PH Fleet: Ford Puma
Riggers' Puma meets its sporty cousin in the form of the Ford Heritage Racing Puma
And if you're talking about how fun to drive a Puma is, conversation soon turns to the wide-shouldered, steroidal form of the Racing Puma. If the standard Puma has a rep among the cognoscenti as a bit of a driver's gem (for those prepared to put up with the odd 'hairdresser' jibe), then the Racing Puma is the Koh-i-Noor of the little Ford coupe.
Which is why, when I found out that Ford would have its heritage fleet example available to try at a recent press event, I made darn sure I could take AX51 GGA along for a quick comparison.
What it's about
The run down to the event, along Surrey and Sussex backroads, was a timely reminder of exactly why I bought the Puma in the first place. A deliciously slick and lightly-weighted gearchange, a willing and revvy engine, precise, informative steering and a general willingness to tackle corners and direction changes with real gusto combine to make a country road a real hoot.
Is it particularly fast? Will it embarrass more expensive and powerful machinery? No. Relatively low grip levels and brakes that don't exactly inspire confidence see to that. But just as with a Mk1 Mazda MX-5, it's how the whole car hangs together dynamically and flows down the road that makes it fun. You might be able to reach point B from point A more rapidly in your 250hp hot hatch, but I'm willing to bet I'll be having almost as much fun in the Puma, and in less danger of losing my licence.
With my Puma placed side by side with Ford's immaculate heritage car, certain differences are obvious. The wide wheelarches, big wheels, and wide-tracked stance, for example, almost go without saying. Likewise, the splashes of Blue Alcantara and hip-hugging sports seats in the racing Puma are obvious points of difference compared with the slightly time-worn black leather seats in my car.
Same but more so
But the overall feel is surprisingly similar. The same is true when you get out on the road in the Racing Puma; the car feels like a Puma, only more so. Perhaps I shouldn't use the word surprising, because the Racing Puma shares the same engine and gearbox as its more effeminate sibling (albeit with more power). But it does get beefier brakes bigger wheels, uprated suspension and a wider track.
True enough, the Racing Puma's engine is that bit more punchy (though probably only just fast enough to feel genuinely amusing), and its general demeanour is grippier and more aggressive. But it's the details that make it feel so familiar, the way you occasionally have to double declutch to get it to engage reverse properly, the way you need to give it a few extra revs when you pull away in order to avoid the engine bogging down.
Even the way it goes down the road is pure Puma, with its incisive but not hyperactive turn-in, general nimbleness and (sadly) jittery ride. It just does it all that bit quicker.
Price point
Returning to the Ford event car park grinning like a muppet, it was hard to work out exactly why Ford struggled to shift the beefy little Puma, only building 500 of the planned run of 1,000 cars and even then struggling to find homes for them. Then I remembered that, when new, it cost £23K. In 1999 that was a couple of grand more than a Subaru Impreza Turbo. For a Fiesta-based car more than 50hp down on the Impreza, that's quite a lot. No matter how magical the fettling of Tickford's engineers (for it was they who developed the Racing Puma for Ford).
These days, a decent Racing Puma will set you back £5K-£6K (though tatty ones are less and pristine examples a bit more), which makes the FRP a more alluring proposition than it was when new.
The funny thing is, though, that I don't think the Riggers piggy bank will be filling up in anticipation of an upgrade from Puma to Racing Puma. And that's not because a car I've lusted after driving for more than a decade was in any way a disappointment, it's just that my £1K shed gives me enough of the stuff that makes the Racing Puma such a treat for a fraction of the cost. And long may that feeling continue.
Fact sheet:
Car: 2001 Ford Puma
Run by: Matt Rigby
Bought: June 2011
Purchase price: £1,000
Last month at a glance: AX51 GGA meets its racy big brother
Previous reports:
MoT failed, but at least Riggers has got that suspension sorted now
Mysterious flat battery appears to be a one-off. So far...
Time to get AX51 GGA spruced up with a spring clean
Continental jaunts and Corrosion block for Riggers' Puma
Riggers is finding it tough to trust with his new Puma
Melina Blue Ford Puma 1.7 by retromotoring, on Flickr
You drive a KA and you notice the fun factor, the zippy gearchange, the nimbleness and general simplicity of it - but you wonder if more power and a bit more body control/some brakes wouldn't be nice.
Then you drive a SportKA and realise that with the bigger engine you also got a heavier front-end, a less comfy ride and a less chuckable feeling car overall (a Fiesta - in effect).
The base Puma is brilliant but you wonder if turning it up a bit wouldn't be a good idea anyway. Problem was, the FRP was a lunatic price when new and has dropped in value really harshly (esp for a rarish RS Ford). Tidy cars are probably a good buy now (when a tidy 3dr Cosworth can demand £30K plus now they may even count as an investment!!) BUT the standard car does almost everything the FRP does for a fraction of the cost so why bother?
Also - taller drivers who struggle in the Puma will REALLY struggle in the FRP - I can't even get into one thanks to what amounts to a bigger/less adjustable seat (see also phase 2 Pumas).
I swear I was on the other side of the roundabout before most cars would have fully disengaged their clutches and gotten underway - there was no pause/no slack at all, it just engaged 'drive' and shot off.
Fantastic little cars - if you can overlook their impracticalities (a bootlid which dumps gallons of water into the boot isn't much fun)
A great, but not fast road, driven in a great but not fast car, in the a.m. under a pink summer sky or that first cold day in October, is really what the Puma is about. In terms of driving pleasure at road legal speeds My opinion is that the Puma can indeed embarris much more expensive and exotic metal.
Good luck with the new job
Best piece of advice a mech gave me - the VCT doesn't properly engage if the oil level isn't at MAX - if I let it get a little low I can definitely feel the difference after topping it up again. Mine's going to tick over 80k soon.
It looked fantastic inside and out. Was fun to drive but looked faster than it was. Handled well but with the huge front tyres it tended to tram line. I'm no lard arse but those bucket seats are very narrow.
I reckon well driven, more nimble, standard 1.7 could keep up with an FRP but lacks the visual drama of the FRP, which is what drew me to it in the first place.
I'd happily drive either now too.
I wonder where it is now?
This was taken on my way to an owners' meet at Castle Combe.
And this video was a later owner's upload of the exhaust sound
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzUn_Ju6Sgo
This was taken on my way to an owners' meet at Castle Combe.
And this video was a later owner's upload of the exhaust sound
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tzUn_Ju6Sgo
Took a Puma to flush you out!!
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