Jay Mingolelli races his '00 GT convertible in the heavily restrictive Real Street class
It's no secret the 5.0 Mustang has revived grassroots drag racing. Along the way, a few ingenious people decided to devote themselves to racing in sanctioning bodies to see who had the baddest Mustang in the land. From those beginnings we have arrived to where we are in 2003-12 racing classes within the NMRA, with no slowing down in sight. It's almost unbelievable to think Mustang racers have that many classes from which to choose. But that's one of the good things about the Mustang drag racing market. Because there are so many different combinations a racer can run, the sanctioning bodies have based their classes around combinations, restricting them accordingly.
One such heavily restrictive class in NMRA is Real Street-sponsored, of course, by 5.0&SF. And one racer making an impact in Real Street is Westbury, New York's Jay Mingolelli.
We won't go into all the rules of Real Street, but to give you an idea, it's open to both pushrod and 4.6 Two-Valve modular Mustangs. Pushrod engines are limited to 311 ci while modulars are held to a maximum of 289 cubes. Pushrod engines are allowed to run a select list of "street-style" aftermarket heads, but the modular must make do with factory heads, which is basically mandatory since no one makes an aftermarket Two-Valve head save for Ford Racing Performance Parts '96-'98 units. Porting of heads-except for factory E7 heads, that is-is illegal. For all other heads, the only legal operations that can be done are valve jobs and milling for increased compression.

Jay bought the convertible before the onslaught of body-in-whites became available to the public. He sort of regrets the amount of money and time he put in the car, especially when he thinks about how he could've done all this work to a body-in-white instead of his former daily driver. Still, the convertible makes for a nice race car-even more so with Bogarts at each corner. A black GT with Bogarts-hmm!
Intake modifications are strictly prohibited in Real Street. But racers are permitted to run selected aftermarket units, while the modular crowd is able to run a Bullitt or FRPP intake in place of the factory plastic unit. Stock cams are required for both pushrod and modular powerplants. Power adders are limited to commercially available, standard mass production-style, street-type systems. Single-nozzle nitrous kits are the only legal way to run the funny stuff, and several pushrod racers have found that's the best way to get it down the track in the low 10s. Automatic transmissions are prohibited in Real Street, making it a true driver's class.
As for Jay-he first got into Mustangs in 1989 when he purchased an '86 GT. He then became interested in Grand Nationals before they became fashionable-he even had one that ran 9.90s with a Duttweiler engine. But once the Grand National secret got out, the car became too expensive to maintain. He sold the GN and bought a new '92 Mustang coupe. After driving the car home from the dealership, Jay ripped off the stock heads and installed new aftermarket ones, along with 4.10 gears and an exhaust. The car routinely ran in the 12s as if it was nothin'.
Still owning the coupe, Jay bought another Grand National and once again began to play with the turbo V-6. He regularly campaigned both cars at Mustang/Grand National shootouts. However, when he started his own trucking business, both the coupe and the GN went down the road. Jay concentrated on the business side of things for a while until the New Edge Mustangs came out in 1999. He even tried to order a '99, but a fire at the Ford plant kept him from getting one until the 2000 model-year run. He ordered a convertible because he had seen Racin' Jason run his convertible into the seven-second zone and because he'd never owned a ragtop before.