Here are some terrible pictures that show the mid-engine-ness of this car, for the casual engin-erd. One might also note changes taking place while engine was apart. In both car-oriented pics, there is actually an engine in place. I could nearly place a chair inside the engine compartment to sit and touch the front of the block when the engine was apart. The placement was about an inch further back from standard C4.
I did spend some time driving the car with the (LS) engine completely stock, which made somewhere around 330-350 horsepower; the DOD/AFM had been deactivated. It got ridiculously good mileage, behaved like a Toyota Camry, and with the car's new footprint, once I had enough tire clearance figured out within the body, it could be floored in the middle of a turn at Thunderhill like a total slob and just get up and go. At that point, I knew I had a chassis that could take a lot more power.
To reiterate, some of the dumbest thrills were found in how well-behaved the car was in contrast to the previous version of the old-school Ford 5.0, which loped and cam-surged and had finicky carbonator manners under high pressure situations. The X-302 engine made the same power as the LS, but generally did everything worse. The new, stock LS barely used any gas in four sessions of being floored on the track, and I could drive it up a gravel road, uphill with full traction, at like three miles per hour. Little joys go a long way sometimes.