RE: Ford Capri 3.0 S | Spotted

RE: Ford Capri 3.0 S | Spotted

Thursday 27th January 2022

Ford Capri 3.0 S | Spotted

It's half a century since the first Ford Capri, more than 30 since the last - and we still love 'em



You know you want it, right? Indeed, back in 1969 Ford launched the Capri with almost that tagline. "The car you always promised yourself." If you couldn't afford the high-roller stakes required for a two-door coupe from the likes of Aston Martin, Jaguar or Mercedes, no problem. Finally, here was the chance to drive something in the same mould - something with a far swoopier roofline than the dowdy Hunter, Viva, or Cortina you were used to. The post-war good times had come to Britain at last.

Of course, for Ford this was the obvious way to go. It had launched the Mustang in the States and that hit the ground running, so it didn't take a genius to work out that Europe should become similarly enthralled with a blue-collar coupe. But just to be sure of its sure thing, Henry Ford II put the same man who'd penned the 'Stang in charge of the European version. Philip Thomas Clark did a fine job, because the Capri wasn't simply a scaled-down Mustang for Europe's narrower, windier roads.

It was distinctive in every way, other than its sporting spirit, and ended up not only being a huge hit in the UK and Europe, but also Australia, Japan and, believe it or not, America. If you walked into a US Ford dealer and it had a Mercury franchise as well, you may well have seen a Mercury Capri sat right next to a Mustang and had to take your pick. In the end, Ford sold very nearly 1.9 million Capris from a production run than lasted 17 years.

Everyone has their favourites, of course. The RS3100 perhaps, or the 280 'Brooklands' as people colloquially refer to it because if its dark green paint. I drove the 280 from Ford's heritage fleet a few years ago, and it was one of those old cars that surprised by being better than expected. Its performance would scarcely match a modern-day VW Golf 1.5, but that good-old Cologne V6 had a lot more character. It still felt pokey, revved crisply and sounded rude enough to make you smile. Even the five-speed 'box had a well-oiled lightness about it - although you couldn't rush the synchromesh.



I expected it to be a proper handful, too, bearing in mind that grown men had told me that the Capri was a lively thing when I was a nipper. It was a car for the hairy chested, they said. Sure enough, it didn't drum up a huge amount of grip from its tiny 15-inch alloys and 195/55 tyres, but when the tail started swinging - at low speeds, at least - it was fun, not frightful. Even the ride was pleasantly absorbing and much less agitated than I'd imagined.

I was very tempted to pick a 280 to focus on today. After all, it was the final swansong, looks the biz, and we have a few of the 1,038 examples they made on sale in the classifieds now. What stopped me was the fact that a Mr. M. Bird wrote about one not that long ago, which he described as "a once in a lifetime opportunity." And with just 942 miles on the clock and a £64,995 asking price, it was. I couldn't top that.

Then I saw this 3.0 S. It has over double the mileage of the 280, but at 2,000 miles (after a full nut-and-bolt restoration) I think we can forgive it that, can't we? The advert says "No expense spared," and, after studying the pictures, I'd say that seems pretty accurate. It looks truly stunning, and not just the bodywork and those agonisingly good-looking, chequered-trim front seats with mesh headrests

The engine bay housing that 3.0 Essex lump is my favourite bit though. Everything from the jubilee clips to the alternator bracket look detailed to perfection. I hope you like it as much as I do. And would you look at that, I got all the way to the end without mentioning The Professionals...


SPECIFICATION | FORD CAPRI 3.0 S

Engine: 2,994cc, V6
Transmission: 4-speed manual, rear-wheel drive
Power (hp): 138@5,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 174@3,000rpm
CO2: N/A
MPG: N/A
Recorded mileage: 2,000
Year registered: 1980
Price new: N/A
Yours for: £39,990

See the original advert here






Author
Discussion

Nu57jez9639

Original Poster:

961 posts

52 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
Capris every British family probably had at least 1 in the 70s allway into the 90s ,my dad had 2 brother 3 and grandad 1, our old man had a brand new mk 1 1.6GT and a MK2 2.0 Ghia brother had a mk 1 1.6XL,1.6 GT and a mk 3 2.0S and my grandad a mk 1 1.6L, I'm only 1 that never bothered but did have a bird who had a mk3 , so I have driven them , they were ok in their Time .

rallycross

13,504 posts

251 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
I think they had 13 inch wheels on the 3.0S not 15 inch.
Was a great car for it’s time.

s m

23,814 posts

217 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
rallycross said:
I think they had 13 inch wheels on the 3.0S not 15 inch.
.
They did indeed - I think he was referring to the 280 he drove from the Ford Collection when he mentioned the 15s

SlimJim16v

6,698 posts

157 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
s m said:
They did indeed - I think he was referring to the 280 he drove from the Ford Collection when he mentioned the 15s
The 280 had 205/50x15s though.

blade7

11,311 posts

230 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
£40k? I'd want a all the bells and whistles X Pack for that. I wonder what happened to KAR 112V, my favorite old black 3.0 S.

