RE: SOTW: Ford Sierra XR4X4
RE: SOTW: Ford Sierra XR4X4
Friday 12th February 2010

SOTW: Ford Sierra XR4X4

Keep your Cossie - Shed is humming along to the tune of its second fiddle



Its not an uncommon opinion among petrol heads that the toy cars you have as a child seem to have a mild but pervasive influence on the cars you come to love as an adult. I have no instinctive draw toward the XR4X4 - I've never really seen the point in them, I've never been much of a fast Ford nut anyway and most Sierra's have turned to rust or modder-fodder by now. And yet when I saw this gleaming red 1990 example in the classifieds today, I was entranced - all thanks to a small yellow and black Matchbox XR4X4 that spent many a tortuous day in my childhood pockets, slowly forming a glutenous mass with mangled bits of chocolate and dubious lint particles.

Just like that toy, there is something strangely appealing about this rather supine Sierra. Coming along in 1985, just a year before the iconic RS Cosworth, the XR4X4 was doomed to play second fiddle in memory - and being a bit, well, 'wet' didn't help. But whilst a nice Cossie will still set you back well-upwards of £10k, this apparently-tidy example of a rare breed will set you back less than a tenth of that. Admittedly it does lack some of the Cosworth's perks such as, er, the power, looks, exclusivity (only around 6000 RS Cossies were ever made) and reportedly most of the handling finesse - but think of the positives.


It only had 160bhp to its name, supplied by a silky-smooth 2.9-litre EFi V6 (the 2.8-litre Capri lump in earlier models). But those were different days - with no need for heavy safety gubbins the later XR4X4 only put 1262kg on the kerb, giving it a power-to-weight ratio of 126.78 bhp/tonne. This gave the XR4X4 a respectable 0-60mph time of 8.5 seconds and 122mph flat-out, plus 159 lb ft of torque helping to make this an established motorway cruiser. And with the glow of Audi Quattros and group B dictating fashions at the time, the Sierra ended up with a permanent four-wheel drive system that reports suggest was great on loose surfaces, and even up for a four-wheel drift or two.

Aesthetically it was nothing special, but the XR4X4 did get treated to a subtley masculating bodykit, smart alloys and a wee boot spoiler. Just as dynamically the car was an odd fusion of executive cruiser crossed with four-wheel drive aspiring rally scrabbler, the styling seemed to carefully tread that line between smart executive saloon and sporty special, and we think its aged pretty well in a retro sort of way.

A pricey RS Cosworth isn't the only alternative. A later Sapphire Cosworth is a good bet, and the three-door XR4i was much prettier - but neither command such usefully deflated values on the used market, and something about the somewhat aimless and unloved XR4X4 is immensely appealing. I think.


The example we've found is a late facelift model, sold in the same year that the Sierra Sapphire RS Cosworth 4x4 was launched, and the Sierra itself was just beginning to lose the futuristic sheen that had accompanied the 'aero' design's launch. This one looks to be in pretty tidy nick, with rich and glossy paint (possibly cheating by being sopping wet in a carwash but never mind), along with an array of recent parts and the usual suite of 'leccy' bits all apparently in order. But perhaps most impressively, look at that mileage! At just 88k that's an average of only 4,400 miles per year, and there are stories online of these things going on for upwards of 200,000 miles. Hardly run-in, really!

Those of you with sharp memories (or the ability to look through our SOTW page) may remember the XR4X4 appearing as our shed back in 2007. But values are down even more since then, and this equally tidy looking example is now almost half the price, with a fresh MOT and a few months of tax to boot.

R.I.P
R.I.P
My matchbox toy may have long-since been lost to the ages, but its good to see that a few full-size examples of this strangely charming oddity have weathered the years rather more successfully.

Ad reads:

Sierra XR4x4 2.9 V6 (1990)
88,000 miles
£800
tax end of april
MOT feb 2011
Good overall condition, leccy mirrors, heated screens, leccy windows all round, central locking.
recent oil/filter air filter hand brake cable and thermostat. good runner. 3 previous owners, some history.

Call for more detail.

Don't forget to Join SOTW on Facebook

Author
Discussion

Escort Si-130

Original Poster:

3,419 posts

202 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
Top shed, although its pace now with a V6 at 160bhp seems tame, lol. i guess back then it did look big.
Can I have the toy please, lol

Oddball RS

1,757 posts

240 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
"and the Sierra itself was just beginning to lose the futuristic sheen that had accompanied the 'aero' design's launch"

What by 1990? futuristic sheen?, the design was seen as old hat and a rebodied Cortina way before this was built.

dorikin2009

40 posts

196 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
Jellymould.

Remember the matchbox cars more fondly than I remember any Sierra.

SimonSaid

407 posts

208 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
Oddball RS said:
"and the Sierra itself was just beginning to lose the futuristic sheen that had accompanied the 'aero' design's launch"

What by 1990? futuristic sheen?, the design was seen as old hat and a rebodied Cortina way before this was built.
Its interesting, actually - I read reports that the Sierra was seen as modern and that this divided opinion, with some thinking it a bit of a messy Cortina and some thinking it an aerodynamic slice of the future. But by 1990 there were plenty of rivals with similar shapes and this wasn't quite so 'quirky' - that's all I was going for. But as with any styling matter, its largely subjective.

dowahdiddyman

965 posts

233 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
Really wanted one of these ages ago. Took one for a test drive which included a blast up a 2 mile dual carridgeway, was totally and utterlly underwhelmed. Just seemed to be totally flat and gutless,one dream totally shattered. So why would I still buy one now, that`s what is really puzzling me.

