Escort Xr3i

Escort Xr3i




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https://www.ultimatespecs.com/ru/car-specs/Ford/7099/Ford-Escort-V-18-XR3i.html
Ford Escort V 1.8 XR3i Размеры, вес и аэродинамика : Num. of Doors : 3 : Колесная база : 252 cm : …
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=RWzRuVGvxp4
Перевести · 29.08.2012 · top speed and fast acceleration with a 1989 Ford Escort …
2001 Ford Escort XR3i & RS Turbo Overview
Ford Escort XR3i Classic Car Review - Paul Woodford
FOR SALE Superb Classics Stunning 1989 XR3i with low miles - XR3i Specilist Dealer
For Sale Superb Classics 1984 Ford Escort XR3i, only 39k, 1 Owner from new!
Ford Escort XR3i - NOT Just Like A Golf [Why The XR3 Was Britain's Favourite] (1984 XR3i Mk3)
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/XR3i
Ориентировочное время чтения: 9 мин
The first use of the Ford Escort name was for a reduced specification version of the Ford Squire, a 1950s estate car version of the British Ford Anglia 100E.
https://www.ultimatespecs.com/car-specs/Ford/248/Ford-Escort-III-16-XR3i.html
Перевести · With a fuel consumption of 8 litres/100km - 35 mpg UK - 29 mpg US (Average), 0 to 100 km/h (62mph) in 9.7 seconds, a maximum top speed of 116 mph (186 km/h), a curb weight of 2039 lbs (925 kgs), the Escort III 1.6 XR3i …
What engine is in Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i?
The Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i has a Inline 4, Petrol engine with 1598 cm3 / 97.5 cu-in capacity.
How many horsepower (hp) does a 1982 Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i have?
The 1982 Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i has 105 PS / 104 bhp / 77 kW.
How much does a Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i weighs?
The Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i weighs 925 Kg / 2039 lbs.
What is the top speed of a Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i?
The Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i top speed is 186 Km/h / 116 mph.
Is Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i All Wheel Drive (AWD)?
No, the Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i is not All Wheel Drive (AWD). It's Front Wheel Drive (FWD).
Перевести · 01.01.2010 · The Escort has been one of the most popular vehicles ever made, and part of that history is being kept alive through this web site. This Web Site can be made even more popular and helpful, if you help us. If you have some information which you feel will benefit other Escort XR3i …
When did the Ford Escort XR3i come out?
When did the Ford Escort XR3i come out?
It's not just for the boy racer. It's not just for someone who owns an immaculate XR3i, but it's for everyone, young and old. This site has been dedicated to the Ford Escort XR3i. It made it's first appearance back in 1980, after the basic MkIII Escort topped the poles as the best selling family car.
The Escort III model is a car manufactured by Ford, with 3 doors and 5 seats, sold new from year 1982 to 1986, and available after that as a used car. Towing Capacity Max. : How much horsepower does a 1982 Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i have? The 1982 Ford Escort III 1.6 XR3i has 105 PS / 104 bhp / 77 kW horsepower.
www.ultimatespecs.com/car-specs/Ford/24…
This is an early Mk3 Ford Escort XR3i on a Y plate, 1983 finished in black with the red stripe grey velour XR interior. An honest car having covered less than 47000 genuine miles from new with a history file to support the mileage. One previous owner in the log book, this is a rare car with genuine ...
www.carandclassic.co.uk/list/21/escort+xr3i/
This beautiful Mk 5A Escort XR3i is a true unrestored, factory original, survivor car. 1.8 DOHC 16V (130psi) with factory fitted all wheel disc brakes, strut braces front and ... For sale Mk4 Escort XR3i. Detailed description and pictures available by request. It is located in Portugal, close to Porto Airport. You can get a low cost flight.
www.carandclassic.co.uk/list/21/escort+xr3i/
www.performance-car-guide.co.uk/performance-cars/ford-motor-company/xr3i.html
Перевести · 13.05.2013 · Ford Escort XR3i & RS1600i 1981-1993 -The XR3i was preceded by the 1981-1983 carburetted 96bhp XR3 (0-60 in 9.2 secs) and also ran along side for a while …
https://www.ebay.co.uk/b/Ford-Xr3i-Classic-Cars/29755/bn_108381238
апр. 25, 2021 · Ford Xr3i Classic Cars for sal…
https://www.carandclassic.co.uk/list/21/escort+xr3i
Перевести · Here’s my 1988 mk4 escort xr3i It’s got 140.000 miles from new even though the speedo is showing 40.000 but don’t let the mileage put you off as it drives lovely It has no …
https://suchen.mobile.de/auto/ford-escort-cabrio-xr3i.html
Перевести · Jetzt Ford Escort Xr3i Cabrio bei mobile.de kaufen. Finden Sie viele günstige Auto Angebote bei mobile.de – …
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This article is about the European Ford Escorts sold from 1968 to 2004. For the earlier UK Ford Escort and models sold as the "Ford Escort" elsewhere, see Ford Escort (disambiguation).
