The SEMA show is all about competing for attention from crowds and media inundated with stimulation from the show floor. From elaborate booths and presentations to seas of project cars and thousands of new products, there’s a lot for gear heads to take in. CGS Performance is no stranger to the SEMA project car game, so the company knew it had to push the envelope with its second Mustang project in as many years.
“Ford asked us to develop some new products for the new EcoBoost Mustang and at the same time we decided to build a project vehicle out of our car,” CGS Performance Products President Casey Scranton explained.

Behind that wider TS Design front fascia is an upgraded intercooler from Whipple Superchargers that helps tame the inlet temps of the turbocharged 2.3-liter engine that’s enhanced by CGS intake and exhaust upgrades. (Photo Credit: CGS Performance)
A Different Path
We wanted to show people that the EcoBoost can still be cool.—Casey Scranton, CGS Performance
“We wanted to show people that the EcoBoost can still be cool and get up and go with over 400 horsepower,” Casey said.
The interior of the latest Mustangs is a major upgrade over the previous models, but Alea Leather took the guts of the CGS SEMA ’Stang to a whole new level with red Napa leather on almost every surface. The floor mats are from Lloyd Mats and the safety belts are from Seat Belt Planet. While the engine is stock, the CGS EcoBoost project does benefit from the company’s cat-back exhaust.
While CGS relied on other aftermarket manufacturers like Kompression, Pirelli, Steeda and Whipple for this build, the company also developed some of its own new gear for the EcoBoost platform.
“CGS now has an EcoBoost cat-back exhaust and we are working on a cold air intake for it now,” Casey explained.

Setting just the right stance for the CGS Mustang is a KW coil-over suspension supported by almost every S550 suspension product in the Steeda Autosports catalog. So, this car not only looks great, but it handles great as well. (Photo Credit: CGS Performance)
CGS EcoBoost Mustang Mods
Powertrain
• CGS Performance Products cat-back exhaust
• CGS Performance Products cold air intake
• Whipple Superchargers intercooler
• Reikken battery
• Inland engine dress-up powder coating
• Moroso aluminum overflow tank
• AMSOIL performance fluids
Chassis
• KW coil-over suspension
• Steeda Autosports front sway bars, rear sway bars, G-Trac braces, strut-tower brace billet sway bar mounts, bump steer kit, and bushings
• Brembo six-piston monoblock brakes & 15-inch rotors
• Inland Powdercoating on suspnsion parts
Wheels & Tires
• Kompression forged (21x 9-inch front, 22×13-inch rear) wheels
• Pirelli P-Zero (255/30ZR21 front, 335/25ZR22 rear) tires
• Tire Stickers tire letter kit
Exterior
• InDesign Motorsports vehicle execution
• TS Design custom widebody
• AIR DESIGN USA rear spoiler and hood scoop
• Axalta Coating Systems custom paint
• TruFiber carbon fiber rear diffuser and side mirror blanks
• Extreme Dimensions front spoiler
• Cerakote ceramic paint wheel coating
• Flying Iron paint by Andy Meeh
• Tint Works window tint
• Bret Oakes Engineering wiring
Interior
• Alea custom Napa leather treatment on the, seats, center console, door panels, steering wheel, shift boot, emergency brake boot and IP trim
• NAV-TV MyTouch VIM13/F-CAM
• Lloyd Mats custom floor mats
• Seat Belt Planet seat belts
The Sister Car
If the name CGS Performance sounds familiar, it’s not just because of the company’s exhaust line. You probably remember the company’s groundbreaking widebody Mustang, which took its first bow at the SEMA show back in 2015.
Wearing a striking red finish over widened bodywork, it was powered by a Whipple-supercharged Coyote putting down over 700 horsepower at the wheels. It was also the first ever S550 to receive a solid-axle conversion.
Casey and the CGS team worked with Chris Alston Chassisworks to develop a new rear subframe that allowed for installing a Chris Alston’s Chassisworks Fab9 rearend filled with Strange Engineering ST axles and a Strange Engineering differential.
What really makes this car stand out, however, is that the rearend was narrowed and the body widened to allow for the installation of massive, 24×16-inch Kompression Forged wheels and 405/25-R24 Pirelli tires.

CGS’s first foray into modding S550s was this insane, solid-axle machine with a Whipplecharged Coyote (left). (Photo Credit: CGS Performance)
With two cool Mustangs under its belt, CGS Performance isn’t slowing down on the project vehicle front. It hopes to have yet another vehicle new in Las Vegas in the future. For now, however, the company can enjoy two unique and different S550s.