drivetrain — it’s the software. Shcherbanyuk retrofitted Tesla’s camera array onto the Mustang, enabling Autopilot, Sentry Mode, and “Full Self-Driving” (Supervised). The system reportedly works, making this what appears to be the first non-Tesla vehicle to actually run FSD.

Inside, the Mustang features the Model 3’s 15-inch touchscreen controlling all vehicle functions and receiving firmware updates over the air. Shcherbanyuk also installed the Cybertruck’s yoke steering wheel and Tesla-sourced heated and cooled seats. The Tesla charging port sits where the original gas cap was at the rear of the car.

Here you can see the car using Tesla’s Summon feature:

During a test drive with Business Insider, the car showed 194 miles of range remaining at approximately 80% battery. Shcherbanyuk reported achieving 258 watt-hours per mile, which matches or beats the efficiency of a standard Model 3 — impressive given the Mustang’s less aerodynamic body.

Why this matters beyond the novelty

The build is a passion project, but it highlights a few things about the state of Tesla’s technology. Elon Musk has talked about licensing “Full Self-Driving” to other automakers for years, but no manufacturer has signed a deal. Ford CEO Jim Farley publicly shut down the idea, saying Waymo’s system is superior. Musk admitted last year that legacy automakers simply don’t want FSD.

Yet here’s a small auto parts shop in Sacramento running FSD on a non-Tesla vehicle for under $40,000 in total project costs. It demonstrates that Tesla’s hardware and software stack is more portable than the company’s licensing struggles would suggest.

The project also speaks to the growing EV conversion market, where Tesla drivetrains have become the go-to for classic car builds. Companies like Arc Motor Company offer Tesla-battery-based classic car conversions starting at $75,000, making this $40,000 DIY build look like a bargain by comparison. The global vehicle conversion market was valued at $5.9 billion in 2024 and is projected to grow at 9% annually through 2034.

Here’s a cool walkthrough of the car:

Electrek’s Take

This is one of the coolest EV conversion projects we’ve seen. Getting a Tesla Model 3 drivetrain into a classic car isn’t new — we’ve covered Tesla-powered builds ranging from Shelby Cobras to Honda Accords over the years — but getting “Full Self-Driving” working in a 1966 Mustang is a first, and it’s genuinely impressive.

The most impressive part, in my opinion, is getting Autopilot and FSD to actually work with what are inevitably different camera angles throughout the entire sensor suite. Tesla’s vision-based neural network was trained on data from cameras mounted in very specific positions on Tesla vehicles. The 1966 Mustang has a completely different body shape, roofline, and mounting surface geometry — meaning every single camera in the suite is sitting at a different angle and height than what the system was designed for. The fact that FSD still functions despite that is a testament to the robustness of the neural net, and it tells us something useful about how adaptable Tesla’s vision stack actually is to non-standard camera placements.

That’s relevant if Tesla ever does manage to license FSD to other automakers with different vehicle geometries – something it has tried to do for years, but it has yet to convince an automaker to get on board.

FTC: We use income earning auto affiliate links. More.

联系我们 contact @ memedata.com