The Ford Escort is a small family car that was manufactured by Ford of Europe from 1968 until 2000.
In 2014, Ford revived the Escort name for a car based on the second-generation Ford Focus sold on the Chinese market.
The Escort was frequently the best selling car in Britain during the 1980s and 1990s. A total of more than 4.1 million Escorts of all generations were sold there over a period of 33 years.[1]
The first use of the Ford Escort name was for a reduced specification version of the Ford Squire, a 1950s estate car version of the British Ford Anglia 100E.
1972 Ford Escort 1100 L Mark I 2 door saloon
2/4-door saloon
3-door estate
2-door van
0.9 L Crossflow I4
1.1 L Crossflow I4
1.3 L Crossflow I4
1.6 L Crossflow I4
1.6 L Lotus-Ford Twin Cam I4
1.6 L Cosworth BDA I4
1.7 L Cosworth BDB I4
2.0 L Pinto TL20H I4
159.25 in (4,045 mm) (saloon)
160.8 in (4,084 mm) (estate)
The Mark I Ford Escort[4] was introduced in Ireland and the United Kingdom at the end of 1967, making its show debut at the Brussels Motor Show in January 1968.[5] It replaced the successful, long-running Anglia. The Escort was as also presented in Europe as the first passenger car to be developed by the merged Ford of Europe (the Transit van having been the first product of this collaboration). Escort production commenced at the Halewood plant in England during the closing months of 1967, and for left hand drive markets during September 1968 at the Ford plant in Genk.[6] Initially the continental Escorts differed slightly under the skin from the UK built ones. The front suspension and steering gear were differently configured and the brakes were fitted with dual hydraulic circuits; also the wheels fitted on the Genk-built Escorts had wider rims.[7] At the beginning of 1970, continental European production transferred to a new plant on the edge of Saarlouis, West Germany.
The Escort was a commercial success in several parts of western Europe, but nowhere more than in the UK, where the national bestseller of the 1960s, BMC's Austin/Morris 1100 was beginning to show its age while Ford's own Cortina had grown, both in dimensions and in price, beyond the market niche at which it had originally been pitched. It competed with the Vauxhall Viva, and from early 1970 the Rootes Group's Hillman Avenger.
In June 1974, six years into the car's UK introduction, Ford announced the completion of the two millionth Ford Escort, a milestone hitherto unmatched by any Ford model outside the US.[8] It was also stated that 60% of the two million Escorts had been built in Britain.[8][9] In West Germany cars were built at a slower rate of around 150,000 cars per year, slumping to 78,604 in 1974 which was the last year for the Escort Mark I.[10] Many of the German built Escorts were exported, notably to Benelux and Italy; from the West German domestic market perspective the car was cramped and uncomfortable when compared with the well-established and comparably priced Opel Kadett, and it was technically primitive when set against the successful imported Fiat 128 and Renault 12.[11] Subsequent generations of the Escort made up some of the ground foregone by the original model, but in Europe's largest auto-market the Escort sales volumes always came in well behind those of the General Motors Kadett and its Astra successor.
The Escort had conventional rear-wheel drive and a four-speed manual gearbox, or three-speed automatic transmission. The suspension consisted of MacPherson strut front suspension and a simple live axle mounted on leaf springs. The Escort was the first small Ford to use rack-and-pinion steering. The Mark I featured contemporary styling cues in tune with its time: a subtle Detroit-inspired "Coke bottle" waistline and the "dogbone" shaped front grille – arguably the car's main stylistic feature. Similar Coke bottle styling featured in the larger Cortina Mark III (a visually similar car was built in West Germany as the Taunus) launched in 1970.
Initially, the Escort was sold as a two-door saloon (with circular front headlights and rubber flooring on the "De Luxe" model). The "Super" model featured rectangular headlights, carpets, a cigar lighter and a water temperature gauge. A two-door estate was introduced at the end of March 1968 which, with the back seat folded down, provided a 40% increase in maximum load space over the old Anglia 105E estate, according to the manufacturer.[12] The estate featured the same engine options as the saloon, but it also included a larger, 7+1⁄2-inch-diameter (190 mm) clutch, stiffer rear springs and in most configurations slightly larger brake drums or discs than the saloon.[12] A panel van appeared in April 1968 and the 4-door saloon (a bodystyle the Anglia was never available in for UK market) in 1969.
