RE: One-owner-since-'99 Fiesta Ghia X (Mk4) for sale

RE: One-owner-since-'99 Fiesta Ghia X (Mk4) for sale

Monday 29th July 2024

One-owner-since-'99 Fiesta Ghia X (Mk4) for sale

Foolishly, nobody thought good Escorts and the like would be worth saving - what about old Fiestas?


Without wishing to sound like a jilted ex, it’s still hard to get over there not being a Ford Fiesta on sale anymore. It was such a constant in all our lives, with Fiestas new and old serving first drivers, school-run parents and retirees equally well. Not having them factory-fresh in showrooms or available to configure is strange. Of course, plenty of nearly new ones exist, but it’s not the same. Thank goodness for the Focus ST and Mustang still being on sale - make the most of them while you can. 

Anyway, that’s a distraction. There’s really never an inopportune moment to be looking at old Fiestas, but with another Festival of the Unexceptional having taken place over the weekend, it seemed a better time than ever. The demand for cars with XR or RS on their boots remains strong, which means it can be easy to forget that the Mk4 - the car that, with the Mondeo, really kicked off Ford’s 90s revolution - is now approaching 30 years old. It’s the classic Fiesta now, and a really good one as well. 

Because it was so long ago, it can be easy to forget what an impact the 1995 Fiesta had. The previous car wasn’t very good, really, so considerable effort went into making the replacement much better. With some new engines, overhauled underpinnings and a fresh look, the Mk4 was much more the ticket. Cars like this, the Puma and the first Focus forged Ford’s reputation as a maker of great-driving fast Fords. How this chassis never received more power from the factory than the later, 1.6-litre Zetec S will always be a mystery, but it means that even today an old Fiesta should be good fun to drive. 

This one is a real rarity. It’s a top-of-the-range Ghia X for starters, complete with wood trim, which was surely seldom specced given the Fiesta was typically a cheap and cheerful choice. It’s a 1.4-litre five-door, too, so somebody really splashed out. Having been a dealer demo early in its life, this Fiesta was then driven by one lady owner. For 25 years. 

They barely used it, either, covering just 47,000 miles since 1999, so the old thing looks fabulous. There can’t have been many purple Fiestas back in the day, and that only adds to the appeal. The alloys are pristine, the interior smart and the engine bay spotless. There was some rust mentioned in February’s MOT, but when it comes to Fords of this era that discovery is like finding sand at the beach - it’s always going to be there. Probably worth tackling sooner rather than later, though. 

Otherwise, the Ghia X ought to be like a Fiesta always was to run: not very much money to keep, and always a joy to drive. At £5k it’s obviously the most expensive of the era, but once upon a time there had to be low mileage, one-owner Escorts and Cortinas that were more than all the rest. And that turned out pretty well both for those who wanted to drive them and collectors. Might the same be true one day for the Fiesta?


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Discussion

TREMAiNE

Original Poster:

4,083 posts

163 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
I do believe cars like this are worth preserving but personally I think I would be better as a museum piece.
£5k is a lot of money for a 25 year old Fiesta. You'd have to really want one to pay that and then once the novelty wears off, you've got a car that'll be worth scrap in a few years if you use it, or a £5k paperweight that has no guarantee of keeping its value.


Master Bean

4,404 posts

134 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
More reliable than my 2015 1 litre that's worth about the same. Maybe a straight swap is on order.

Rob 131 Sport

3,624 posts

66 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
My wife had a very late 95 M Reg Mk3 that was truly dire. That was replaced by a 99 T Reg Fiesta exactly like this in Ghia Specification but without the ‘X’ in Metallic Black with the same mushroom colour interior and fake wood.

Whilst it drove really nicely, there were a few reliability niggles and it was replaced after 18 months by a MK2 Fiat Punto ELX. The Fiat was a much better looking car, reliable and more roomy.

wistec1

611 posts

55 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
Having owned a fiesta flight back in the day I've a bit of a soft spot for a posh fiesta. 5K may seem strong money but find another that's evidently as good. The obvious appeal at this age is surely the weekend motor for the classic car owner who wants a turn key tidy car without all the hassle and restoration costs which could easily exceed the asking price.

Agent57

2,086 posts

168 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
I think this is the ugliest of all the Fiestas.

A very bad facelift.

