RE: Ford Mondeo ST220 | Spotted
RE: Ford Mondeo ST220 | Spotted
Monday 27th April

Ford Mondeo ST220 | Spotted

A fabulous fast Ford for £5k? Get on the train already


Did you also see the Super Touring BTCC cars at Goodwood? What a wonderful treat down memory lane that was, a real highlight of another great Members Meeting. As a reminder of the glory days, with iconic racing machines being thrashed in the sunshine by great drivers, it was hard to think of very much better. By bringing together recognisable saloon silhouettes with incredibly sophisticated underpinnings and almost limitless budgets, Super Touring really was a stunning era of touring cars. It was great to be reminded of the fact. 

And if you’ve also spent the following days seeking out your own racy repmobile as a result, then you certainly aren’t alone. Plenty attempted to cash in on the BTCC’s runaway success back in the day, from the Vectra Supertouring to the Laguna Airflow (which actually homologated some new aero parts), but precious few survive. Not many sold new, either because of limited production runs or a bit of brand snobbery (or both), and so even fewer will be around 30 years later. Rust will have claimed plenty, specialist parts may now be difficult to get, and so on.

But there’s hope, and it takes the form of this Mondeo ST220. Now, before you moan, obviously this isn’t from the Super Touring era (the previous ST200 is the car for that). As a reminder of just how good mass market, fast family cars once were, however, this looks absolutely ideal. The 220 took what had already proved popular with the old 200 - a hearty Duratec V6, a sorted chassis, a really good blue - and served up more of the same. With a fresher interior and more modern look. 

Despite rave reviews (we all remember the Top Gear episode with the Vectra and the 6 MPS), the ST220 never sold in enormous numbers. Because, well, it had a blue oval rather than a blue propeller on the front, and people were happier with the latter on the drive (and a weedy four pot under the bonnet) rather than a 3.0-litre V6. Weirdos.  But the ST220 was the real deal alright, hailing from that time when every single Ford was by far and away the class of its field chassis-wise. This was the last of its kind, too; while the 2.5 turbo would find its way into later Mondeos, the idea of a proper ST flagship disappeared with this generation. With Mondeos gone, it ensures an additional significance for the ‘220. 

This one’s a real gem by the looks of it, with £7,000 spent on it in the past 14 months (so hopefully not needing the same again!). It’s a six-speed example (the earliest ones had just five gears), the colour combination is interesting, and it sits on little more than 80,000 miles. The tyres are very good, the rust really is minimal, and it comes with a model-appropriate plate. A lot of the surviving ST220s you see now appear past their best; not this one. 

The bad news? It’s in Edinburgh, for one thing, which might not be massively convenient (but what a result if it is). As a 2006 car it could be hit with the pricier VED. And it was a Category N car in 2020, so that’s something to investigate. That’s a non-structural classification, though you’ll obviously want to see evidence of the repair and perhaps pay for an inspection, just to be sure. Fingers crossed it’s as good as it looks. While the rest of planet fast Ford still seems as mad as ever, one of its lesser spotted heroes remains something of a steal. 


SPECIFICATION | FORD MONDEO ST220

Engine: 2,967cc V6 petrol
Transmission: 6-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 225@6,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 207@4,900rpm
MPG: 27.2
CO2: 254g/km
First registered: 2006
Recorded mileage: 83,000
Price new: £23,565 (hatch)
Yours for: £5,995

See the original advert here

Author
Discussion

Mobeer

Original Poster:

1 posts

1 month

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
Like the idea of the car, but not this one. £7k spent already suggests big new bills to come.

swanseaboydan

2,237 posts

188 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
I used to borrow my mates about 15 years ago - what a lovely car

J4CKO

46,101 posts

225 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
Mobeer said:
Like the idea of the car, but not this one. £7k spent already suggests big new bills to come.
Strange take, seven grand in a year on a Mondeo like this would likely cover most of the things that could possibly go wrong, would you prefer an example that has had nothing spent ?

Its a 20 year old car at the end of the day.


w1ltsu

38 posts

78 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
Lovely cars. Not that quick in a straight line, but wonderful cars to drive. One of the most delightful steering racks and power steering systems you will ever find.

Very handsome car also.

