RE: Ford StreetKa | Shed of the Week
RE: Ford StreetKa | Shed of the Week
Today

Ford StreetKa | Shed of the Week

Staying cool needn't cost the earth - so long as you're not fussed with looking cool...


The heat has been splitting the flags outside Shed’s workshop this week. It’s been so hot he’s had to work in nothing more than his string vest and underpants and yellow scaffolder’s boots. 

There’s a massive old upright freezer in the yard that he’s managed to get working for lollies and other essential cooling aids. In the heat haze, he thought someone had painted a big letter Y on the front of it, but it turned out to be Mrs Shed facing away from him in her black thong swimsuit. 

While the sun has got his hat on, whatever that means – presumably he has them made from very high-grade asbestos – what better time to introduce this week’s shed, a low-mileage Ford StreetKa. Shed has never fully understood the point of convertibles, despite or possibly because of his own experience with various MX-5s in which he used to take Mrs Shed to Italy in happier times. After a hundred hot autostrada miles with the top down, she looked like she’d had her hair done by Medusa. Italians thought they were mad. 

Ford did Winter and Ice special editions of the StreetKa. They even did a Thunderbirds one in pink, with just eight of them getting past security, but they never did a Bleedin’ Hot one. Ballooning arches set it apart from anything else in the class stylistically, but they were also functional, covering wide tracks which gave the StreetKa the stability it needed to go with its fast steering. Although some of you might think that the Pininfarina body overall hasn’t stood the test of time all that well, the Parry-Jones chassis shouldn’t be suffering the same fate as long as it’s been looked after.

Scuttle shake could be disconcerting on the wrong road, even when it was new, and the mounts for the rear beam were not built to last. Still, it was more than capable of delivering plenty of smiles per mile, even with only 94hp coming its way from the 8-valve Duratec 1.6 engine. It wasn’t a revver, but its torque curve was well suited to town trundling. 

We had one of these StreetKas in this feature almost exactly three years ago. Like today’s shed, that one was a Luxury spec car with climate control, a CD player – stop laughing, that was high tech back then – and heated leather seats. The metal gearknob was hot too, but that wasn’t by design. To compensate for the burns on your palms it did control a slick change.

Rust has killed most of these off. In 2012 there were 9,000 Luxury StreetKas registered for British roads. By 2022 that number had gone down to 1,400. The car featured in 2023 was a clean low-miler with 67,000 on the clock, but it didn’t make it past 2025. Now there are just over 600 left. Could they become collectable and expensive, like many other old Fords? If you want to get a car like today’s £1,875 51,000-mile shed to that stage you’ll need to keep on top of its suspension components, literally as well as figuratively. 

If the previous owners of this one did the right thing by it – and if the full service history line in the ad is true, they might have – it should drive nicely. If they didn’t, it won’t. Seat runners famously rattled, the electrics could be whimsical and the hoods were annoyingly tear-prone, but it was surely better to have a fabric top that could be manually whipped down in ten seconds than some crapulous electronic steel roof that didn’t work in any amount of seconds. There was a surprisingly decent amount of boot space, too. 

Shed is confident that this week’s offering will split the forum. Some will remember Wayne Rooney owning one, or Kylie Minogue advertising them. Others will deride it as a car for those with a short life expectancy, or as Humphra so neatly put it in ’23, ‘a Streetka named Retire’.


See the original advert

Author
Discussion

JRaj

Original Poster:

126 posts

99 months

Looks clean but who knows? Takes away the driving dynamics of the coupe and heavier too. Could make an ideal first car.....

Master Bean

5,071 posts

146 months

My first car was a 54 plate Ka. 68hp and it buzzed along the motorway at who knows how many rpm.

biggbn

31,413 posts

246 months

One of my favourite cars owned. An absolute blast. Find a solid one and enjoy. Only problem is the boat anchor engine which is neither powerful, nor frugal. One of these with the 1.7 Puma engine would be a prefect fwd fun car.

Vsix and Vtec

1,385 posts

44 months

Cracking little things, made when Ford had the courage (and money) to do things that were a little quirky. I do seem to recall it was a Rocam 1.6 not a Duratec though, originally being used by Ford in the Brazilian market. I can only assume packaging constraints were the reason the Zetec 1.6 wasn't used. On the plus side, the Rocam is borderline indestructible if properly maintained.

Random84

169 posts

39 months

Remember this being launched and my first car was a 2000 Ford Ka with the 1.3 Endura engine, hopefully the 1.6 Duratec improved things.
The Ka was great fun and cornered quite well but it didn't have any guts whatsoever, it was actually dangerous. Overtaking a lorry had to be planned, build up speed and pull out at the last minute, as soon as your out of the wind protection created by the lorry you start scrubbing off speed and you quickly needed to decide whether you need to abort!
Air conditioning was a nice little extra but you couldn't really use it as it used vital engine power and you could actually feel it sapping power.
Rust was the killer for all of the KA models, my car was only 9 years old when it looks like it failed it's final MOT (14 major rust related failures) after covering just 81,000 miles.

