CMST's D-style carbon bonnet and GT rear wing are two new dry-carbon upgrades for the 2015โ2017 (S550) Ford Mustang. The bonnet frames a clear polycarbonate window in its centre, ringed by louvred side vents, and is moulded in dry carbon fibre with a 2x2 twill weave. The wing is a tall, swan-neck GT-style aerofoil that adds rear downforce and high-speed stability on top of the visual change. Both are styling and performance parts in one, designed to bolt onto a stock or widebody S550 without cutting the car.
CMST keeps releasing fresh designs rather than recycling the same moulds, and these two parts are the latest for the facelift-era Mustang. This feature walks through what each part is, how the bonnet's window and vents work, what a GT wing actually does at speed, and how dry carbon is built and cared for. Read it before you buy so you know what you are fitting and why.
- Vehicle: Ford Mustang S550 (2015โ2017)
- Fitment: Bolt-on bonnet replacement and boot-lid-mounted rear wing; suits stock and widebody cars
- Parts covered: CMST D-style carbon bonnet with transparent window and louvred vents; CMST GT-style big carbon rear wing
- Material: Dry carbon fibre, 2x2 twill weave, with a UV-stable polycarbonate window panel on the bonnet
- Finish: Exposed carbon weave under a UV clearcoat (gloss)
Two new carbon parts for the S550 Mustang
The S550 generation gave the Mustang a sharper face and a stiffer body, and it remains one of the most modified performance cars in Australia. CMST's two new releases target the two areas owners change first: the bonnet and the rear aero. Each is sold as a standalone upgrade, so you can fit one, the other, or both, and each is built from the same dry carbon process used across the CMST range. If you are matching panels over time, both sit naturally alongside the rest of the CMST carbon fibre body kit for the car.
The D-style carbon bonnet
The headline part is the D-style (Dๆฌพ) bonnet. It replaces the factory steel bonnet with a single dry-carbon panel that carries a transparent window set into the centre and a pair of louvred vents on each shoulder. The styling is unmistakable, but the design also does real aerodynamic and thermal work, which is why vented carbon bonnets are common on track-focused builds. You can see the full range of options in the CMST carbon bonnet for Ford listings.
The transparent window
The clear panel in the centre of the bonnet is a show feature first. It lets you see into the engine bay, so a dressed-up Coyote V8, a supercharger or a tidy strut tower brace is on display whenever the car is parked. The window is moulded from polycarbonate rather than glass, which keeps weight down and resists cracking. Polycarbonate is sensitive to UV and fine scratches over time, so the panel should use a UV-stable, hard-coated grade and be cleaned only with a soft microfibre cloth and plastic-safe cleaner. Treat it like a helmet visor, not a windscreen, and it will stay clear.
Vents and heat extraction
The louvred vents flanking the window are not just decoration. A Coyote-powered S550 generates a lot of under-bonnet heat, and louvres give that hot air a low-pressure path to escape upward instead of building up around the engine and radiator. Extracting trapped heat helps intake and engine-bay temperatures on a hard run or a hot Australian day. Vented bonnets also bleed off high-pressure air that would otherwise push up under a sealed bonnet, which trims front-end lift at speed. The louvres are angled to shed water away from the engine bay, though like any vented bonnet the car should not be left to sit in heavy rain with a dressed engine exposed.
Weight and handling
Carbon's biggest mechanical benefit on a bonnet is where the weight comes off. The bonnet sits high and well forward, over the front axle, so swapping heavy steel for dry carbon removes mass from the worst possible spot for handling. Less weight up high lowers the car's centre of gravity slightly, and less weight ahead of the axle line sharpens turn-in and reduces the load the front tyres have to manage. The change is modest on its own, but it is the kind of unsprung-adjacent, high-leverage weight saving that enthusiasts chase, and it comes with the cooling and lift benefits of the vents on the same panel.
The carbon GT rear wing
The second release is CMST's GT-style big rear wing (ๅคงๅฐพ็ฟผ), a tall aerofoil mounted on swan-neck uprights above the boot. It is a far bigger statement than a factory ducktail or a lip spoiler, and on a widebody S550 it finishes the aggressive look. Beyond appearance, a wing of this size does measurable aerodynamic work once the car is moving quickly. The matching options sit in the CMST rear wing for Ford range, and CMST's lower-profile CMST spoiler for Ford options cover owners who want a subtler look.
What a GT wing does
A raised GT wing works in cleaner, faster-moving air well above the boot lid, away from the turbulent flow that comes off the roof and rear glass. At higher speeds the aerofoil generates downforce, pressing the rear axle into the road, which improves rear grip and high-speed stability through fast corners and under braking. The swan-neck mounts, where the uprights attach to the top of the wing rather than the underside, keep the more aerodynamically active lower surface clean and let the wing work more efficiently. The effect scales with speed: it is most useful at the top end and on track, and you will feel little of it at suburban pace. We have not quoted downforce figures here because they depend on wing angle, speed and the rest of the car's aero, but the direction of the effect is well established for a wing of this type.
