When I was 20 in 1973 I bought one of the last RS bodyshells that Ford AVO were selling off in grey primer for about £270. All strengthened and with flared front wheel arches. At the same time the local scrapyard had a Gilbern Invader that had caught fire and looked a blackened heap of burnt glass fibre mess. Under the mess was a three litre V6 and a Capri 3 litre gearbox with Laycock electric overdrive, I took a gamble and bought the engine and gearbox for £25. Luckily the fire had not distorted alloy castings and only damaged easily replaceable seals and wiring. Cortina Estate rear axle with 3.09 ratio gave a 28mph/1000 rpm top overdrive and filled the rear large wheel arches without the need for wheel spacers, RS front brakes, 3 litre radiator. Stage 2 heads and Piper cam, never overtaken by anything. I had ten years of pure joy!
@@rickydub6950 Sort of alive. The shell which had a full roll cage ( one of the conditions my father put on allowing me to build it) eventually rusted and I took out the drive train, suspension and brakes and put them all in a Dutton Phaeton kit car which is still alive. The body shell alas went to a Skegness grass track racer, not one of my wisest decisions!
I love the history. Perception is everything. Growing up in the U.S. and coming of age in the early 2000s, the common sentiment of the Ford Escort at the time was that it was a "discount car." A second-hand car that never cost more than a $1000 to buy. I had no idea how huge the Escort was outside the U.S. until now. What a fascinating story.
The early USA Ford Escorts had the front wheels held on by the leaf spring suspension spring. When that spring broke, the front wheels came off. Very 'inconvenient'/dangerous! The water pumps tied up at only 25K miles. In a further bad design, the water pump was driven by the timing/camshaft belt instead of conventionally by the fan belt. So the tied up water pump broke the timing belt and the camshaft stopped spinning while crankshaft was still spinning. In still further bad design, this was a 'crash' 'interference' engine wherein when camshaft stops the pistons crash into open valves destroying the engine internally and creating a very expensive repair! Escorts left a very bad taste in the mouths of thousands of Americans!
Never cost more than a $1000.00? I don’t think so, I have come of age way before you and know that Escorts could be found for a $1000.00 or less but they were probably barely drivable. I seem to remember that I sold my Escort for $6500.00 in 2005 it was secondhand.
@@A-FrameWedge A colleague of of mine bought an early 90's US Escort - secondhand - for $600, but it was missing the grill and bumper! He had to fix up a lot, but he thought he got a deal.
Those aren't real Escorts. They're just other cars badged as Escorts, I looked them up. Companies love to do this in the American market (all markets really).
Errata: * The consensus is the mk1 Escort Ghia didn't have air conditioning. * The mk2 Twin Cam was 1.6, not 1.3. * South African Escort production ended in 1987.
Must be a nightmare to go through all the data for all the different model variations to research the information for the video and still get every detail correct. I think you do a fantastic job on these videos, this is one of your best! People will always be quick to point out errors, but please keep doing what you do. Great to see Mrs Big Car too. I'm with her on the Mk5 Escort, I had Mk2s and later I had a 1992 Mk5 1.6LX and I actually really liked it! How about The Talbot Matra Rancho story?
Absolutely superb documentary, would expect nothing less! Kept me engrossed (and thanks to gags such as the "Ford Exploder") also amused 🤣 I still remember the day my uncle pulled up outside our house in his classically coloured red and black Mk III XR3i, complete with gleaming clover leaf alloys and twin circular spots... He worked for Crystal Ford in Hull at the time, and during the 80s and 90s he leased so, so many of the classic performance Fords of that Era. Certainly got the 10 year old me far more excited than Dad's Volvo 440! Nowadays I appreciate each equally for their respective invitations, but it was the Escort which I'd obsess over, until I discovered the Lotus Carlton 😏 Keep up the great work my friend!! 👏🇬🇧
@@robsterbob580 I kick myself about getting bits wrong, and do try my best, but without someone else fact checking it's hard. But fact checking would take a LONG time! The Matra Ranco was a fun looking car. Maybe!
Brazilian here. The autolatina era Escorts (mk4 and mk5) were still available along with the VW siblings, but with VW 1.8 and 2.0 engines, known as AP1800 and AP2000. They also had the 1.6 from Renault, known as CHT, and also de 1.0 from the Hobby. We also got the mk6, known as 'Sapão' (big frog). Welcome to the brazilian car rabbit hole! Subscribed! Cheers!
Back in 1999 I bought a 1988 Mk4 Escort 1.3 Popular for £200 and got about three years out of it! Being so impressed, I replaced it with a 1991 Mk5 Escort 1.4 estate and.... I've never owned a Ford since then.
(11:12) Small correction there if you don't mind BG - Escort production did not end in South Africa in 1980. The locally assembled 3rd generation (with locally manufactured 1.3 & 1.6 L engines) was sold up until about 1987 until replaced by the Mazda-based Lazer.
I was in the RAF the entire 1980s. I was offered my driving course and thus got my provisional licence via the forces. I expected to be taught to drive on Land rover. Nope , I was given an Escort. I had to share with 2 other students and our instructor . The entire day every day was driving lessons. 2 days before my test Argentina invaded the Falkland islands. I was recalled to base ( I was Vulcan bomber force ). The other lads were new recruits going on to be drivers as a trade and had to witness me plead with the instructor to get the powers to be let me stay 2 days longer to get me back as a driver. I loved the Escort.
In 1991 I had an 85 Mustang GT with the 302 HO and 5 speed trans in Red. My roommate had an 86 Escort GT with the turbo four cylender and 5 speed trans in Black. They both had basicly the exact same options and interior. Other than his escort being slightly narrower you could not tell the differences inside them. My roomate had replaced his wheels with larger diameter wheels from an 89 Mustang GT. When parked side by side at a car show once his Escort got a lot more attention. We asked a few people why they liked the smaller car more. The answers were all the same. They were interested in a car easier to park and with better fuel milage. Plus the Escort was only slighter slower and since most people are just using it for transportation and occasional fun drive in the country the speed didnt matter. No one was racing so the Escort was fine.
The reason for the massive weight gains in the later models was primarily side impact protection. The Escort wasn't alone in this - when the Mondeo replaced the Sierra Ford seriously thought about making certain panels from fibreglass or composites to pare the weight down. The Mondeo suffered in fleets due to high refurbishment costs at end of life, due to its propensity to pick up dents because of the thin panels.
The mk1 mondeo also had bumpers that seemed to be made of glass and would break up into shards with even very minor knocks. Plus the rust proofing was not great. It's no wonder they would start to look tatty so quickly.
At last, a channel that covers cars sold in the UK and a presenter who does his research and is interesting to listen to! So many good videos on this channel.. Thank you!
My dad’s first car at the age of 17 was a Ford Escort which he loved. He even installed his own manual reversing light as they weren’t standard at the time. He eventually got a van through work and hated that he didn’t get to drive it as much but a first car that he always swore by. My Grand father also drove a Ford Anglia at one point and as I’m typing I drive a Ford Focus my first car. While this wasn’t exactly intentional it’s amazing how a car company has spanned three generations of drivers. It’s that legacy of longevity that I think I love the most about Ford.
As a service engineer we used Anglia vans ,then im 1968 we had the first Escort vans in Northants,these were a revelation as they were unbreakable, often max loaded with tools an spares, in 1971 as senior engineer I had a new 1.3 saloon xl and this vehicle saved my life on a motorway crash when a lorry came through the central reservation at Dunstable, we hit the frontispiece area went over the top ,turned a car into a fastback when it came down, engineunder my feet ,got thrown out and only scratches, 11pm and pouring, a really great car written off ,only 3 months old
I discovered your channel this very night and binged almost all of your videos by now. i am deeply impressed about the in depth information you provide along with all the historic footage! Absolutely fantastic! Greetings from Cologne, where Ford automobiles are built for almost 90 years :)
Thank you for this informative video. My dad had the 1971 German version, and my most memorable memory was his accident. My dad hit a BMW 2002 from behind and the damage to the BMW rendered the vehicle unusable while the Ford Escort had only a slight deflection in the bumper. This proved how robust this vehicle was. The good old days...!