Frimley111R

18,602 posts

259 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
J4CKO said:
Mobeer said:
Like the idea of the car, but not this one. £7k spent already suggests big new bills to come.
Strange take, seven grand in a year on a Mondeo like this would likely cover most of the things that could possibly go wrong, would you prefer an example that has had nothing spent ?

Its a 20 year old car at the end of the day.
Yep, I'd be much more inclined to buy it if someone had spent that on it

AmyRichardson

1,909 posts

67 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
"see the Super Touring BTCC cars at Goodwood"

Yep. The Mondeo's driveshaft-through-the-vee arrangement was a proper eye-opener; made the Honda's "just turn the engine/gearbox around" approach look like simplicity itself.

BenEK9

796 posts

215 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
Mobeer said:
Like the idea of the car, but not this one. £7k spent already suggests big new bills to come.
Did you just sign up to the forum today to post this rubbish?

Very good steer these and just a nice punch where you need it to make moving and changing gears fun.
Suffering the ST curse for desirability / values. Imagine if ford had played with an RS 'light' like Audi etc.

GreatScott2016

2,322 posts

113 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
As a model, very understated and still looks very good by today’s standards smile

Stu0302

43 posts

15 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
These are quicker than numbers suggest. I had a stage 1 Octavia vRS running approximately 250 hp and couldn't get away from my mate in his standard ST220 (the Skoda was fully maintained and running power with dyno proof).

el romeral

1,965 posts

162 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
That appears to have been very well looked after. It looks immaculate inside and out. Not even any bolster wear on the driver’s seat. As long as the cat N bit was nothing too serious, then it has got to be worth a punt.

Firebobby

960 posts

64 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
£7k on the car and then £760 a year on VED. I'm sorry I couldn't stomach that!
When I started driving in 75 there was one car tax it was £25 for twelve months that was it! Mini, Rolls Royce, transit van, petrol or diesel it was £25. There are now 143 different VED rates!! WTF? It must cost millions just to run the system. This country is unbelievable. If I were 50 years younger I'd be off like a rat up a drainpipe...

rossub

5,634 posts

215 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
4D number plates

Instant turn off

Nickp82

3,831 posts

118 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
Great cars, I had good fun tearing around in them when working at a Ford dealer circa 2006. Being picky I don’t think the seat colour works with the blue but that’s easily sorted.

s m

24,223 posts

228 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
Stu0302 said:
These are quicker than numbers suggest. I had a stage 1 Octavia vRS running approximately 250 hp and couldn't get away from my mate in his standard ST220 (the Skoda was fully maintained and running power with dyno proof).
I think you’d need more than 15% power jump to notice any meaningful gap under acceleration given gearing differences etc …. even if the Skoda was lighter

carinaman

24,597 posts

197 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
AmyRichardson said:
"see the Super Touring BTCC cars at Goodwood"

Yep. The Mondeo's driveshaft-through-the-vee arrangement was a proper eye-opener; made the Honda's "just turn the engine/gearbox around" approach look like simplicity itself.
I like learning stuff. I learnt something, thank you.

TikTak

2,823 posts

44 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
Brilliant things. Brought one on a whim about 10 years ago for £800 and ended up giving it to my sister when she needed a car. Very capable (although maybe not by today's EV standards), comfortable, spacious and just decent all round.

Just didn't like the clock inside, felt it dated it more than the CD player/dash in general.

Bit thirsty and mega VED these days too. Shame.

carinaman

24,597 posts

197 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
Firebobby said:
£7k on the car and then £760 a year on VED. I'm sorry I couldn't stomach that!
<snip>
I had to check when it reg'd. Sept. so now before the 23rd? March 2006 cut off date.

I am another that doesn't like the plates, but I've driven a TDCi one and I liked it lots.

Terminator X

19,880 posts

229 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
Ideal for Lee wink

TX.

Wab1974uk

1,280 posts

52 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
Always liked these back in the day. Nearly bought it's predecessor the ST200.

What's not to like. Big torque V6 upfront and a 6 speed manual.

J4CKO

46,101 posts

225 months

Monday 27th April
quotequote all
Wab1974uk said:
Always liked these back in the day. Nearly bought it's predecessor the ST200.

What's not to like. Big torque V6 upfront and a 6 speed manual.
Torque: 207 lb-ft (280 Nm) @ 4,900 rpm

Thats not really big torque these days, we have got used to turbo stuff, it was back then but our brains are addled by big Turbo diesels and now EV's !