s m

23,814 posts

217 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
SlimJim16v said:
s m said:
They did indeed - I think he was referring to the 280 he drove from the Ford Collection when he mentioned the 15s
The 280 had 205/50x15s though.
280s should be on 195/50 x15s

fttm

4,048 posts

149 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
rallycross said:
I think they had 13 inch wheels on the 3.0S not 15 inch.
Was a great car for it’s time.
Yes it was 13' , ran mine on 205s which kept scrubbing out on the front then went back to factory spec 185s and problem solved , Oyster Gold with chocolate brown trim , lovely old car and happy memories . Went to an Audi 80 quattro afterwards and the Capri V6 went into the Transit service barge .

blade7

11,311 posts

230 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
s m said:
280s should be on 195/50 x15s
The set I had were on Pirelli P7's. Probably a better tyre than the Goodyear NCT's I think standard 2.8 Injections came on.

s m

23,814 posts

217 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
blade7 said:
s m said:
280s should be on 195/50 x15s
The set I had were on Pirelli P7's. Probably a better tyre than the Goodyear NCT's I think standard 2.8 Injections came on.
Yep, came on P7s


blade7

11,311 posts

230 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
fttm said:
Yes it was 13' , ran mine on 205s which kept scrubbing out on the front then went back to factory spec 185s and problem solved , Oyster Gold with chocolate brown trim , lovely old car and happy memories .
Odd, I ran injection pepperpot and special wheels with 205's on 3.0S Capri's without issues.

blade7

11,311 posts

230 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
Can anyone smell stale piss, this is like a Bingo night smile.

Esceptico

8,897 posts

123 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
I’ve never driven a Capri. In fact I’ve never even been a passenger in one. My older brother had, I think, a black Mk1 with a 3.0 litre engine but he changed cars about as often as he did women and I saw it but never managed a ride in the passenger seat (given that he crashed almost as often as he bought I think in retrospect I saved myself a pair of undies).

Are these really good to drive now? Or just good for the time. I’ve had a couple of 1970s early 911s and they were brilliant, even by today’s standard.

el romeral

1,551 posts

151 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
SlimJim16v said:
The 280 had 205/50x15s though.
At the other end of the spectrum, my 79 2.0S came with alarmingly skinny 165/80x13 tyres! Sidewalls were taller than most kerbs lol. I subsequently upgraded to massively broad 185/70x13!

GT03ROB

13,765 posts

235 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
Esceptico said:
Are these really good to drive now? Or just good for the time. I’ve had a couple of 1970s early 911s and they were brilliant, even by today’s standard.
I wouldn't think so, but we did feel like we were Bodie out of the Professionals!


nobrakes

3,574 posts

212 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
Considering the price of ‘classics’ at the moment, the price isn’t toooo bad.

Lovely version. I’d a 2.8. My first quick car. I remember going to over take a few cars - by the time I’d to pull in I was going far too fast and had to carry on flooring it to pass the rest. What a blast.

timberman

1,363 posts

229 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
GT03ROB said:
Esceptico said:
Are these really good to drive now? Or just good for the time. I’ve had a couple of 1970s early 911s and they were brilliant, even by today’s standard.
I wouldn't think so, but we did feel like we were Bodie out of the Professionals!
like a few have mentioned a lot had non standard wheels and tyres fitted

I went with Compomotive wheels and then because I'd spent all my money on them went with cheap Firestone tyres

the handling was certainly entertaining,

If it was even a mildly damp day and I tried to go around a roundabout or tight bend at anything much over walking pace I could very easily end up facing the opposite direction.

Billy_Whizzzz

2,344 posts

157 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
Honestly, they were rubbish then and they’re rubbish now.

yme402

521 posts

116 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
Looks a bargain when you see MK3 RS Escorts changing hands now for £60k

GT03ROB

13,765 posts

235 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
timberman said:
GT03ROB said:
Esceptico said:
Are these really good to drive now? Or just good for the time. I’ve had a couple of 1970s early 911s and they were brilliant, even by today’s standard.
I wouldn't think so, but we did feel like we were Bodie out of the Professionals!
like a few have mentioned a lot had non standard wheels and tyres fitted

I went with Compomotive wheels and then because I'd spent all my money on them went with cheap Firestone tyres

the handling was certainly entertaining,

If it was even a mildly damp day and I tried to go around a roundabout or tight bend at anything much over walking pace I could very easily end up facing the opposite direction.
A slide was easily achieved for sure.

Earl of Petrol

552 posts

136 months

Thursday 27th January 2022
quotequote all
Nu57jez9639 said:
Capris every British family probably had at least 1 in the 70s allway into the 90s ,my dad had 2 brother 3 and grandad 1, our old man had a brand new mk 1 1.6GT and a MK2 2.0 Ghia brother had a mk 1 1.6XL,1.6 GT and a mk 3 2.0S and my grandad a mk 1 1.6L, I'm only 1 that never bothered but did have a bird who had a mk3 , so I have driven them , they were ok in their Time .
‘A bird’ ha ha not heard that for years.