So much effort and detail in these mini-documentaries, very impressive, I’m subscribed now. Excellent work. ......I always wanted an Escort, specifically the mk3, but it went out of production by the time I had learned to drive. My brother had a mk5 RS 2000, a very nice car in its time. It would be another 15 years before I could get a Focus ST...........(The missus seems lovely, but there’s a pristine mk4 still being driven around where I live, it is beige though!)
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I was a UK Ford apprentice in the 70’s at Dunton my mentor was the designer of the escort floor pan the flat sheet body in white hung in his office no CAD or computers in those days just drawing boards great time of my life
The Model T numbers are phenomenal given the era, population and number of drivers. I'm sure it's the all time champion if you go by percentage of the population who owned one.
"The Model T numbers are phenomenal given the era" it was era of Ford monopol for mass production of cars so why its suprising that plenty of them were made and sold as it was also the cheapest car of that time? WV Beetle are in this topic much more impresive and "With 21,529,464 produced, the Beetle is the longest-running and most-manufactured car of a single platform ever made.".
The Escort was very popular in Germany too. I remember well many of my slightly older friends nearly all went for Escorts as their first or second car. It was very well received, a quite modern and reliable car. BTW the Orion never sold well at all.
The Orion was an awkward looking car, as if the boot was an afterthought. In the UK most people buy hatchbacks, or at least they used to before the obsession with ridiculous crossovers that don’t do anything different to a normal hatchback, but its trendy to be seen in one. I also think the Audi A3 looks awful in saloon format.
Back in 1975 my driving instructor had a mk 2 Cortina 1600 E. After 4 lessons he announced that he was trading this in. Next lesson he turned up with an Escort. However this was a mk 1 RS 2000 white with blue stripes. Looking back i now realise just how lucky I was. Best bit was the instructor favourite phrase " give it a little more gas" !!!!!!! Oh i also passed first time !
👍 My 1st new car was a brand new Black 1989 Ford Escort GT...had really good times after replacing the alternator about 28 times...was too young and full of energy and burnt countless calories washing it to keep it spotless in Orlando Florida...the heat and the black color were not a good combination...it did however save my life because I had just totaled my Kawasaki Ninja 250 and was about to purchase a Yamaha FZR 400; narrowly escaping a death sentence... Then came my first 1995 VW Golf GTI VR6 and I never looked back! FORD; Fix Or Repair Daily And calling it a Ford 'Exploder' was no slip of the tongue...come on!
My nan has one...as a 1:50 toy car. Full metal, with plastic glass and interior. Probably from the time when my dad and uncle were still boys. Although she never bothered to read its name on the floor, she maintains it's a Zhiguli (a.k.a. VAZ Lada). I love that dog bone grille...
Great show on my wife's favorite car, the 1993 Ford Escort wagon. She started out driving Hondas, but the Escort quickly became her favorite. I offered to buy her a new Fiesta, but after test driving the new car, she said no thanks.. The Ford escort is a winner for our family
Lovely to see Mrs. BC. Would love for her to become a regular fixture: it's obvious you are great friends and she seems to have a great sens of humour. Particularly when ribbing you :) On a side note, my aunt had an 87 (?) xr3 convertible in white. She loved racing the 'wide boys' from the lights (or so she used to say). Sign of the times, eh.
Compelling accuracy in your commentary. I’m pretty knowledgeable about certain aspects of the industry and I totally support your presentation! Well researched and utterly enjoyable! Can’t thank you enough.
yeah agreed. the stupidly named and impossible to google _'Honda 'e'_ just ain't doin it for me. too little and too damn late. although I guess some of those charger reboots look alright.
i use to work as a mechanic in the 90s, for a Ford dealership.. ive worked on all those cars,... i remember using the fds2000 software for the engine management sytem... great video,.. thanks
My second ever car (after a 1966 Beetle) was a Mk1 Escort. I was 18 at the time and although the 1100cc engine was slow, it didn't matter and I loved it. It was a hideous bottle green colour.!
My dad bought my stepmother a '69 or '70 metallic green Escort mk1 when we lived in South Africa. She had a mid-60s Mini estate wagon with an 850 CC wagon, it was a real dog. I remember they were shopping Opel's at the time when they bought the Escort. My dad had brought his '68 Pontiac LeMans over to South Africa from the US when we moved there in 1968.
My uncle owned a bright red mark 1 escort back in the early '70's when Roger Clarke was king of International rallying. This replaced his mark 1 Capri he had owned earlier. A friend of the family who was a police officer used to drive either a mark 2 escort van when he was a dog handler or a mark 2 saloon was he was on normal duty. My work colleague had a bright orange mark 2 Mexico 1600 about 1984 with the small black rear spoiler. The XR3i was everywhere in the '80's, perhaps the best looking family saloon of the '80's. Who can forget Doyles white RS2000 in "The Professionals". When I think back escorts were everywhere in my younger days. My favourite would have to be the Cosworth version with the larger spoiler in the early '00's. Very rare model.
I had to rewind and watch it again. I initially thought it was a bit "raunchy" that the panties were showing... ... but alas it was just the rear hem of the skirt LOL
I owned a few Escorts in the UK during the 80s and 90s so really enjoyed this excellent, highly informative and expertly presented episode. This is one of the best channels on RUclips, full stop. It was great to see Mrs Big Car making an appearance and I loved her sense of fun. So nice to see such a happy couple. Best wishes to you both and please keep doing what you do so very well.
Great historical review of the Escort. Well done. I appreciate the details of many things I did not know. Nice to see that Mrs BC shares the passion. Without doubt the Escort was a global success and still is. I consider myself a car guy but have never even driven an Escort or desired to drive one - until now. My car exposure has been in Canada, Singapore and Australia where I believe many more competitive cars are available. Thanks again. I watch your channel regularly and will continue to do so.
Another excellent video, well done - really love the story telling and visuals from the archives! For the record the Mk3 was sold in South Africa up until 1986 and was replaced by the Mazda based Ford Laser. We also had a pick-up variant of Mk3 called the Bantam - it received the Mk4 nose in 1986 and was also sold as the Mazda Rustler until 1993 (very popular). Mk6 was introduced in 1996 and replaced by Focus. Just a little SADM FYI :)
My dad had a 1990 Escort. I was with him when he bought it new at the car dealer. I learned to drive in that car also. I loved it. Love the way it looks, and it was very good to drive. The Escort in general is easily one of my favorite cars of all time.
Great to watch this. I started working in the Halewood factory in 1967 and was involved with the Escort and Focus for many years. They were both good quality and good selling cars. The escort pop plus had carpets as apposed to rubber mats. Many a pop was fitted with carpets by mistake. But it was so difficult to take the carpet out after seats and Windcord fitting they were sold at no extra cost for customers advantage. A chat up line at the time used by the lads when out looking for a lady. Was " I am from ford can I give you an escort". Ha Ha.
Not only that: the "F series" is a huge category all by itself - not a single vehicle. Not even looking at the older versions - we can see that there's a HUGE difference between the current F-150 & F-750 - and yet they're both "F-series".
This is an extremely well thought out video which must of taken so much time to gather the information. I'm so grateful for the effort you put in to produce these videos. Also try and include Mrs. Bc in more videos, she is lovely.
