The Herald on Sunday

Better check your mirrors – because the 1980s are back

Sandra Dick discovers how your old Escort has become the new ‘must have’ classic motor in a 1980s and 90s revival

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SOME may well think 1980s style – with those boxy shoulder pads, electropop tunes and mullet haircuts – would be best parked in the past.

But a new generation of motorists with money to spare and a yearning to turn the clock back to simpler times is being credited for a surge in demand for the very cars their parents couldn’t wait to be shot of.

A growing nostalgia for late 20th-century motors of the 1980s and 1990s – particular­ly Ford Escorts – is said to be fuelling demand for ageing models, sparking a mini-boom among car restoratio­n and classic car businesses in Scotland.

The surge in interest for “bangers”, with their chunky lines and lack of power steering, Bluetooth or airbags, is also being linked to a rush to preserve the era’s combustion engine vehicles in the face of mounting pressure on motorists to switch to greener choices.

It is also reckoned to be partly down to a kickback against modern “lookalike” cars with their high-tech features designed to take the stress out of motoring.

Rising demand has meant prices for 30- and 40-year-old cars such as Mk2 Ford Escorts, Talbot Sunbeams, Renault 5s and Peugeot 205s – particular­ly if they are limited edition or higher spec “hot hatch” models – are hitting the roof.

According to the owner of an East Kilbride-based car restoratio­n business – which is expanding due to soaring demand for its services – some enthusiast­s are happily spending tens of thousands of pounds reviving late 20th-century motors in order to drive them for just a few thousand miles a year, not unlike how collectors of more traditiona­l vintage cars might use their prized motors.

“We are getting a lot more 1980s and 90s cars in for restoratio­n work,” said David Mutch, owner of Clydesdale Classic Cars.

“These are being bought up by people who are now in their 40s, who have disposable income and feel nostalgic for that time. The most common thing I hear is it’s the car that their parents drove.”

In some cases, he added, motorists are swapping their modern cars in favour of greener modes of day-to-day transport and keeping their restored eighties and nineties classic car for a weekend treat.

“One current customer is having his car restored and plans to use it simply for pleasure and will use his bike to get around for the rest of the time,” he said.

“Quite often we find customers are planning to only take their cars out now and again and drive maybe two or three thousand miles a year ,and use public transport for the rest of the time.”

Demand for the 1980s and 90s vehicles has pushed prices to levels that might make their original owners’ eyes water: a basic 1990 Renault 5 Campus, for example, is currently being sold on eBay for more than £4,000.

The same online auction site lists a sportier 1989 Peugeot 205 1.9 Hatchback for almost £16,000.

At Car Cave Scotland in Bonnyrigg near Edinburgh, which specialise­s in Mk1 and Mk2 Ford Escorts, the number of cars sold per month has leapt from around 12 prior to the pandemic to closer to 20 now.

It is currently selling a restoratio­n project W-reg Mk2 Ford Escort Estate – with “scruffy” interior, faded patchwork paintwork and its differenti­al lying on what remains of the front seats, for £3,750.

Meanwhile, a gleaming 1980 V-reg restored Ford Escort Mk2 RS2000 with 90,000 miles on the clock is on sale for just short of £28,000.

Alan Potts, owner of Car Cave Scotland said: “A lot of people were bored during the pandemic. Some people bought motor homes and caravans and others bought a car to work on.

“It’s a bit of nostalgia – everyone wants to go back to what they or their parents had when they were young.

“They might have had a basic model when they were young and couldn’t afford the top model in the range, but they can now.

“We also get a few younger people who are buying cars because it’s what their parents drove.”

Buyers are also looking for models which stand out in the supermarke­t car park, he added.

“Cars today seem to come in just three colours – black, silver and pale grey – and everyone seems to be driving a mini SUV-type car. It’s all a bit samey.”

The rise of the “modern” classic car has been put in the spotlight by programmes like Richard Hammond’s Workshop which follows the former Top Gear presenter’s efforts to establish his own garage specialisi­ng in restoring cars.

One of the first cars the garage worked on was a 1979 Escort RS2000 Mk2 Rallye Sport model, which fetched just over £43,000 when it was sold at auction last September.

Bangers & Cash, on the Yesterday channel, traces the restoratio­n of a car

They are being bought up by people who are now in their 40s, who have disposable income and feel nostalgic for that time

from its sale to being reauctione­d. The latest series, Bangers & Cash: Restoring Classics, has focused on a 1980s Vauxhall Astra GTE, and early-1980s classic Talbot Sunbeam Lotus.

Its high spec meant it was priced at around £7,000 new. However, a similar model today costs around £25,000.

Among the most in-demand 1980s models is a Ford Sierra RS Cosworth: one low-mileage 1988 “barn find” which had been in the owner’s garage for 30 years, recently sold at auction for £80,000.

Soaring interest in cars from the late20th century comes as the clock ticks loudly for future of the combustion engine.

Ford recently confirmed the hugely popular Ford Fiesta is to be discontinu­ed, sparking renewed nostalgia for the hatchback.

Although a profession­al restoratio­n can cost tens of thousands of pounds, some enthusiast­s are also looking to revive the rapidly disappeari­ng art of tinkering with car in the driveway.

“Modern cars are so complicate­d that the average DIY mechanic can’t really do much with them,” said Mr Potts. “But with older cars, the average guy with a bit of knowledge could fix his own car.”

However, it is not for those too used to modern comforts.

“You definitely know when you’re driving one of these older cars – they drive like a 50-year-old car,” he said.

“Drivers are used to the modern stuff like power steering – with these cars you find yourself wrestling with the wheel.”

 ?? ?? David Mutch, right, of Clydesdale Classic Cars says Ford Capris and Escorts are back in vogue
David Mutch, right, of Clydesdale Classic Cars says Ford Capris and Escorts are back in vogue
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 ?? ?? Old Ford models are becoming increasing­ly popular
Old Ford models are becoming increasing­ly popular

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