Fast Ford

ESCOS RACER

Having spectacula­rly crashed out of its former life as a Group N rally car, this Escort RS Cosworth has enjoyed a masterful rebirth at the hands of MJ Racing – and now it’s out there taking names on the track…

- Words DAN BEVIS / Photos ADE BRANNAN

Ex-rally car is now tearing up the Tarmac, winning circuit races.

The idea of being fit for purpose is something that’s vital to any successful motorsport project. Every single part of a build needs to be considered for optimal efficiency in order to create favourable results: the weight of your wheels, the position of your fuel tank, the compound of your tyres, the tactility of your gearshift when you’re strapped into the seat, these are all elements in the equation that adds up to your position as you roar past the chequered flag. But what if the fundamenta­l purpose of the vehicle in question has been changed to begin with? What if, say, you were taking a rally car and re-imagining it for the track? Does this inherently mean that you’ll be starting on the back foot, on a hiding to nothing? Well, not necessaril­y… and as the team at MJ Racing in Motherwell has proven with this after-hours skunkworks project, if you’ve got the right people and the right idea, you can create something truly devastatin­g.

The crux of this orange Cossie’s genesis was to take a smashed-up Group N rally Escort and rebuild it as a track car, and it’s a project close to the hearts of every single character twirling the spanners at MJ Racing. What’s particular­ly interestin­g to note with this car is that it’s wearing the WRC-spec bodykit, which is a real in-your-face move and something that neatly carries the thread of its rally past through into its circuit-based present and future. The most obvious alteration with the WRC addenda is the switch from the traditiona­l whale-tail to the so-called ‘smiley’ rear spoiler, but naturally there was far more to it than that. Whack the kettle on, and we’ll indulge ourselves in a little history lesson.

Ready? OK, so first of all it’s important to remember that the whole point of the Escort RS Cosworth existing in the first place was motorsport; yes, it’s a spectacula­r road car that’s quite rightly passed into the pantheon of aspiration­al modern classics, but its origins sprang directly from Ford’s keenness to get into Group A rallying. Homologati­on was a necessity for this, and the fact that there’s so much Sierra under the skin proves how single-minded the manufactur­er was in its focus. The Sierra Sapphire RS Cosworth was already a proven entity

in rallying, so a borrowed longitudin­al engine and all-wheel-drive system made sense for the Escort. The changes to the works rally cars over the road cars in the showrooms were huge too: we’re talking about a seam-welded chassis and a rollcage, a larger intercoole­r with water injection and external water spray, redesigned suspension to allow all settings to be adjusted on the fly (with liquid-cooled shock absorbers!), 8-pot Brembos, a six-speed sequential gearbox with dual-plate carbon dry clutches… works Cossies were deadly serious. That effervesce­nt YB turbo motor was treated to all manner of motorsport dictated upgrades, amounting to 300bhp, and this was delivered via an arrangemen­t of three beffed-up differenti­als… and that was just the original Group A spec. The WRC evolution cars had 330bhp, fancy electronic diffs, multi-link rear suspension, and fully reworked aerodynami­cs.

And it’s this last point that shouts loudest when we switch our focus to the vivid orange creation you see before you: adding the WRC kit ties in an implicit hardcore-ness to anyone who knows their Group A history – the ‘smiley’ spoiler, the reshaped front bumper, it’s a vibe that suggests the ultimate evolution of something that was already pretty well evolved.

Scott Tollan is the name on the rear windows, and it’s he who has the enviable task of manhandlin­g this jaffa-hued monster around the track in ever-heated battles for supremacy. It’s ineffably cathartic that the car’s turned out to be such an impressive brute, as Scott and the team really did pour their hearts and souls into this project. “We built the car in-house at MJ Racing, from a smashed-up Group N rally car,” he says. “Last year we carried out a full bare-shell rebuild, the hardest part of which was simply the fact that we were doing it all at night after work!”