Ah the Escort memories from 80's... My dad got a new Escort 1.6 in 1986 and that was a cool car back then. I had just got out of military service and spent summer with my wife to be driving along Finnish countryside with it... Little after that in 1988 I bought my first own car that was an 1971 Escort 1.1 in bright orange colour and had only 55 000 KM in the meter. That is the only car I regret I ever sold, it was in flawless show room condition in and out those few years I drove it...
Really enjoyed your review of this iconic car. My Father was always a Ford man, so your review's are a joy to watch. Funny enough, he never owned a set of key's to an Escort. That privelage belonged to my sister. Keep up the good work. Fantastic entertainment !!!
I remember the first generation Escorts here in the states. They were pleasant to drive, but so so with respect to performance. They also had interference engines, so you had to change the timing belt regularly or face major engine repairs/replacement if you neglected maintenance. Great video as always! Keep up the good work. It was also a joy to see your better half!
I've got a Mk4 (1988) Escort 1.4 as my first car... She's been sitting in a barn for the last ~10 years, so she does need a bit of work (brakes have got air in the system - I suspect maybe a split brake hose, or perhaps the master cylinder, the gearbox is leaking and has contaminated the clutch disk (I assume), the valve seals are knackered (CVH lol). Oh, and I broke the clutch ratchet last week... So that's gonna be a pig to do lul). Obviously a full service will be in need (cambelt, oil etc...). The underbody appears to be in good shape (rare I know...), just a bit of surface rust here and there, although I wouldn't be too surprised if I did need to bring out the welder... . Seems like a decent project, certainly gonna keep me busy for a while.
Had a couple of Mk II Escorts here in Australia. Swapped the 1.3L for the 1.6L in the first one without issue with my Dad. The next one was a ~'79ish Ghia that we converted from Auto to manual using a similar aged donor. Discovered, aside from a different transmission tunnel (we cut and welded the tunnel from the donor) that the seat mounts were different between the Ghia and XL models; one had little mount point platforms welded into the floor, the other had feet built into the seat that bolted onto mount points drilled out of the floor itself. BIZARRE that they did it differently. Looking at wreckers at the time, this seemed to be a consistent difference not between years but trim levels, which beggars belief to me. Our Ghia had a real wood insert across the dash (by this time cracked and lightly splinter-y), and a glove box! (essentially a closable door to cover the existing parcel shelf) No A/C, which wasn't the worst thing - the standard heater fan came in loud/very loud modes, and cranking the window down was generally the preference. Never mind the vinyl roof on the Ghia :-) Luxury. Still miss the funky orange, rally lights, steel minilite-style wheels and half-bumpers on that original one though. It looked the business.
I drove my '86 red Escort Pony 4-speed hatchback for countless years and it was extremely reliable. The fuel economy was excellent as was the interior space. It was hard to give let her go but it was just time to move on. I also had a black ZX-2 automatic which was a blast to drive.
Fun fact the safari cars from Jurassic Park were Toyota Land cruisers in the book but they were Ford Explorers in the film so Ford could advertise them
I had a 1983 EXP. It drove quite well and I was happy to have a car with a manual transmission. I kept that car until after I graduated from college and had a decent job (so around 1992).
I had 3 Mk2 Escorts, an estate, and then a four door saloon, plus a Ghia saloon as a spares and parts car. If I still had any of them, they'd be worth decent money now!
4 doors and estates aren't worth much prices of mk1 and 2 escorts are driven up by the rally boys still wanting 2 door shells, that's why even povo spec cars have value as long as they don't have 4 doors.
@@popuptoaster True, but even though estates and 4 door saloons aren't worth that much compared to 2 door cars, they're not so common, as most rusted away years ago like mine did. You can't buy an estate for a few hundred quid like back then. The survivors go for 4 figures now. My 1979 Escort 1.6 4 door cost me £100 back in 1991. You can buy a brand new Escort Mk2 2 door shell now. There's a company that makes them.
Ted Frith-1992 American Ford Escort Owner. I'm a proud owner of a 1992 American Ford Escort GT 'Cayman Green Limited Edition' 2 Door Hatchback. I owned my car for 28 1/2 years and exhibited it in car shows in the Southeastern Michigan Area. I won a total of 170 plats, ribbons, and trophies for my car shows participation in United Street Machines Association and Mustang Owners Club of Southeastern Michigan. It certainly gets the. Lions share of attention at these shows and it was almost featured in a made in michigan movie in 2010. I'm sharing this letter to you know i"m enjoying my Ford. Escort and it still draws a lot people in car shows in local car shows in my area in Michigan. Keep up the old car stores on my cell phone because they are an inspiration. to anyone who loves them. Thank you very much,, Ted Frith @ gmail.com P.S. Let me know how I can on 'My Classic Car' with Dennis Gage and 'My Car Story' with Lou Constable. Keep up great old car
My dad had a Ford Orion 1.6i Ghia 1986 from 6 months old. Brilliant car, he had it til 1999 when it was replaced by a renault laguna. Bodywork was absolutely perfect, underneath, well not so much (think flintstones) when he eventually part ex'd it. I don't remember it having air con (unless you opened the windows - does that count?) It did have electric windows and a keep fit sunroof though. It would break down quite a lot though, seemingly only when my mum was driving it - she hated that car, it replaced her Volvo 340 that she loved.
I was the search and rescue coordinator for my county's sheriff's department. Since I was on call 24 hours a day, I had a take home unit that was a brand new 1990 Explorer. I hauled around about half a ton of equipment in that thing for almost ten years. The county garage finally made me hand it back in 1999 because it was the oldest unit we had in service by then. I didn't want to give it up because it was outfitted exactly how I wanted it, and it would take at least a week just to transfer all the radios and computers. It had 240,000 miles when I turned it in and, even though it saw hard use for the entire time, it never gave me any real trouble. Maybe I just had the one good one, but the "Exploder" name certainly never applied to mine. They replaced it with a Suburban, but that was another and sad story.
Great and interesting video thank you. I recall that the fast Ford Mk1 Escort Mexico had an 89 bhp engine. Exactly the same as my current Skoda Roomster shopping car.. Most of us are not any bigger now, as a population than then. Why do we need cars weighing 2.5 tonnes and with engines of over 200bhp to go to the shops? The speed limits are the same (if not lower now) so if we want to save the planet, let's make better, lighter smaller cars. Very easy to do.
I used to own an early 70's 4-door 1.3L MK I when I lived in Germany back in the mid to late 70's - fun little car - thanks for posting - brings back some great memories of driving in Germany, France and Switzerland with it !!
I loved the Escort. I had a MKII RS2000 which was the best car I ever owned - simply aim it at a corner, foot flat to the floor and correct the steering if necessary. You could actually hear the Webers drinking the fuel though :-) The only new car I ever bought was an Escort Turbo which was quite a lot of fun but I always missed rear wheel drive. I nearly bought an Escort Cosworth but ended up buying a Sierra Cosworth because the Escorts were so overpriced. Then I had a MK5 RS2000 which was nippy but forever had problems with the electronics. Having lived in Germany for most of the time I was actually able to use them on most of the autobahns. Now I'm hanging on to a 17 year old Mondeo ST because I don't see anything affordable which I like. I would dearly love to have my old MKII back though.
My dad had a MK1 when I was very young, and over the following decade or so he had a MK2, a MK3, a MK3 based Orion (same engine as the XR3i) and a MK4. He considered buying the MK5 in the early 1990s, but didn't after all the bad reviews. As for me, I've had a Focus for the last 10 years. The Focus really is the latter day Escort successor and I think it actually would have carried the Escort name if not for the fact that the brand had lost credibility with the lacklustre efforts of the 1990s. I can see why Ford felt a need to distance the new car from that and went for a new name. Still, after twenty years maybe the time is right for a new European Escort. If the Chinese Escort had been sold here I might have been interested in one.
