RE: Mint condition Ford Racing Puma for sale
RE: Mint condition Ford Racing Puma for sale
Today

Mint condition Ford Racing Puma for sale

The last owner kept this for more than 20 years - easy to see why... 


Time is certainly kinder to some cars than others. For the Ford Racing Puma, the passing of a quarter of a century has boosted its reputation considerably. While everyone loved the way it drove back at the turn of the millennium, and its widetracked, tarmac rally car looks, it was hard to level the experience of 153hp - even a zingy, willing 153hp - with the £23,000 asking price. Even now, that looks like a lot of cash for not much horsepower, and £23k in today’s money is almost £45,000…

But this was the time of Ford making its special cars very special indeed, even when they didn’t have a huge amount of power. So the RP got the pumped-up bodywork fitted by Tickford, the brakes used super expensive Alcon calipers, Sparco seats were included, suspension was by Eibach springs and Sachs dampers, there was a limited-slip diff… like the Focus RS that followed, no expense was spared on making the Racing Puma handle as well as possible. In fact, it’s the engine modifications that were probably the least involved bit of the overhaul, with new cams, a sprightlier exhaust and its own inlet manifold to free up another 30hp. 

It was that effort invested in making the Puma such a stunning little object to look at and to drive, rather than the most powerful flagship model it could be, that has secured the Racing such hallowed status. It really does look sensational. What was rare new, with just 500 made, is even more so now, with a chunk of them having rotted away or ended up around trees. Typically these will have been cared for better than standard Pumas, because they never depreciated to such bargain bin levels, but there was definitely a time when rust repairs - especially around those bespoke arches - could have cost most of the value of the car. There must be considerably fewer than 500 left on the road, put it that way. 

That being said, with the Racing’s reputation as fast(ish) Ford royalty now assured, those remaining tend to be good ones. Really, really good ones, in the case of this one. It comes from more than 20 years in a collection, during which time it has passed every single MOT without advisory bar two - those fails were both for a headlight pointing too high. So a pretty much perfect record. Use slowed up at the end of the '00s, from which time it’s only been driven a few hundred miles a year, leaving it now on 58,356 miles. 

You can imagine the Puma was probably in pretty fine fettle already, but after 20-odd years the Imperial Blue paint wasn’t quite perfect. So it’s actually just been resprayed, with the aim ‘to make it one of the best out there’ according to the selling dealer. Has that made it too nice to use? Tricky one, isn’t it? Because there’ll always be that concern about spoiling the paint, or exposing vulnerable bodywork, or wearing out parts that’ll be difficult to replace. The Racing Puma is definitely one of very few front-wheel drive cars you’d surely be quite happy just to park up and stare at. On the other hand, this is the very best version of one of Ford’s greatest small cars ever - one drive might be enough to have you hooked, and unable to clamber from the Sparco’s embrace… 

In 2026, a Racing Puma costs about what it did all those years ago, this one for sale at £24,950. A lot against every other Puma, if small change in the mad world of fast Fords. With mass market cars as specialised as the Racing unlikely to happen again, it certainly doesn’t seem like this will be worth any less as its 30th birthday nears. But we also wouldn’t bank on any further appreciation, given it lacks a homologation link or huge power. All the more reason, you might say, to get out and enjoy it…


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Author
Discussion

350Matt

Original Poster:

3,861 posts

301 months

My boss had one of these back when they were new, and got to drive it 100 miles or so. I loved it the brakes were the best I'd ever encountered at that time. engine was the low point really as the chassis was so good , it could have easily taken another 50-60 ponies

steveb8188

9 posts

2 months

The respray would be enough to put me off unless there was extensive evidence about how well or not it was done.

MyV10BarksAndBites

1,591 posts

71 months

Fun drive but horrible to look at...... Zero real power.... Just so past it.......

dukebox9reg

1,682 posts

170 months

Really does nothing for me at all. Low powered car thats fun to chuck about but the buyer of this will stick it in a shed and hope that the cult of Ford will continue to wax lyrical over this absolute rot box.

Fords of this era are a permanent mix of rot and door seals hanging out. Rather a R26 Megane/Clio 200 and be happy to drive it.

michaeldouglas72

78 posts

154 months

Standard 1.7 16V was a far better driving car, the wide track had it grabbing at cambers, suspension was far too stiff. Seats were good.

Lotobear

8,562 posts

150 months

'bring to the market' hehe


martin12345

939 posts

111 months

I had one of these as my 2nd company car for 6 months (I worked for part of Ford at the time)
These are a really quirky car.