The Donster

166 posts

227 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
Er, that yellow toy isn't a 4x4 - it's a boggo XR4i with a sticker on it. Never had 4WD in that three-door variant.

God, that's sad. frown

Edited by The Donster on Friday 12th February 10:35

Shropshiremike

24,126 posts

225 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
I think only the Capri was officially rated at 160bhp with the Cologne engine - supposedly down to the twin exhaust system. The Capri used the earlier 2.8 version rather than the 2.9.

A lot of those engines never quite made the official power

alfa pint

3,856 posts

233 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
Wonder if it'll go quickly as 4wd is more desirable than ever before?

I had 2 sierras as company cars. Plastic heaps of ste with paint that faded as soon as you introduced them to a hint of sun.

McAndy

15,564 posts

199 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
Needs to go in the 'Assymetric car' thread for its alloys...classic shedding though! Used to have one live down my road, so I understand the illogical draw.

Edited by McAndy on Friday 12th February 10:41

Frimley111R

18,268 posts

256 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
dowahdiddyman said:
Really wanted one of these ages ago. Took one for a test drive which included a blast up a 2 mile dual carridgeway, was totally and utterlly underwhelmed. Just seemed to be totally flat and gutless,one dream totally shattered. So why would I still buy one now, that`s what is really puzzling me.
A lot of old 'fast' cars are nothing special now, especially after losing some horses over the years. Still good for £800 and a bit handy in the snow too.

Good shed!

Jag-D

19,633 posts

241 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
The Donster said:
Er, that yellow toy isn't a 4x4 - it's a boggo XR4i with a sticker on it. Never had 4WD in that three-door variant.

God, that's sad. frown

Edited by The Donster on Friday 12th February 10:35
Dont worry..I made the same comment on one of the other 4x4 threads rofl

soad

34,300 posts

198 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
Good shed - not too fond of those old Sierra's (apart from Cosworth versions) though.

Uncle had 2.0 litre version, in this shape (car was saloon, not estate) in the early 90's. Run it into ground on his farm...

Renn Sport

2,761 posts

231 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
Ahh the ford Serria... this is the car that took many of its style influences from the Porsche 928. I read this years ago and then saw how the lead designer tried to explain it to Clarkson on TG. Needles to say Clarkson ribbed him about it.

Also this is the car that frank Williams was paralysed in when it landed on its roof coming back from Paul Ricard race track back in 86. Frank Williams suggested the roof was weak and simply folded in on top of him.

Anyway... I like, from afar but I think this closes the book for me in terms of having any interest in Ford.

snotrag

15,470 posts

233 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
What mods did TVR do to the engine to get (IIRC) 170bhp out of them in the S?

With a sportsflute on it would sound superb I'm guessing.

I love XR4's, its the earliest of the cars my Grandad owned and he rated it - he went on to own a Legacy Turbo (the early Colin Mcrae wedgy shape), Accord Type R, etc, so he knew his stuff.

Also - something I've notice.

The XR4X4 is the car of choice for the amateur/volunteer Stage rally marshall/radio operator/first aider?

Always seem to see a couple about at any rally, usually with a sump plate and some 2nd hand Gravel wheels pinched off an Escort. Ideal for tramping about the fireroads loaded with cones, marker tape, fold out chairs and camping stoves.

Mr2Mike

20,143 posts

277 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
That looks like a great donor for a '7' type kit wink

ode

184 posts

224 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
I've always liked these but I don't know why. An uncle had one, back in the day, and said it was a surprisingly rapid cross-country blaster. His was the first generation XR4x4, this looks like the 2nd, which I think was more a case of just sticking the badge on... maybe the first one had a bit more poke?

Fire99

9,863 posts

251 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
Hatefull car. Cosworth's excluded.

A mate had a 4x4 and it just seemed like a slower version of an XR4i but with the added bonus of more transmission noise.

They really were a car for the common man. Not nice.

Glosphil

4,774 posts

256 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
I had a D-reg black XR4x4 for 3 years/80K miles. Not particularly fast, but the 2.8 litre engine was very lightly stressed at 150bhp. First car I had with ABS. Excellent traction - fun annoying (far) more powerful BMWs when exiting wet roundabouts and slippery slow corners. Worked well in snow although the standard 195/70-14 summer road tyres were fitted (or were the tyres 185s?). On one occassion I was the only car to make it up a hill in the Cotswolds. A police landrover coming down stopped me and the driver said that I won't make it to the top. Wrong, I even got going again from a standing start after being stopped.

According to the original spec. the 2.9 was also 150bhp.

bazking69

8,620 posts

212 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
I think everyone can recall owning a matchbox Sierra.

Mine was a Texaco liveried one.

Spudler

3,985 posts

218 months

Friday 12th February 2010
quotequote all
Used to have a white one of these in '86...the same as the police...which could be funsmile
Years later i had a blue T5, exactly the same as their unmarked car at the time. The marked cars used to wave-up to me for a couple of weeks till they cottoned on the reg Nosmile