@@lukerinderknecht2982 Oh wow! So they are ex-pats' living the dream in the USA! 😁 That makes sense because he has previously stated he worked on the Microsoft Ford Sync system. Thank you for the update buddy. Hope you and yours are all safe and well at this very worrying time?
Brilliant video....I had a 78 MK2 4 door 1.3 auto...3 speed....loved it even with the hose pipe sleeve added to the trans fluid pipe to solve a fluid leak! Lol
The first civilian car I drove when I relocated to Germany was (a 1969, I think) Escort with the tiniest motor they probably made. I had been loaned the car and thought it was hilarious that wide open for almost a full kilometer on a slight downhill grade I managed 90 kph out of it. Hugely fun, painfully slow.
Credit to you for making such a wonderful informative video. I think my whole family have been bread on fords, mainly escorts My Grandad had a brown 1970 k reg, my father had escorts, cortinas and anglia. This wonderful car I sat in as a child, learnt to Drive, spent mis spent youth customising with the crappy add ons in the 1980”s .. cringe... right up until adulthood . Amazing vehicle and such an ingrained part of the U.K. life. Great video and so much research. Wow 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
I thought of sharing this with you after watching this film. I had bought my first car in 1988 a three door Ford Escort Mk3 with a 1.0 litre engine in Rosso Red paint and the reg FXI 487. It was over four years old with 18.600 on the clock. I did over that mileage (about 20K) during my first year in driving her. I have many a good memory driving that car even a 100-mile journey for Christmas to my future in laws. That trip should have been only over two hours long, but I ended up driving for five and a half hours. This was due to leaving home on a nice summery day, getting about thirty miles up the motorway for it to change. Starting as a light snow fall turned blizzard another ten miles further. When I arrived the car and household were all ice locked in for three weeks. The car performed very well throughout the journey in terrible weather. It didn't let me down once driving through up to a foot and half of snow in some parts and kept on going. After nine years of transporting me about and the car being twelve years old sadly the back end totally went, and she was sold for scrap. I may still have the steering wheel and a number plate hiding in my mums that I kept as a souvenirs of my first car ownership.
My first car (and my sisters first car before me) was a US Model 1978 Ford Fiesta. I wish they had kept importing them. I'd have loved to update with later mark versions of the Fiesta.
The Mk4 x Mk5 argument is kinda skewed where I live, the Mk4 here never had fuel injection and only got power steering in 92, its last year of production (Mk4 1.0L Hobby model lasted till 96, but had no equipment whatsoever). The Mk5 was better equipped and had fuel injection all with VW sourced engines and transmissions. Brazil never had the Mazda derived Escort btw, I'd say no place in South America had it, Ford here sold the Mk5 Escort and Verona (Orion as you know them) and VW sold the Pointer and Logus, so you got that part of the Autolatina rabbithole right.
I always wanted an Escort for my first car. My mum had a 98 Escort Ghia 1.8 (sunroof instead of AC), she always told me I could have it but after the head gasket went when it was 2 years old and it sat on the drive for about 5 years she scrapped it. It hadn't once been opened or started in that time, but it had no rust, no leaks and started first time it was unbelievable. I ended up with a 2001 Focus CL 1.4 for my first car instead, swapped out the central locking unit for the LX model one to give me remote locking and that was that, it was woefully underpowered but it was a great car. After I got a new car, my mum carried on using it as a cheap runabout then I gifted it to a friend of mine after her Focus got stolen. Unfortunately she ran it into the ground.
When I was 20 in 1973 I bought one of the last RS bodyshells that Ford AVO were selling off in grey primer for about £270. All strengthened and with flared front wheel arches. At the same time the local scrapyard had a Gilbern Invader that had caught fire and looked a blackened heap of burnt glass fibre mess. Under the mess was a three litre V6 and a Capri 3 litre gearbox with Laycock electric overdrive, I took a gamble and bought the engine and gearbox for £25. Luckily the fire had not distorted alloy castings and only damaged easily replaceable seals and wiring. Cortina Estate rear axle with 3.09 ratio gave a 28mph/1000 rpm top overdrive and filled the rear large wheel arches without the need for wheel spacers, RS front brakes, 3 litre radiator. Stage 2 heads and Piper cam, never overtaken by anything. I had ten years of pure joy!
Sounds awesome. Is it still alive? 👍
@@rickydub6950 Sort of alive. The shell which had a full roll cage ( one of the conditions my father put on allowing me to build it) eventually rusted and I took out the drive train, suspension and brakes and put them all in a Dutton Phaeton kit car which is still alive. The body shell alas went to a Skegness grass track racer, not one of my wisest decisions!
@@duckpuddles at least its heart lives on 😁
Great tale!
Sounds like the perfect beginning to an amazing project!! What ever became of it? The prices were certainly on point!!
I love the history. Perception is everything. Growing up in the U.S. and coming of age in the early 2000s, the common sentiment of the Ford Escort at the time was that it was a "discount car." A second-hand car that never cost more than a $1000 to buy. I had no idea how huge the Escort was outside the U.S. until now. What a fascinating story.
The early USA Ford Escorts had the front wheels held on by the leaf spring suspension spring. When that spring broke, the front wheels came off. Very 'inconvenient'/dangerous! The water pumps tied up at only 25K miles. In a further bad design, the water pump was driven by the timing/camshaft belt instead of conventionally by the fan belt. So the tied up water pump broke the timing belt and the camshaft stopped spinning while crankshaft was still spinning. In still further bad design, this was a 'crash' 'interference' engine wherein when camshaft stops the pistons crash into open valves destroying the engine internally and creating a very expensive repair! Escorts left a very bad taste in the mouths of thousands of Americans!
Never cost more than a $1000.00? I don’t think so, I have come of age way before you and know that Escorts could be found for a $1000.00 or less but they were probably barely drivable. I seem to remember that I sold my Escort for $6500.00 in 2005 it was secondhand.
@@A-FrameWedge A colleague of of mine bought an early 90's US Escort - secondhand - for $600, but it was missing the grill and bumper! He had to fix up a lot, but he thought he got a deal.
Those aren't real Escorts. They're just other cars badged as Escorts, I looked them up. Companies love to do this in the American market (all markets really).
Errata:
* The consensus is the mk1 Escort Ghia didn't have air conditioning.
* The mk2 Twin Cam was 1.6, not 1.3.
* South African Escort production ended in 1987.
Must be a nightmare to go through all the data for all the different model variations to research the information for the video and still get every detail correct. I think you do a fantastic job on these videos, this is one of your best! People will always be quick to point out errors, but please keep doing what you do. Great to see Mrs Big Car too. I'm with her on the Mk5 Escort, I had Mk2s and later I had a 1992 Mk5 1.6LX and I actually really liked it!
How about The Talbot Matra Rancho story?
Absolutely superb documentary, would expect nothing less!
Kept me engrossed (and thanks to gags such as the "Ford Exploder") also amused 🤣
I still remember the day my uncle pulled up outside our house in his classically coloured red and black Mk III XR3i, complete with gleaming clover leaf alloys and twin circular spots...
He worked for Crystal Ford in Hull at the time, and during the 80s and 90s he leased so, so many of the classic performance Fords of that Era.
Certainly got the 10 year old me far more excited than Dad's Volvo 440! Nowadays I appreciate each equally for their respective invitations, but it was the Escort which I'd obsess over, until I discovered the Lotus Carlton 😏
Keep up the great work my friend!! 👏🇬🇧
@@robsterbob580 I kick myself about getting bits wrong, and do try my best, but without someone else fact checking it's hard. But fact checking would take a LONG time!