See, this wasn’t just an exercise in paying the bills, Scott and the guys did this on their own time out of pure passion for the craft and a keenness to go racing. The expertly straighten­ed and perfected body looks factory fresh, testament to the endless hours of painstakin­g work involved in getting it all just-so. The WRC kit has been artfully tweaked here and there to make it even more fit for purpose; precision drilled intake holes in the quick-release front bumper, a cutaway in the rear to aid aerodynami­cs, and all of it slathered in lurid orange to truly intimidate everyone else on the track.

“Last year we carried out a full bare-shell rebuild on the car, the hardest part of which was simply the fact that we were doing it all at night after work!”

When it came to the Cossie’s innards, naturally it would have to be an approach of pure function; asking Scott to talk us through the interior mods, he merely shrugs with a coy grin and says “Well, there’s a seat, that’s about it.” Fair enough, really. But elaboratin­g further, we discover an obsessive approach to weight-saving, with anything superfluou­s thrown in a skip, the dash lightened and studded with vital gauges, and everything fitted out with a mindset that function is key, and form can follow if it feels like it. We just love the artistical­ly modded handbrake handle, something that’ll surely be appearing in a Snap-on catalogue near you in due course, and all of the touchpoint­s scream pure race car: the ’cage, the extinguish­er, the solo bucket and harness. There’s absolutely zero ambiguity about what this car’s made for, and it ain’t bouncing through Welsh forests or skipping between Scandinavi­an lakes. There’s no space for the extra ballast of a co-driver here.

Scott’s impressive­ly modest when we quiz him about motive power; “One of the key lessons I’ve learned from this car is that you don’t need crazy power to be fast,” he grins, although some might argue that 496bhp is a pretty bonkers figure. Sure, we’ve become accustomed to seeing YB builds whose vital statistics begin with a six or a seven, but nigh-on five-hundred horses is still hella frantic. Obviously, as is the nature of any competitiv­e race build, the fellas at MJ Racing have to be somewhat clandestin­e about the details of the engine (you never know which competitor­s are reading!), but they’re able to outline the basics: a full eight-injector setup running greens, a T38 turbo on a 2WD manifold, an RS500 intake, and secret-spec fast road cams and low-comp pistons.

The transmissi­on is less of a mystery,

and its specs read like a who’s-who of aspiration­al mods for any and every Cosworth owner out there: an R&D dog ’box with dogleg 1st gear, MJ Racing’s own strengthen­ed front diff, and a 7.5in rear with 3.9 gears. This all works hand-in-hand with a chassis setup that deviates from the ultrapremi­um and eye-wateringly expensive arrangemen­t of the works WRC cars; instead, this Cossie’s underpinni­ngs wear a sort of greatest-hits of more readily available componentr­y. Bilstein coilovers join Group A front arms and compressio­n struts, and a square rear beam with mag arms – it’s a combinatio­n familiar to many a fast-road Cosworth owner, and it translates very

“One of the key lessons I’ve learned from this car is that you don’t need crazy power to be fast...”

“...We won class A1 in the Scottish Sports and Saloons series in 2019, and the car finished every single race. So we must have done something right in building it!”

well to the track.

The overall impression given by the specs of this RS is one of correctnes­s; this may have all been bolted together under cover of darkness by a team who’d already pulled a full day’s work before getting started on the side project each night, but it’s obvious from every inch of it that firstly, they really know what they’re doing when it comes to race car setup, and secondly, there have been no punches pulled here. Everything has been done absolutely correctly. “We were working so hard through the nights to get it ready for the start of the next race season,” Scott explains. “And it was well worth it – we won class A1 in the Scottish Sports and Saloons series in 2019, and the car finished every single race. So we must have done something right in building it!”

Scott’s modesty here is huge. The result of MJ Racing’s late-night endeavours is a truly world-class Escort RS Cosworth build, cleverly reframing the very nature of a car designed for rallying and making it eminently successful on the track. We’re looking forward to seeing how much silverware it scoops up in 2020.

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The cabin contains all the essentials needed for racing, but not much else
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