Mounting and balance
The wing mounts through the boot lid on its uprights, and that is the part to get right. A large wing loads its mounting points hard at speed, so the boot lid needs proper reinforcement or backing plates and the correct hardware, not just bolts through thin sheet metal. Equally important is aero balance: adding strong rear downforce without addressing the front can make the steering feel light at speed. Owners chasing a balanced setup usually pair a wing like this with a front splitter or lip so the front axle keeps pace with the new rear grip. Fitted correctly and balanced front to rear, the wing adds stability; fitted as a pure styling piece on a stock front, it still looks the part but should be set at a sensible angle.
Dry carbon fibre: construction and finish
Both parts are made from dry carbon fibre, not the cheaper wet-layup or FRP-with-a-carbon-skin construction. Dry carbon is cured under heat and pressure in an autoclave, which produces a lighter, stiffer panel with a consistent 2x2 twill weave and far fewer voids than hand-laid wet carbon. The visible weave sits under a UV clearcoat that protects the resin from sunlight. That clearcoat is the part that ages: like all exposed carbon, it is UV-sensitive and will dull or yellow if it is never protected, so an occasional wax or a paint-protection film over high-exposure areas keeps it looking new.
| Attribute | CMST carbon bonnet | Factory steel bonnet |
|---|---|---|
| Weight | Lighter (dry carbon, weight removed high and forward) | Heavier stamped steel |
| Finish | Exposed 2x2 twill weave under gloss UV clearcoat | Body-colour paint |
| Heat extraction | Louvred vents bleed under-bonnet heat and reduce lift | Sealed, no extraction |
| Show feature | Transparent polycarbonate window over the engine bay | None |
| Care | Wax clearcoat; clean window with plastic-safe products | Standard paint care |
Fitment and care
Both parts are designed for the 2015โ2017 S550 Mustang and bolt on without cutting the car, though a carbon bonnet always needs proper setup. Because an aftermarket bonnet is lighter than steel and uses its own latch and stops, it should be aligned for even gaps to the guards and headlights, and many owners fit bonnet pins or verify firm latch engagement so the panel cannot lift at speed. Set the rubber stops and hinges so it closes flush, then open and close it several times to confirm the catch holds. The wing needs its uprights centred and square and its boot-lid mounts reinforced. For care, keep both panels clean, wax the clearcoat occasionally to slow UV dulling, and clean the polycarbonate window only with soft cloths and plastic-safe cleaner to avoid scratches. If you are building a full look, the broader Ford Mustang body kit range and the CMST body kit for Ford collection cover matching panels.
Frequently asked questions
Does the D-style bonnet fit my Mustang and year?
It is designed for the 2015โ2017 (S550) Ford Mustang and bolts on in place of the factory bonnet. It suits both stock and widebody cars. If your Mustang is a 2018-onward facelift, confirm the exact model year before ordering, as the front-end panels changed and fitment differs.
Is the transparent window safe and durable?
The window is moulded from polycarbonate, which is impact-resistant and far harder to crack than glass, so it holds up well to road use. Its main weakness is UV exposure and surface scratching over years, so it should be a UV-stable, hard-coated grade and cleaned only with a soft microfibre cloth and plastic-safe cleaner. Treat it like a helmet visor and it stays clear.
Do I need bonnet pins with a carbon bonnet?
They are strongly recommended. A lighter aftermarket bonnet relies on its own latch and stops, so many owners fit bonnet pins or carefully verify firm latch engagement as insurance against the panel lifting at speed. At minimum, set the latch and rubber stops correctly and check the catch holds before driving hard.
Does the GT wing add real downforce or is it just cosmetic?
It adds real downforce once the car is moving quickly. A raised GT wing works in clean air above the boot and presses the rear axle down, improving high-speed stability and rear grip. The effect grows with speed, so it does most of its work at the top end and on track and little at suburban pace. For balance, pair it with front aero such as a splitter.
How is dry carbon cared for?
Dry carbon is finished with a UV clearcoat that protects the resin, and that lacquer is the part that ages. Wash the panels normally, then wax the clearcoat occasionally or apply paint-protection film to high-exposure areas to slow UV dulling and yellowing. Kept protected, the weave and gloss stay looking new for years.
Can I fit the wing myself?
A confident DIYer can, but the mounting matters more than the bolting. The uprights must be centred and square, and the boot lid needs proper reinforcement or backing plates so the wing's load at speed does not stress thin sheet metal. If you are not comfortable reinforcing the boot lid and setting the wing square, have it fitted professionally.
Build your S550 in carbon with AME Motorsport
The D-style bonnet and GT wing are two of the newest dry-carbon parts for the S550 Mustang, and both deliver looks and function from the same panel. AME Motorsport stocks them in Australia along with the rest of the range: start with the CMST collection, browse the CMST carbon bonnet for Ford and CMST rear wing for Ford listings, and check the full Ford Mustang body kit range to confirm the right parts for your car before you buy.