Underneath the bonnet was the Kent Crossflow engine also used in the smallest capacity North American Ford Pinto. Diesel engines on small family cars were rare, and the Escort was no exception, initially featuring only petrol engines – in 1.1 L, and 1.3 L versions. A 940 cc engine was also available in some export markets such as Italy and France. This tiny engine remained popular in Italy, where it was carried over for the Escort Mark II, but in France it was discontinued during 1972.[13]
There was a 1300GT performance version, with a tuned 1.3 L Crossflow (OHV) engine with a Weber carburetor and uprated suspension. This version featured additional instrumentation with a tachometer, battery charge indicator, and oil pressure gauge. The same tuned 1.3 L engine was also used in a variation sold as the Escort Sport, that used the flared front wings from the AVO range of cars, but featured trim from the more basic models. Later, an "executive" version of the Escort was produced known as the "1300E". This featured the same 13" road wheels and flared wings of the Sport, but was trimmed in an upmarket, for that time, fashion with wood trim on the dashboard and door cappings.
A higher performance version for rallies and racing was available, the Escort Twin Cam, built for Group 2 international rallying.[14] It had an engine with a Lotus-made eight-valve twin camshaft head fitted to the 1.5 L non-crossflow block, which had a bigger bore than usual to give a capacity of 1,558 cc. This engine had originally been developed for the Lotus Elan. Production of the Twin Cam, which was originally produced at Halewood, was phased out as the Cosworth-engined RS1600 (RS denoting Rallye Sport) production began. The most famous edition of the Twin Cam was raced on behalf of Ford by Alan Mann Racing in the British Saloon Car Championship in 1968 and 1969, sporting a full Formula 2 Ford FVC 16-valve engine producing over 200 hp. The Escort, driven by Australian driver Frank Gardner went on to comfortably win the 1968 championship.
The Mark I Escorts became successful as a rally car, and they eventually went on to become one of the most successful rally cars of all time.[15] The Ford works team was practically unbeatable in the late 1960s / early 1970s, and arguably the Escort's greatest victory was in the 1970 London to Mexico World Cup Rally, driven by Finnish legend Hannu Mikkola and Swedish co-driver Gunnar Palm. This gave rise to the Escort Mexico (1598cc "crossflow"-engined) special edition road versions in honour of the rally car. Introduced in November 1970, 10,352 Mexico Mark Is were built using bodyshells using additional strengthening panels in high stress areas making them more suitable for competition.[16]
In addition to the Mexico, the RS1600 was developed with a 1,601 cc Cosworth BDA which used a Crossflow block with a 16-valve Cosworth cylinder head, named for "Belt Drive A Series". Both the Mexico and RS1600 were built at Ford's Advanced Vehicle Operations (AVO) facility located at the Aveley Plant in South Essex. As well as higher performance engines and sports suspension, like the Mexico these models featured the strengthened bodyshell.
Ford also produced an RS2000 model as an alternative to the somewhat temperamental RS1600, featuring a 2.0 L Pinto (OHC) engine. This also clocked up some rally and racing victories; and pre-empted the hot hatch market as a desirable but affordable performance road car. Like the Mexico and RS1600, this car was produced at the Aveley plant using the strengthened bodyshell.
The Escort was built in Germany and Britain, as well as in Australia and New Zealand.
Escort 1300 and Deluxe and Super, Manual and Automatic
Escort 1100 L/XL, Manual and Automatic
Escort 1300 L/XL Manual and Automatic
All models 1100 and 1300 were offered in 2 door Saloon, 4 door Saloon and 3 doors Estate versions.
Ford New Zealand's Seaview plant in Lower Hutt built 1.1 and 1.3-litre versions, initially as Deluxe (1.1) and Super (1.3) two-door sedans plus panel vans. The four-door sedan was added in 1970. Trim levels were revised after the 1972 UK facelift with just one run of 1.3XLs (with the GT instrument pack) before these were downgraded to 'L' trim. Base and L trims were offered to the end of the Mk I run. Some 1.6 Mexicos were imported in 1973–74 after the government temporarily freed up import licensing owing to a shortage of new cars. Estate versions were mostly imported.