The Matra Ranco was a fun looking car. Maybe!
@@BigCar2 maybe you're being too hard on yourself. On the other hand, could we have more brummie accent and Mrs. BigCar
@@j.chiari4222 My Brummie accent has long since disappeared to I don't know where. And if I try one, it's just fake.
Brazilian here. The autolatina era Escorts (mk4 and mk5) were still available along with the VW siblings, but with VW 1.8 and 2.0 engines, known as AP1800 and AP2000. They also had the 1.6 from Renault, known as CHT, and also de 1.0 from the Hobby. We also got the mk6, known as 'Sapão' (big frog). Welcome to the brazilian car rabbit hole! Subscribed! Cheers!
Back in 1999 I bought a 1988 Mk4 Escort 1.3 Popular for £200 and got about three years out of it! Being so impressed, I replaced it with a 1991 Mk5 Escort 1.4 estate and.... I've never owned a Ford since then.
I loved Mrs Big Car's surprise appearance. These mini-docs are getting better and better each time!
i loved the cotton ball fight :)
I think we need more of Mrs Big Car
Mrs. Big Car surely was a surprise appearance. 😀 Not what I expected. Quite a lovely person.
(11:12) Small correction there if you don't mind BG - Escort production did not end in South Africa in 1980. The locally assembled 3rd generation (with locally manufactured 1.3 & 1.6 L engines) was sold up until about 1987 until replaced by the Mazda-based Lazer.
Thanks for the correction!
I was in the RAF the entire 1980s. I was offered my driving course and thus got my provisional licence via the forces. I expected to be taught to drive on Land rover. Nope , I was given an Escort. I had to share with 2 other students and our instructor . The entire day every day was driving lessons. 2 days before my test Argentina invaded the Falkland islands. I was recalled to base ( I was Vulcan bomber force ). The other lads were new recruits going on to be drivers as a trade and had to witness me plead with the instructor to get the powers to be let me stay 2 days longer to get me back as a driver. I loved the Escort.
In 1991 I had an 85 Mustang GT with the 302 HO and 5 speed trans in Red. My roommate had an 86 Escort GT with the turbo four cylender and 5 speed trans in Black. They both had basicly the exact same options and interior. Other than his escort being slightly narrower you could not tell the differences inside them. My roomate had replaced his wheels with larger diameter wheels from an 89 Mustang GT. When parked side by side at a car show once his Escort got a lot more attention. We asked a few people why they liked the smaller car more. The answers were all the same. They were interested in a car easier to park and with better fuel milage. Plus the Escort was only slighter slower and since most people are just using it for transportation and occasional fun drive in the country the speed didnt matter. No one was racing so the Escort was fine.
The reason for the massive weight gains in the later models was primarily side impact protection. The Escort wasn't alone in this - when the Mondeo replaced the Sierra Ford seriously thought about making certain panels from fibreglass or composites to pare the weight down. The Mondeo suffered in fleets due to high refurbishment costs at end of life, due to its propensity to pick up dents because of the thin panels.
A million panel beaters employed because of side impact bars.
I take it you never changed a clutch in one. Cast iron bell housing & gearbox. And the head was cast iron as well.
The mk1 mondeo also had bumpers that seemed to be made of glass and would break up into shards with even very minor knocks. Plus the rust proofing was not great. It's no wonder they would start to look tatty so quickly.
A truly masterful telling of a long and episodic tale of the Escort story. I truly don’t think it could be done better. Quite an accomplishment.
I had a 1996 Ford Orion,here in Ireland....and I loved it.....could not fault it in any way. Reliable,good to drive and a very handsome car
At last, a channel that covers cars sold in the UK and a presenter who does his research and is interesting to listen to! So many good videos on this channel.. Thank you!
Thanks Darren.
My dad’s first car at the age of 17 was a Ford Escort which he loved. He even installed his own manual reversing light as they weren’t standard at the time. He eventually got a van through work and hated that he didn’t get to drive it as much but a first car that he always swore by. My Grand father also drove a Ford Anglia at one point and as I’m typing I drive a Ford Focus my first car. While this wasn’t exactly intentional it’s amazing how a car company has spanned three generations of drivers. It’s that legacy of longevity that I think I love the most about Ford.
As a service engineer we used Anglia vans ,then im 1968 we had the first Escort vans in Northants,these were a revelation as they were unbreakable, often max loaded with tools an spares, in 1971 as senior engineer I had a new 1.3 saloon xl and this vehicle saved my life on a motorway crash when a lorry came through the central reservation at Dunstable, we hit the frontispiece area went over the top ,turned a car into a fastback when it came down, engineunder my feet ,got thrown out and only scratches, 11pm and pouring, a really great car written off ,only
3 months old
I discovered your channel this very night and binged almost all of your videos by now. i am deeply impressed about the in depth information you provide along with all the historic footage! Absolutely fantastic! Greetings from Cologne, where Ford automobiles are built for almost 90 years :)
Glad you like them Robin!
Brilliant edition, for subject and the banter with Mrs Big Car.
You researched this really well. Great to see you covered the models in Australia too, not just a UK history!
Thank you for this informative video. My dad had the 1971 German version, and my most memorable memory was his accident. My dad hit a BMW 2002 from behind and the damage to the BMW rendered the vehicle unusable while the Ford Escort had only a slight deflection in the bumper. This proved how robust this vehicle was.
The good old days...!
Mark 2 brings back memories.Our family car driven from my dad,also the very first car I drove....lots of love from Greece to this Escort series
I always thought "escort service" had something to do with bringing your Ford to the dealership every 15.000km ;-)
And I thought Screwfix was a dating app ! 🤣
I thought of Pretty Woman/Richard Gere/Julia Roberts.
@@iedco4 I thought Snap on Tools were something you bought in a sex shop.
@@jamesreynolds2867 😆😆
"I'm going for a ride inside the escort!"
Always loved the MK1 escort such a great little package full of character and superb styling. Great content 👍.
So much effort and detail in these mini-documentaries, very impressive, I’m subscribed now. Excellent work. ......I always wanted an Escort, specifically the mk3, but it went out of production by the time I had learned to drive. My brother had a mk5 RS 2000, a very nice car in its time. It would be another 15 years before I could get a Focus ST...........(The missus seems lovely, but there’s a pristine mk4 still being driven around where I live, it is beige though!)
The Mk5 RS 2000 would have deserved a mention, the only really good Mk5 Escort aside from the Cosworth.
Never buy a car named after a prostitute...
@@charlesharper2357 xh0itickctjiojijkv0 ot6ki9jokbjj jicjjit9th0tj to ocgjij6oji0tjtjthttjcjititctjhtjj0tc c. Tcotg0cd jocktbj0kit jioctojjih j0 jtktjhi tji ki
@@charlesharper2357 io otioji ttio ji9ccffct j9to titjbi0tjhctcttjhtgjcc0vti jdcj0ttototoc0cjbj kitjicthitbvgjvi9 j0k fji
@@charlesharper2357 Funny but rubbish comment as it is one of the most successful designs ever.
I was a UK Ford apprentice in the 70’s at Dunton my mentor was the designer of the escort floor pan the flat sheet body in white hung in his office no CAD or computers in those days just drawing boards great time of my life
The Model T numbers are phenomenal given the era, population and number of drivers. I'm sure it's the all time champion if you go by percentage of the population who owned one.
"The Model T numbers are phenomenal given the era" it was era of Ford monopol for mass production of cars so why its suprising that plenty of them were made and sold as it was also the cheapest car of that time?