On the right road, in the right mood - absolutely some of the most fun I've had in a car
On a long journey - horribly noisy - I only ever did one !!
Daily commute - pretty horrible with crashy suspension, grabby steering and noisy

I don't think I would spend my own money on one but I do have warm feeling towards them as the "highs" were so high that you remember them
If I didn't have motorbikes then I might think about one

Can not imagine having one as an only car - would drive you mental

WTDMM

70 posts

6 months

There will be plenty of comments from people who havent driven them but they are super fun. Fun on a b road, fast on track. Hard to justify as a thing to drive these days as the bespoke aluminium wings are hard to come by as are any of the bespoke plastics. Super fun to drive though, easy to get a few more horses out of too.

C5_Steve

7,292 posts

125 months

I think these look brilliant (as do standard ones), but not worth the premium. That said really good stock Puma's are creeping up in value anyway.

Jon_S_Rally

4,229 posts

110 months

The negative nancies above can bugger off, because I think that's lovely. No, they're not fast. Yes, they're expensive. But just look at it. What a lovely looking little car. The proportions are just spot on, and it's an exercise in making something look purposeful without it looking clumsy.

The Puma is such a great car to drive and, while I'd struggle to justify the required investment (and care) for a genuine Racing version, the idea of a pumped up one that looks like this still has bucket loads of appeal.

If only more manufacturers were willing to do this sort of thing today.

PRO5T

6,815 posts

47 months

I always fancied one as Ford were really the only manufacturer to make a publicly available road going Rally Kit Car-I'm sure they'll be astute buys in the coming years.

I did revisit them when they were in the £5-8k price range as a cheap but cool track car, you could get an utterly mint one for around £7k. The problem was even then in the late noughties to early teens parts supply was a problem and they really didn't do anything a Clio 197 couldn't do for similar money.


Keith-9fc7j

12 posts

3 months

These shouldve came with a Mk 1 Focus RS lump

SDK

2,619 posts

275 months

I had a Puma 1.7 as my first car and loved it, having it for about 10 years.
Always wanted an FRP but couldn't justify it back then when saving for a house etc... I remember seeing it at the Motorshow in 2000 or 2001 and those wide arches and wheels really set it off .


WTDMM

70 posts

6 months

Keith-9fc7j said:
These shouldve came with a Mk 1 Focus RS lump
They didnt need to, it adds nothing to the experience IMO, having driven a few of them converted with that exact engine. Its an easy enough swap

TonyMac

52 posts

68 months

Had three of the standard one but never a Racing. The beauty of the Puma was that it didn't have a lot of power so you could rag the nuts off them without risking life, limb and license.

Parts supply must be a real problem for these now, which would be an issue for anyone wanting to actually use it.

I don't think I'd want one as a daily cos even the standard puma is a pain in the arse on the daily. Metal gear knob on a cold day? No thanks. It's raining and you want to get in the boot? All the water in the world will run into the boot. Not in a mood for driving hard? Get annoyed by the crashy suspension and the engine that doesn't really come alive until the revs come up a bit. Can't imagine a racing being any better.

That said I think it's cheap enough, they're all close to 20k, this one looks a goodun. Standard ones are coming up fast too. Mine cost £600, £300 and £200. You're looking at closer to £2k for anything halfway decent now.

Trap

177 posts

207 months

Remember when people struggled to shift these on for £7k?

Back then I couldn't even afford that so I had a standard one and put the seats from a Racing Puma in it.

C.A.R.

3,989 posts

210 months

Am I misremembering or did there used to be a high-level spoiler option you could have on these too? I'm sure my mate's one used to have a wing on the back, but that was 10+ years ago...

Lester H

3,932 posts

127 months

Lotobear said:
'bring to the market' hehe
Mmm…estate agent speak. ( Must add to the lengthy PH ‘Pompous ad’ file.)

WPA

13,396 posts

136 months

Am I right in thinking that Tickford did more than fit just the bodykit, did they not convert and build the whole car

Jon_S_Rally

4,229 posts

110 months

Keith-9fc7j said:
These shouldve came with a Mk 1 Focus RS lump
That engine didn't exist (at least in production form) when these came out though. It would have also rather gone against the junior rally car vibe, given these were vaguely inspired by the Puma rally cars, which used normally aspirated engines.

I get why people might want a bit more power, but these have always been about a zingy, revvy engine to me. Adding a turbo would turn it into a very different car. If you really needed 200bhp without going mad on the standard engine, I'd fit a 2.0-litre Duratec from a Fiesta ST150 with some cams, throttle bodies and other bits. Would give a decent uplift without totally changing the character of the car.