Lo-Fi

964 posts

84 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
My ex-wife had a T plate 1.25 Zetec in this colour. A peppy little thing, wheel spin in 2nd in the dry. We called it The Berry.

chazwozza

844 posts

200 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
My first girlfriends sister had one in almost this exact spec, colour, wood trim etc. except it had the 1.25?? Litre zetec iirc.
It was her 18th birthday present and she rolled it onto it's side a few months later avoiding an oncoming drunk driver.
To be fair, it was on grass and once tipped back there was hardly any damage bar a broken wing mirror and scuffed paintwork, easily sorted.
I remember at the time the engine being nicely revvy.
Number plate was 778 BJ which got a lot of attention...

DaveyBoyWonder

3,115 posts

188 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
wistec1 said:
Having owned a fiesta flight back in the day I've a bit of a soft spot for a posh fiesta. 5K may seem strong money but find another that's evidently as good. The obvious appeal at this age is surely the weekend motor for the classic car owner who wants a turn key tidy car without all the hassle and restoration costs which could easily exceed the asking price.
You won't. But then why would you want to find a really good condition, low mileage but ugly little runt of a Fiesta.

Angelo1985

532 posts

40 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
I remember when they were just old and cheap as chips.
A guy came to the scrapyard asking for a rear light for his fiesta, there was one where the lights were pristine but I couldn’t open the boot as we lost the keys. I asked the chap if he could lend me the keys to his fiesta, and I opened the other fiesta’s boot with it. He got his rear light but wasn’t very impressed 😂

David87

6,875 posts

226 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
Peak Fiesta in my eyes. Well, specifically the facelift version of this - Mk4.5 or Mk5 or whatever it's called... always thought the front of the earlier one was a little blobby. Probably no coincidence that I had one as my first car (and it was fantastic!).

Phateuk

806 posts

151 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
My 2nd car was a purple mk4 in lowly 1.3 LX spec on a P reg in the early 00s.

Brings back memories seeing this, seemed a huge upgrade from my first car - a '91 rover metro biggrin

GreatScott2016

1,837 posts

102 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
A good first car for someone but that’s a hefty price tag for the privilege. I do prefer the simplistic interiors of older cars though smile

pb8g09

2,797 posts

83 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
I hate everything about it, including the price.

All except the colour, which would be awesome on something else.

Turbobanana

7,157 posts

215 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
Prime example of a classless "car for the people". All the way from austerity-grade Populars and the like, through to this, which was likely bought as a second car for a well-to-do older couple for when they didn't want to use the Jaguar.

Would I pay £5,000 for it? No, but I could imagine a Ford collector doing so, for the simple novelty value of something once so common, and now quite rare.

Bobupndown

2,490 posts

57 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
I think that's a reasonable price for a perfect Fiesta. Don't see it ever losing money unless you use it as a daily.
Gotta love Ford's "wood" trim.
I looked at a Mk2 Mondeo Ghia which had this, it was awful!

supacool1

681 posts

193 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
Agent57 said:
I think this is the ugliest of all the Fiestas.

A very bad facelift.
I was just to say that....

PSB1967

349 posts

170 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
DaveyBoyWonder said:
wistec1 said:
Having owned a fiesta flight back in the day I've a bit of a soft spot for a posh fiesta. 5K may seem strong money but find another that's evidently as good. The obvious appeal at this age is surely the weekend motor for the classic car owner who wants a turn key tidy car without all the hassle and restoration costs which could easily exceed the asking price.
You won't. But then why would you want to find a really good condition, low mileage but ugly little runt of a Fiesta.
The MOT history suggests Tin worm is already having its own 'fiesta' around the rear of the car. So maybe not that far off needing some form of restoration after all. And it'll never be a looker to my eyes.

chestersantana

20 posts

60 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all


We have a 99/00 Odyssey as our runabout in Spain, inherited from an Uncle who had it from new. It’s the mk4 facelift, sometimes referred to as a mk5, with the updated wheels that I like.
Whilst I have nice cars in the UK, there is nothing like tearing around the perfect Spanish mountain roads in this.
It’s light, there’s no power steering, no aircon, it loves to rev out to 7k. It can sit on the autovia at 140kph all day long.
If someone offered me €5k for it I’d politely decline!

paulyv

1,057 posts

137 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
Why d'ya post a photo of the inside of a Puma.............


Wren-went

957 posts

52 months

Monday 29th July 2024
quotequote all
I'm feeling old at 54 as I remember when my mum in the mid 80s bought a 2 years old A reg MK1 Fiesta 1.3 Ghia, which was a time when Ghia was something special.

After the.Ghia followed a D reg XR2 which was an ex Ford demonstrater, & before was a V reg 1.1 L , never drove that was too young but did the others particularly the 1.3 Ghia.

This in the article is a belter but think £5 grand is a bit rich.