WV Beetle are in this topic much more impresive and "With 21,529,464 produced, the Beetle is the longest-running and most-manufactured car of a single platform ever made.".
Mr And Mrs Big Car , Brilliant !
Blessings From Birmingham England
The Escort was very popular in Germany too. I remember well many of my slightly older friends nearly all went for Escorts as their first or second car. It was very well received, a quite modern and reliable car. BTW the Orion never sold well at all.
The Orion was an awkward looking car, as if the boot was an afterthought. In the UK most people buy hatchbacks, or at least they used to before the obsession with ridiculous crossovers that don’t do anything different to a normal hatchback, but its trendy to be seen in one. I also think the Audi A3 looks awful in saloon format.
Fabulous history lesson and Mrs Big Car is a joy to watch.
Back in 1975 my driving instructor had a mk 2 Cortina 1600 E. After 4 lessons he announced that he was trading this in. Next lesson he turned up with an Escort. However this was a mk 1 RS 2000 white with blue stripes. Looking back i now realise just how lucky I was. Best bit was the instructor favourite phrase " give it a little more gas" !!!!!!! Oh i also passed first time !
👍
My 1st new car was a brand new Black 1989 Ford Escort GT...had really good times after replacing the alternator about 28 times...was too young and full of energy and burnt countless calories washing it to keep it spotless in Orlando Florida...the heat and the black color were not a good combination...it did however save my life because I had just totaled my Kawasaki Ninja 250 and was about to purchase a Yamaha FZR 400; narrowly escaping a death sentence...
Then came my first 1995 VW Golf GTI VR6 and I never looked back!
FORD; Fix Or Repair Daily
And calling it a Ford 'Exploder' was no slip of the tongue...come on!
The Mark 1 makes me teary eyed 😭 It was a true classic .
The dog bone grate was ugly though, Im glad that got changed by the late 70s.
My nan has one...as a 1:50 toy car. Full metal, with plastic glass and interior. Probably from the time when my dad and uncle were still boys. Although she never bothered to read its name on the floor, she maintains it's a Zhiguli (a.k.a. VAZ Lada).
I love that dog bone grille...
@@vaclav_fejt My parents had a late 70s ghia so the dog bone grill looks inferior to the straight one really on the mark 2.
It certainly was. If you can get hold of a Mark 1 Twin Cam now (with the Lotus engine) they're worth serious money, £20,000+.
Great show on my wife's favorite car, the 1993 Ford Escort wagon. She started out driving Hondas, but the Escort quickly became her favorite. I offered to buy her a new Fiesta, but after test driving the new car, she said no thanks.. The Ford escort is a winner for our family
Lovely to see Mrs. BC. Would love for her to become a regular fixture: it's obvious you are great friends and she seems to have a great sens of humour. Particularly when ribbing you :)
On a side note, my aunt had an 87 (?) xr3 convertible in white. She loved racing the 'wide boys' from the lights (or so she used to say). Sign of the times, eh.
Is Mrs. "BC" from Rome, or Grease" I didn't know that people from back then knew how to time travel.
My late stepfather had one in the early Seventies. I can almost remember the number plate. Fond memories.
Ford memories.
Compelling accuracy in your commentary.
I’m pretty knowledgeable about certain aspects of the industry and I totally support your presentation!
Well researched and utterly enjoyable! Can’t thank you enough.
Bring back the dog bone grille; Ford's best ever styling motif
Not the best in my opinion, but one of the best for sure. I would also like to see it back in some form.
Bring back the sealed beam round headlight which fitted just about every car.
yeah agreed. the stupidly named and impossible to google _'Honda 'e'_ just ain't doin it for me. too little and too damn late. although I guess some of those charger reboots look alright.
i use to work as a mechanic in the 90s, for a Ford dealership.. ive worked on all those cars,... i remember using the fds2000 software for the engine management sytem... great video,.. thanks
Used FFS200 at the factory
After i wasn't happy with the Ivac Tests
My second ever car (after a 1966 Beetle) was a Mk1 Escort. I was 18 at the time and although the 1100cc engine was slow, it didn't matter and I loved it. It was a hideous bottle green colour.!
My dad bought my stepmother a '69 or '70 metallic green Escort mk1 when we lived in South Africa. She had a mid-60s Mini estate wagon with an 850 CC wagon, it was a real dog. I remember they were shopping Opel's at the time when they bought the Escort. My dad had brought his '68 Pontiac LeMans over to South Africa from the US when we moved there in 1968.
My uncle owned a bright red mark 1 escort back in the early '70's when Roger Clarke was king of International rallying. This replaced his mark 1 Capri he had owned earlier. A friend of the family who was a police officer used to drive either a mark 2 escort van when he was a dog handler or a mark 2 saloon was he was on normal duty. My work colleague had a bright orange mark 2 Mexico 1600 about 1984 with the small black rear spoiler. The XR3i was everywhere in the '80's, perhaps the best looking family saloon of the '80's. Who can forget Doyles white RS2000 in "The Professionals". When I think back escorts were everywhere in my younger days. My favourite would have to be the Cosworth version with the larger spoiler in the early '00's. Very rare model.
I really loved that you talked about Escort here in South America! Your work is amazing, thank you!
You’re welcome Bryant
Brazilian's son?
I used to make the brake calipers for the escort and others and the product line name for the escort calipers was Erika. now I know why lol
Brilliant cameo from Mrs. Big Car!
The cotton wool balls won me over. :-)
Need to see more Mrs Big Car.!
Barry from auf wiedersehen pet introduced me to the Brummy accent, even though he was from Battersea.
The Escort and 911 were my favourite Scalextric cars.
...and Ronnie Corbett!
7:15 The perfect reason to love 1970.
I had to rewind and watch it again. I initially thought it was a bit "raunchy" that the panties were showing...
... but alas it was just the rear hem of the skirt LOL
Yes !
My dad worked at the Halewood plant in liverpool building the mk1 escort in the early 70s when i was young boy growing up in liverpool 🇬🇧
I owned a few Escorts in the UK during the 80s and 90s so really enjoyed this excellent, highly informative and expertly presented episode. This is one of the best channels on RUclips, full stop. It was great to see Mrs Big Car making an appearance and I loved her sense of fun. So nice to see such a happy couple. Best wishes to you both and please keep doing what you do so very well.
Why the need to own so many? Did dealers push you to upgrade?
My parents used to have a 1981 (X-reg) Escort as their first car...
Great historical review of the Escort. Well done. I appreciate the details of many things I did not know. Nice to see that Mrs BC shares the passion. Without doubt the Escort was a global success and still is. I consider myself a car guy but have never even driven an Escort or desired to drive one - until now. My car exposure has been in Canada, Singapore and Australia where I believe many more competitive cars are available. Thanks again. I watch your channel regularly and will continue to do so.
Another excellent video, well done - really love the story telling and visuals from the archives! For the record the Mk3 was sold in South Africa up until 1986 and was replaced by the Mazda based Ford Laser. We also had a pick-up variant of Mk3 called the Bantam - it received the Mk4 nose in 1986 and was also sold as the Mazda Rustler until 1993 (very popular). Mk6 was introduced in 1996 and replaced by Focus. Just a little SADM FYI :)
My dad had a 1990 Escort. I was with him when he bought it new at the car dealer. I learned to drive in that car also. I loved it. Love the way it looks, and it was very good to drive.
The Escort in general is easily one of my favorite cars of all time.
Great to watch this. I started working in the Halewood factory in 1967 and was involved with the Escort and Focus for many years. They were both good quality and good selling cars. The escort pop plus had carpets as apposed to rubber mats. Many a pop was fitted with carpets by mistake. But it was so difficult to take the carpet out after seats and Windcord fitting they were sold at no extra cost for customers advantage.
