You know where you stand with the Mustang – it’s going to feel old-school to a degree, for which you’re going to like it in the main.

This facelifted model is a bit different, though. Its instrument cluster is now entirely digital, for a start, with a 12.0in display whose colours can be customised. The readouts also change depending on which mode you’re in, starting out looking just a bit staid in Normal but ramping up to a vast horizontal tachometer in Track and even ‘Christmas Tree’ lights in Drag Strip. Yes, that’s Ford’s name for launch control.

Elsewhere, the interior remains as it was: vast, with chunky switchgear, and seats more accurately described as ‘chairs’. And remember, the sixth-generation Mustang also remains the first of its kind to be offered in right-hand drive, which is nice.

Buy a Mustang and you still get a choice of two engines – either a turbocharged 2.3-litre Ecoboost that’s now been tickled to develop a little more torque at the expense of outright power or the 5.0-litre V8 whom for many owners will be a no-brainer. With a manual gearbox, of course.

Going for the four-cylinder Ecoboost unit will save you about £5500 up front. Throttle response is fine and 350lb ft means you could never call it ‘slow’ with a straight face. However, if you consider a bellyful of effortless shove a core constituent of the Mustang experience – and, frankly, we do – it’s hard not to find it a bit gutless through the mid-range. That it becomes so breathless at higher crank speeds merely seals its fate as second fiddle to the V8.

Those eight cylinders remain likeably lazy in their waffling, ever-so-slightly-flatulent power delivery, which is up from 410bhp to 444bhp – an exact match for BMW's Competition Pack-equipped BMW M3 and M4. With the 10-speed ’box, the Mustang's 0-62mph time drops to 4.3sec, which the car feels good for as it roars off the line, powerboat-style.

That time is achievable only with that new automatic ’box, which for cruising is an inoffensive device, upshifting gently at roughly 2000rpm and sidestepping second gear altogether thanks to those fancy solenoids. In the car’s most relaxed mode, barely have you pulled away and you’re already into sixth or even seventh, and for some, that’ll be just dandy.

However, getting the most out of the engine requires either knocking the gear selector into ‘S’ or pulling one of the plastic paddle shifters mounted on the steering wheel. The former raises the default upshift point to around 3000rpm but will allow the crankshaft to spin to beyond 7000rpm if you’re in enough of a hurry.

Upshifts don’t exactly match those of a Porsche PDK unit for precision, but neither are they required to in a Mustang. They’re adequately quick and seamless, although downshifts can sometimes jerk. The transmission’s incessant hunting for just the right gear can irk, mind.

In fact, it’s a layer of fussiness the Mustang could do without, because this chassis doesn’t half like the road to be smooth. A generous wheelbase and good natural balance allow the car to settle into a decently composed gait. It’s one that can give you a false sense of security, even, because it’ll permit to you carry considerable speed through most corners while using generous levels of body roll to keep the contact patches squished into the road.