The Mk I was produced by Ford Australia from 1970 to 1975 as a two- or four-door saloon and as a two-door panel van.[17] 1100 cc and 1300 cc engines were offered, as was the 1558 cc twin cam unit.,[17] the last only in the Escort Twin Cam model, which was renamed the Escort GT 1600 in late 1971.[18] Some 67,146 examples of the Mk I were built in Australia,[17] with local sourcing bringing the Australian content of the vehicles to 85 per cent. In 1975 Ford Australia imported 25 MK1 RS2000 Escorts from England for sale in the local market[19]
Assembly of the Mk I Escort was undertaken by Automotive Industries in Upper Nazareth, in conjunction with the local distributor, Israeli Automotive Corp. Assembly from UK-sourced kits started in April 1968. The last Mk I, a light green 1100cc two-door, was produced on 14 November 1975. A total of 14,905 units were assembled in Israel, including 105 Escort 400 vans.
The Mk I Escort was sold in Japan, imported from the United Kingdom by Kintetsu Motors and was available with the 1.3 L engine in GT trim, and was sold alongside the Ford Cortina and the Ford Capri. Sales were helped by the fact that this generation Escort complied with Japanese government dimension regulations concerning vehicle dimensions and engine displacement. Only the four-door saloon was offered, and this was the only generation available to Japanese buyers. The engine displacement contributed to a lower annual road tax obligation to Japanese buyers which helped sales.
Ford Escort Mark II 2-door saloon (1974-1977)
Halewood, England
Saarlouis, Germany
Cork, Ireland
Homebush, Australia
Nazareth, Israel
Wiri, New Zealand
Amsterdam, Netherlands (1975–1978)
Silverton, Pretoria, South Africa
2/4-door saloon
3-door estate
2-door van
940 cc Crossflow I4 (Italy only)
1.1 L Crossflow I4
1.3 L Crossflow I4
1.6 L Crossflow I4
1.6 L Pinto TL16G I4
1.8 L Cosworth BDE I4
2.0 L Pinto TL20H I4
2.0 L Cosworth BDG I4
156.5 in (3,975 mm) (saloon)[20]
163 in (4,140 mm) (estate)
The squarer-styled Mark II[4] version appeared in January 1975. The first production models had rolled off the production lines on 2 December 1974.
Unlike the first Escort (which was developed by Ford of Britain), the second generation was developed jointly between the UK and Ford of Germany. Codenamed "Brenda" during its development, it used the same mechanical components, floorpan and core structure as the Mark I. The 940 cc engine was still offered in Italy where the smaller engine attracted tax advantages, but in the other larger European markets in Europe it was unavailable. The estate and van versions used the same doors, roof and rear panelwork as the Mark I, but with the Mark II front end and interior.
The car used a revised underbody, which had been introduced as a running change during the last six months production of the Mark I. The rear suspension still sat on leaf springs though some contemporaries such as the Hillman Avenger had moved on to coil springs. The car came in for criticism for its lack of oddments space, with a glove compartment available on only higher end models, and its stalk-mounted horn.[21]
The "L" and "GL" models (2-door, 4-door, estate) were in the mainstream private sector, the "Sport", "RS Mexico", and "RS2000" in the performance market, the "Ghia" (2-door, 4-door) for a hitherto untapped small car luxury market, and "base / Popular" models for the bottom end. Panel-van versions catered to the commercial sector. The 1.6 L (1598 cc/97 CID) engine in the 1975 1.6 Ghia produced 84 hp (63 kW) with 125 N·m (92 ft·lbf) torque and weighed 955 kg (2105 lb).
A cosmetic update was given in 1978 (note that Australia received differing updates - see below), with L models gaining the square headlights (previously exclusive to the GL and Ghia variants) and there was an upgrade in interior and exterior specification for some models. The base spec Popular versions were divided into "Popular" and "Popular Plus", with the former being an "austerity" model with vinyl seats and rubber carpets, the 'Plus' version having a fully trimmed interior. Underneath a wider front track was given.
In 1979 and 1980 three special edition Escorts were launched: the Linnet, Harrier and Goldcrest.
Production ended in Britain in August 1980, other countries following soon after.
The Mk II Escort was assembled at Ford Australia's Homebush Plant, Sydney from March 1975 to 1980 in 2-door and 4-door sedan, and 2-door panel van forms – the estate versions were unavailable to the Australian market.
The sedan models were available in L, XL (later renamed GL) and Ghia forms, and a Sport pack option – similar to the 1300 and 1600 Sport models sold elsewhere. Unlike other markets – likely due to the estate's absence – the van was offered in a higher level of trim – a GL
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Escort Xr3i


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