A chat up line at the time used by the lads when out looking for a lady. Was " I am from ford can I give you an escort". Ha Ha.
The sales numbers at the start are kinda misleading, because you're comparing models to decade spanning series.
Not only that: the "F series" is a huge category all by itself - not a single vehicle. Not even looking at the older versions - we can see that there's a HUGE difference between the current F-150 & F-750 - and yet they're both "F-series".
@@carlpeters8690 And since when are F-trucks classified as cars? None of them have a car body available (model t has)
Brilliant as usual. I've been looking forward to this. My first car was a Ford Escort, mark 3, way back in 1983. Thank you. Superb video.
This is an extremely well thought out video which must of taken so much time to gather the information. I'm so grateful for the effort you put in to produce these videos. Also try and include Mrs. Bc in more videos, she is lovely.
Ah the Escort memories from 80's... My dad got a new Escort 1.6 in 1986 and that was a cool car back then. I had just got out of military service and spent summer with my wife to be driving along Finnish countryside with it...
Little after that in 1988 I bought my first own car that was an 1971 Escort 1.1 in bright orange colour and had only 55 000 KM in the meter. That is the only car I regret I ever sold, it was in flawless show room condition in and out those few years I drove it...
Im from Israel and love to woch that' videos, ford biled escort in isreal between the years 1968-1980
More appearances from Mrs Big Car! What a lovely voice she has, too, ear massage! Great show, as always.
It should be illegal for two people in one house to both have such beautiful voices.
I thought the same thing. Very very nice voice.
Really liked the Ford Escort as a kid and still do!
Really enjoyed your review of this iconic car.
My Father was always a Ford man, so your review's are a joy to watch.
Funny enough, he never owned a set of key's to an Escort.
That privelage belonged to my sister.
Keep up the good work.
Fantastic entertainment !!!
I remember the first generation Escorts here in the states. They were pleasant to drive, but so so with respect to performance. They also had interference engines, so you had to change the timing belt regularly or face major engine repairs/replacement if you neglected maintenance. Great video as always! Keep up the good work. It was also a joy to see your better half!
Hi from Canada again... THANK YOU FOR INTRODUCING MRS BIG CAR... you guys are awesome together!!! 👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Class A production and well spoken and informative, thank you for a fine youtube view.
The mk 1 escort was everything in its day. Period. Great video thank you.!
I've got a Mk4 (1988) Escort 1.4 as my first car... She's been sitting in a barn for the last ~10 years, so she does need a bit of work (brakes have got air in the system - I suspect maybe a split brake hose, or perhaps the master cylinder, the gearbox is leaking and has contaminated the clutch disk (I assume), the valve seals are knackered (CVH lol). Oh, and I broke the clutch ratchet last week... So that's gonna be a pig to do lul). Obviously a full service will be in need (cambelt, oil etc...).
The underbody appears to be in good shape (rare I know...), just a bit of surface rust here and there, although I wouldn't be too surprised if I did need to bring out the welder... . Seems like a decent project, certainly gonna keep me busy for a while.
Had a couple of Mk II Escorts here in Australia. Swapped the 1.3L for the 1.6L in the first one without issue with my Dad. The next one was a ~'79ish Ghia that we converted from Auto to manual using a similar aged donor. Discovered, aside from a different transmission tunnel (we cut and welded the tunnel from the donor) that the seat mounts were different between the Ghia and XL models; one had little mount point platforms welded into the floor, the other had feet built into the seat that bolted onto mount points drilled out of the floor itself. BIZARRE that they did it differently. Looking at wreckers at the time, this seemed to be a consistent difference not between years but trim levels, which beggars belief to me.
Our Ghia had a real wood insert across the dash (by this time cracked and lightly splinter-y), and a glove box! (essentially a closable door to cover the existing parcel shelf) No A/C, which wasn't the worst thing - the standard heater fan came in loud/very loud modes, and cranking the window down was generally the preference.
Never mind the vinyl roof on the Ghia :-) Luxury.
Still miss the funky orange, rally lights, steel minilite-style wheels and half-bumpers on that original one though. It looked the business.
I drove my '86 red Escort Pony 4-speed hatchback for countless years and it was extremely reliable. The fuel economy was excellent as was the interior space. It was hard to give let her go but it was just time to move on. I also had a black ZX-2 automatic which was a blast to drive.
I would buy a 4th generation now if they were still available. Though the cozzy is still the poster car.
Fun fact the safari cars from Jurassic Park were Toyota Land cruisers in the book but they were Ford Explorers in the film so Ford could advertise them
Which film? The original film used Mercedes Benz vehicles. One of the later films re-used them.
@@shebbs1 The first one used ford's the lost world use mercs
So actually, there were two Escort lines, the first from 1968, the second from 1980: The name Escort is therefore a marketing slot, not a car model.
I had a 1983 EXP. It drove quite well and I was happy to have a car with a manual transmission. I kept that car until after I graduated from college and had a decent job (so around 1992).
My grandfather owned an Escort. Thank you for the History lesson.
The Ford “Exploder”. 👏😆
@4:34 Ronnie Corbett! RIP.
I remember referring to the Explorer as the Exploder when it first came out because of the BadYear tires that they put on them.
When he first said that at 0:44 I thought it was a jab at the Ford Pinto!
No, they were actually Firestone tyres, not Goodyear. Quite a scandal back in the 90s.
We've had several Escorts in the family over the years, good cars.
I had 3 Mk2 Escorts, an estate, and then a four door saloon, plus a Ghia saloon as a spares and parts car.
If I still had any of them, they'd be worth decent money now!
4 doors and estates aren't worth much prices of mk1 and 2 escorts are driven up by the rally boys still wanting 2 door shells, that's why even povo spec cars have value as long as they don't have 4 doors.
@@popuptoaster True, but even though estates and 4 door saloons aren't worth that much compared to 2 door cars, they're not so common, as most rusted away years ago like mine did. You can't buy an estate for a few hundred quid like back then. The survivors go for 4 figures now. My 1979 Escort 1.6 4 door cost me £100 back in 1991.
You can buy a brand new Escort Mk2 2 door shell now. There's a company that makes them.
Ted Frith-1992 American Ford Escort Owner.
I'm a proud owner of a 1992 American
Ford Escort GT 'Cayman Green Limited
Edition' 2 Door Hatchback.
I owned my car for 28 1/2 years and
exhibited it in car shows in the Southeastern Michigan Area. I won a
total of 170 plats, ribbons, and trophies for my car shows participation in United Street Machines Association and
Mustang Owners Club of Southeastern
Michigan.
It certainly gets the. Lions share of attention at these shows and it was
almost featured in a made in michigan
movie in 2010.
I'm sharing this letter to you know i"m
enjoying my Ford. Escort and it still draws a lot people in car shows in
local car shows in my area in Michigan.
Keep up the old car stores on my cell
phone because they are an inspiration.
to anyone who loves them.
Thank you very much,,
Ted Frith @ gmail.com
P.S. Let me know how I can on
'My Classic Car' with Dennis Gage
and 'My Car Story' with Lou Constable.
Keep up great old car
My dad had a Ford Orion 1.6i Ghia 1986 from 6 months old. Brilliant car, he had it til 1999 when it was replaced by a renault laguna. Bodywork was absolutely perfect, underneath, well not so much (think flintstones) when he eventually part ex'd it.
I don't remember it having air con (unless you opened the windows - does that count?)
It did have electric windows and a keep fit sunroof though.
It would break down quite a lot though, seemingly only when my mum was driving it - she hated that car, it replaced her Volvo 340 that she loved.
