SKU: 46321736359

AWE Tuning 2018+ Ford Mustang GT (S550) Cat-back Exhaust - Track Edition (Quad Chrome Silver Tips)

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Description

AWE Tuning 2018+ Ford Mustang GT (S550) Cat-back Exhaust - Track Edition (Quad Chrome Silver Tips)Performance. Sound. Fitment. Muscle. If raw and rowdy are your speed, the Track Edition is your dose of steel. The loudest of the lot, the Track Edition Exhaust retains all the engineering and precision of the Touring Edition, including the H pipe and 3 diameter tubing, minus the 180 Technology. The result? Completely raw wake the dead level muscle. This version is known to get rowdy, and may be too much for many. For that reason, this particular

Performance. Sound. Fitment. Muscle. If raw and rowdy are your speed, the Track Edition is your dose of steel. The loudest of the lot, the Track Edition Exhaust retains all the engineering and precision of the Touring Edition, including the H-pipe and 3” diameter tubing, minus the 180 Technology®. The result? Completely raw wake-the-dead level muscle. This version is known to get rowdy, and may be too much for many. For that reason, this particular version cannot be returned due to sound preference. But fear not – if after running the Track Edition you're feeling it’s a bit too much, AWE makes it easy to swap over to a Touring Edition with the Conversion Kit. Just bolt it on and tone it down a bit – easy! Let's talk about Valve Anxiety for a moment -- an affliction affecting many enthusiasts. If your car came with valves, you're thinking, does this AWE exhaust have valves? The answer is that it doesn't need them. AWE's 180 Technology handles drone in a smarter way, while not impeding any performance, and with no moving parts - just good old fashioned brainy engineering. 180 Technology is so good, we patented it. Hear for yourself in the videos, and join the cured. Optional Valve Actuator Bracket: For drivers who have opted for the Active Valve Performance Exhaust from the factory, we have created a convenient, attractive, bolt-on bracket so your factory-issued valve actuators have a home, and your GT’s ECU stays happy. When it comes to tips, the Track Edition finishes off with 4” slash-cut tips, featuring the AWE logo, so they know what team you're on. All tips are individually adjustable, allowing depth into the bumper to be set according to personal taste. They're also double walled to ensure a mirror finish - even under hard usage.

This Part Fits:

Year Make Model Submodel
2019-2020 Ford Mustang Bullitt
2018-2023 Ford Mustang GT
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SKU: 46321736359

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james hammill
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
How Capitalism Shaped America
Format: Hardcover
Very impressive analysis. Unfortunately the author ended his analysis in 2010. Wish he had offered some thoughts on what should be done as opposed to what is being done in this age of economic chaos.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on August 19, 2021
J
J. Miller
Boise, US
★★★★★ 3
Some good footnotes to other histories
Format: Audiobook
This book is impressive in two key ways: first it re-surfaces recurring elements in the political/economic intersect over time (the on-again off-again use of "the gold standard," the company invasion into the intimate life of the laborer) and second it gets into the gory details of policies and logistics that shaped or limited major historical events (like the availability and movement of gold going into WWII). That said, it's pretty massive for providing just those two things. It comes up weaker from Nixon on to today which undermines its contemporary relevance: it stamps everything from 1980 on as "chaos" and tries to back away slowly. It spends some time on the change in stock ownership of the 1980s (prefer Ho's Liquidated or Nace's Gangs of America; the pivot from pensions to 401ks is lost, Supermoney is not mentioned), spends time on Enron (see also McLean's The Smartest Guys in the Room) but seems to mostly ignore terror and catastrophe (consider Klein's The Shock Doctrine), spends time on the 2008 meltdown (prefer Lewis's The Big Short and Foroohar's Makers & Takers) but comes up short of Occupy Wall Street, VC-fueled gig economy corporations and cryptocurrencies. I'm suspecting that the "Chaos" isn't so much chaos but rather "Distributed Tactical Illegibility" (to borrow from Scott's Seeing Like a State): where the control of information can be used to cultivate socioeconomic advantage, then powerful people within a state will maintain their privilege through obfuscating the information they're using to create and maintain that advantage -- this is why insider trading is illegal as an abuse of power and trust *but also legal for members of the US legislature*. It's also a bit weak (at least in Audible form) of noting which bits of economic history would be echoed or reversed over time; tracing the evolution of a social construct through a twisting maze of legal decisions to current incomprehensibility does have this effect. I did find its larger position interesting, if perhaps a bit lost in the larger prose, that capitalism is about pricing the future into the present and it's gone off the proverbial rails because informational ubiquity compounds short-termism to collapse the future into the present in both public and private enterprise. Or, to put it another way, money can't escape the gravity of our economic expectation for near-horizon growth to invest in a future that our larger society wants and might reasonably expect and while legislators need to govern for the long term they're only elected for the short term and judged by people's everyday-experiences of the social-economy.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 20, 2021
J
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JK Waltham
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 2
Writing style not for me
Format: Hardcover
Some readers may enjoy this writing style, but I could not persevere and put it down after about a hundred pages. Too many single word quotations, choppy sentences that hoped around from subject to subject and some events discussed way out of chronology with other events. Some of this, particularly the constant one word quotes, may be for dramatic effect, but I found it disturbed the flow of the reading, something that is important in trying to get through a book this size. I prefer books with well organized paragraphs and syntax. This is not such a book.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2025
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Rebecca Borkowski
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
Book for Elementary Children
Format: Paperback
Fun book great for 2nd graders
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Reviewed in the United States on April 6, 2026
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Kimberly Zornes
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
Cute book.
Format: Paperback
Both my boys loved this book. Super cute.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 15, 2026

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