RyCliff

63 posts

148 months

I had one of these as my first car in 2014 as a student, cost me £1400 and had similar mileage. Was good fun and coped well with a care free driving style, even giving some lift off oversteer. It met its end when a white van man drove into the back and the whole boot crumpled like a cartoon, even then I was still able to drive it the 20mins journey home. The insurance payout was £2500 so nice little profit

Portofino

5,292 posts

217 months

Crikey 22 years old now!

If it checks out as solid, then a good fun little run around that reminds you that cars don’t have to be over powered to bring a smile to your face.

InitialDave

14,799 posts

145 months

Interesting cars now, though like the SportKa, I always felt the 8v was a poor engine choice for them.

Agree that the Yamaha Zetec-S engine is what they should have had.

el romeral

2,031 posts

163 months

Still look good today. Nice low mileage, so hopefully most of that has been done in fair summer weather. The fact it has lasted this long is a good sign, compared to all the others that have fallen by the way.

aterribleusername

536 posts

89 months

Would love another Ka but you have to be oh so careful it's not rotten. They hide it behind the front arch covers plus the usual areas of round the filler cap etc and very few seller will let you start removing stuff to check.

Had a 54 plate 1.3 with the Duratec which was so, so much better than the Endura engine. Loved it but even after 3 years and 56k miles it was getting tired. It somehow survived for 12 years before failing spectacularly on rust everywhere! The age of the underlying design being essentially Mk3 Fiesta really shows as they get old.

FrankandLynn

77 posts

19 months

An ugly duckling that never got to grow into a swan. Dynamically underwhelming, stylistically as attractive as a weekend in Blackpool, and produced for a market segment that didn’t exist. Never, ever, ever.

humphra

617 posts

118 months

Phwooar, name checked! There goes my 5 minutes of fame biggrin

As for Kas in general, I had a Ka hire car for a couple of days and loved the handling, if only it had more power..... i ended up doing that forwards - backwards pulling on the steering wheel, like I'm sure we've all done when there's not enough acceleration, as if that action would somehow add some!

Though I've never actually owned a Ka or StreetKa, I have spent time over the years idly looking at ads for ones for sale, and building an impression that they like to rust. I've also seen some modded ones that IMHO have improved the looks.

As for this one, fair credit for making it this far! Hopefully someone will take it on and love it and help it carry on for many more years.


Edited by humphra on Friday 26th June 06:24


Edited by humphra on Friday 26th June 06:45

edoverheels

584 posts

131 months

As long as you don’t take yourself too seriously I think that it would be difficult not to have fun driving around in that for a bit.

POIDH

3,341 posts

91 months

What a daft wee thing - I like, but it's not a car for me.
I had a (1.3?) Ka on hire once. My word you could trash that thing at it was still woefully slow...

yme402

627 posts

128 months

A Temu Audi TT convertible, in times before Audis became a bit Temu themselves.

biggbn

31,413 posts

246 months

Random84 said:
Remember this being launched and my first car was a 2000 Ford Ka with the 1.3 Endura engine, hopefully the 1.6 Duratec improved things.
The Ka was great fun and cornered quite well but it didn't have any guts whatsoever, it was actually dangerous. Overtaking a lorry had to be planned, build up speed and pull out at the last minute, as soon as your out of the wind protection created by the lorry you start scrubbing off speed and you quickly needed to decide whether you need to abort!
Air conditioning was a nice little extra but you couldn't really use it as it used vital engine power and you could actually feel it sapping power.
Rust was the killer for all of the KA models, my car was only 9 years old when it looks like it failed it's final MOT (14 major rust related failures) after covering just 81,000 miles.
I found the more modern 1.3 and ancient Kent derived engine to be perfectly acceptable for the Ka and would argue that there has not been a supermini with such a perfectly balanced blend of ride and handling made since. Such a tactile car, few things equal the pleasure of hurling a base Ka down a twisty, bumpy b road. Miss every one I owned

Andy86GT

992 posts

91 months

Imagine sitting on those black seats after leaving the roof down in the weather we're currently enjoying redface

Sheetmaself

6,091 posts

224 months

I had one of these. You could actually watch the fuel gauge move!

Apart from that it was a fun little thing

S600BSB

7,808 posts

132 months

Get a decent bike instead for the money.

Robertb

3,680 posts

264 months

There’s an older couple I see every morning in one of these, usually roof down. They always look happy!