Always loved my uncles suped up Mk2 fishnet headrests quarter bumpers 13in wheels and Janspeed! Good memories
I was the search and rescue coordinator for my county's sheriff's department. Since I was on call 24 hours a day, I had a take home unit that was a brand new 1990 Explorer. I hauled around about half a ton of equipment in that thing for almost ten years. The county garage finally made me hand it back in 1999 because it was the oldest unit we had in service by then. I didn't want to give it up because it was outfitted exactly how I wanted it, and it would take at least a week just to transfer all the radios and computers. It had 240,000 miles when I turned it in and, even though it saw hard use for the entire time, it never gave me any real trouble. Maybe I just had the one good one, but the "Exploder" name certainly never applied to mine. They replaced it with a Suburban, but that was another and sad story.
Your videos keep getting better and better! :)
Great and interesting video thank you. I recall that the fast Ford Mk1 Escort Mexico had an 89 bhp engine. Exactly the same as my current Skoda Roomster shopping car.. Most of us are not any bigger now, as a population than then. Why do we need cars weighing 2.5 tonnes and with engines of over 200bhp to go to the shops? The speed limits are the same (if not lower now) so if we want to save the planet, let's make better, lighter smaller cars. Very easy to do.
Owned a escort in seventies not as good as vauxhallviva engine not good wheel balance troublesome
I used to own an early 70's 4-door 1.3L MK I when I lived in Germany back in the mid to late 70's - fun little car - thanks for posting - brings back some great memories of driving in Germany, France and Switzerland with it !!
I loved the Escort. I had a MKII RS2000 which was the best car I ever owned - simply aim it at a corner, foot flat to the floor and correct the steering if necessary. You could actually hear the Webers drinking the fuel though :-)
The only new car I ever bought was an Escort Turbo which was quite a lot of fun but I always missed rear wheel drive. I nearly bought an Escort Cosworth but ended up buying a Sierra Cosworth because the Escorts were so overpriced. Then I had a MK5 RS2000 which was nippy but forever had problems with the electronics. Having lived in Germany for most of the time I was actually able to use them on most of the autobahns. Now I'm hanging on to a 17 year old Mondeo ST because I don't see anything affordable which I like. I would dearly love to have my old MKII back though.
My dad had a MK1 when I was very young, and over the following decade or so he had a MK2, a MK3, a MK3 based Orion (same engine as the XR3i) and a MK4. He considered buying the MK5 in the early 1990s, but didn't after all the bad reviews. As for me, I've had a Focus for the last 10 years. The Focus really is the latter day Escort successor and I think it actually would have carried the Escort name if not for the fact that the brand had lost credibility with the lacklustre efforts of the 1990s. I can see why Ford felt a need to distance the new car from that and went for a new name. Still, after twenty years maybe the time is right for a new European Escort. If the Chinese Escort had been sold here I might have been interested in one.
As always a superb upload; informative interesting and still capable of enlightening an auld car nut like myself 👍
Ok I’m totally in love with mrs Big car! May we have next reviews from her please?
I'll have to find another good way to have her in a video!
Agreed! Love her personality and her voice/mixed accent is very endearing.
@@lukerinderknecht2982
She has the most wonderful accent, doesn't she!
Very articulate, yet cheeky and sincere.
Wonder where she hails from?
@@residentelect Big Car posted in some of the comments here that they're both from the UK but have lived in Seattle for quite a while.
@@lukerinderknecht2982
Oh wow! So they are ex-pats' living the dream in the USA! 😁
That makes sense because he has previously stated he worked on the Microsoft Ford Sync system.
Thank you for the update buddy.
Hope you and yours are all safe and well at this very worrying time?
Brilliant video....I had a 78 MK2 4 door 1.3 auto...3 speed....loved it even with the hose pipe sleeve added to the trans fluid pipe to solve a fluid leak! Lol
The first civilian car I drove when I relocated to Germany was (a 1969, I think) Escort with the tiniest motor they probably made. I had been loaned the car and thought it was hilarious that wide open for almost a full kilometer on a slight downhill grade I managed 90 kph out of it. Hugely fun, painfully slow.
The Tempo was based on a stretched Escort platform. Cursed with a nail of an engine though.
Not the same escort as what was being built and sold in Europe.
Lovely little monday surprise 👌
Bring Mrs Big Car back all the time she’s amazing
Credit to you for making such a wonderful informative video. I think my whole family have been bread on fords, mainly escorts My Grandad had a brown 1970 k reg, my father had escorts, cortinas and anglia. This wonderful car I sat in as a child, learnt to Drive, spent mis spent youth customising with the crappy add ons in the 1980”s .. cringe... right up until adulthood . Amazing vehicle and such an ingrained part of the U.K. life.
Great video and so much research. Wow 👏👏👏👏👏👏👏
Such a professional approach to the data, the narration itself, but then your special one comes along and that's it. Very nice videos.
Clearly a lot of research gone into this video......great to watch..
Loved this one ! Thank you
I love Mrs Big Car 😂❤️
I thought of sharing this with you after watching this film. I had bought my first car in 1988 a three door Ford Escort Mk3 with a 1.0 litre engine in Rosso Red paint and the reg FXI 487. It was over four years old with 18.600 on the clock. I did over that mileage (about 20K) during my first year in driving her. I have many a good memory driving that car even a 100-mile journey for Christmas to my future in laws.
That trip should have been only over two hours long, but I ended up driving for five and a half hours. This was due to leaving home on a nice summery day, getting about thirty miles up the motorway for it to change. Starting as a light snow fall turned blizzard another ten miles further. When I arrived the car and household were all ice locked in for three weeks. The car performed very well throughout the journey in terrible weather. It didn't let me down once driving through up to a foot and half of snow in some parts and kept on going. After nine years of transporting me about and the car being twelve years old sadly the back end totally went, and she was sold for scrap. I may still have the steering wheel and a number plate hiding in my mums that I kept as a souvenirs of my first car ownership.
My first car (and my sisters first car before me) was a US Model 1978 Ford Fiesta. I wish they had kept importing them. I'd have loved to update with later mark versions of the Fiesta.
I gave up waiting for the thing to start.
The early escorts were fun.
and beautiful, then it became ugly through the years.
@@strat0871 I've always loved the Escort Mexico.
@@BennysBenz ,I've owned one in 1975( until 1980) Still regret that I ever sold it.
@@BennysBenz Me too, and 1st generation in general.
I would buy early rear wheel drive with the wrench/ dogbone grill
My gf at the time had a mk1 1300xl. It was rubbish, slow, noisy , just not a nice car. Amazing the dross that was sold to us back in the day.
The Mk4 x Mk5 argument is kinda skewed where I live, the Mk4 here never had fuel injection and only got power steering in 92, its last year of production (Mk4 1.0L Hobby model lasted till 96, but had no equipment whatsoever). The Mk5 was better equipped and had fuel injection all with VW sourced engines and transmissions. Brazil never had the Mazda derived Escort btw, I'd say no place in South America had it, Ford here sold the Mk5 Escort and Verona (Orion as you know them) and VW sold the Pointer and Logus, so you got that part of the Autolatina rabbithole right.
I always wanted an Escort for my first car. My mum had a 98 Escort Ghia 1.8 (sunroof instead of AC), she always told me I could have it but after the head gasket went when it was 2 years old and it sat on the drive for about 5 years she scrapped it. It hadn't once been opened or started in that time, but it had no rust, no leaks and started first time it was unbelievable.
I ended up with a 2001 Focus CL 1.4 for my first car instead, swapped out the central locking unit for the LX model one to give me remote locking and that was that, it was woefully underpowered but it was a great car. After I got a new car, my mum carried on using it as a cheap runabout then I gifted it to a friend of mine after her Focus got stolen. Unfortunately she ran it into the ground.