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Irish motoring in the 1980’s

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Comments

  • Registered Users Posts: 488 ✭✭Fritzbox


    jimgoose wrote: »
    Yes. The Mk. I was built in Dagenham as well. But as far as everyone was concerned back then, Fords were Irish cars! :D

    Indeed, all Fords were Irish! I still remember ads on TV in the 1980s for the Ford Cortina Cashel and Ford Cortina Tara limited editions.


  • Registered Users Posts: 958 ✭✭✭Stratvs


    Started driving 1979. First car was a FIAT 127c just like this
    Had a heated rear window ! No radio so put in a National Panasonic cassette player as didn't want to make any holes for an ariel. Was very important to always keep a pencil in the car. Insurance was with PMPA and collected books and books of green shield stamps from the petrol, til they went.
    £10 filled it for the week. Had matching wooly seat covers and steering wheel cover.:D Happy days.


  • Registered Users Posts: 20,174 ✭✭✭✭jimgoose


    Fritzbox wrote: »
    Indeed, all Fords were Irish! I still remember ads on TV in the 1980s for the Ford Cortina Cashel and Ford Cortina Tara limited editions.

    They were a fine bus too. The Mk. IV was very popular when I were a Gosling. And that reminds me of the father having a loan of a purple Mk. III Cortina with a 2l Pinto engine, bench seats and column shift. Lovely old thing. :cool:


  • Registered Users Posts: 488 ✭✭Fritzbox


    jimgoose wrote: »
    They were a fine bus too. The Mk. III was very popular when I weer a Gosling. And that reminds me of the father having a loan of a purple Mk. I Cortina with a 2l Pinto engine, bench seats and column shift. Lovely old thing. :cool:

    Coke-bottle Cortina from the early seventies?
    My own father also had one from new at that time - 1.3L - no radio, no seatbelts for anyone!


  • Registered Users Posts: 20,174 ✭✭✭✭jimgoose


    Fritzbox wrote: »
    Coke-bottle Cortina from the early seventies?
    My own father also had one from new at that time - 1.3L - no radio, no seatbelts for anyone!

    Yes, my apologies, I meant "Mk. III", that was the "curvy" one for the early '70s. And where I say "Mk. III" above, substitute "Mk. IV"! :D


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  • Registered Users Posts: 4,355 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    Fritzbox wrote: »
    Indeed, all Fords were Irish! I still remember ads on TV in the 1980s for the Ford Cortina Cashel and Ford Cortina Tara limited editions.

    In the UK these run out models were the Ford Cortina Crusader. So, the names had to change coming across the Irish sea.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,355 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    The second gen Fiat 127 was very popular here. The long forgotten Mark III barely sold for a year before the Uno put Fiat back on top in the supermini class. One of the best selling cars of all time across Europe


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,384 ✭✭✭✭road_high


    The second gen Fiat 127 was very popular here. The long forgotten Mark III barely sold for a year before the Uno put Fiat back on top in the supermini class. One of the best selling cars of all time across Europe

    My granny had one. Complete rust bucket in the end but they were good to keep going. Fiat had a great market here and in much of Europe that they just threw away in the early 2000s.


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,384 ✭✭✭✭road_high


    jimgoose wrote: »
    They were a fine bus too. The Mk. IV was very popular when I were a Gosling. And that reminds me of the father having a loan of a purple Mk. III Cortina with a 2l Pinto engine, bench seats and column shift. Lovely old thing. :cool:

    What was the one in the late 80s? There were a few of them about. Wasn't there an extra posh Scorpio version? Our local doctor had one, the time before Mercedes and BMW became attainable.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,355 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    The Scorpio was a posh version of the Granada. Not used on Cortinas


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  • Registered Users Posts: 20,174 ✭✭✭✭jimgoose


    The Scorpio was a posh version of the Granada. Not used on Cortinas

    Correct-and-right - Scorpio was the new Ghia for a while, the top trim-level. Eventually Ford dropped the "Mk. III Granada Scorpio" nomenclature and went with the "Ford Scorpio", which was a very American-looking thing in all the wrong ways - I thought it looked like a Crown Vic who's face had melted. :D


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,622 ✭✭✭10-10-20


    Friends of ours had a rust-brown Austin Maxi. They used to bring it to France on holidays in the early 80's.
    The damn thing didn't have a fuel-gauge, just an orange light which told you that you had only a couple of miles to go before it was empty. Yep, great!

    So when we were driving down through France, we would all have to go in convoy in case the Maxi ran out of petrol and we needed to do a station-run.:p
    So every 50 miles of so the driver would pull over near a French petrol-station, open the fuel cap and shake the car to roughly gauge how much fuel was left, before hopefully heading onwards!


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,355 ✭✭✭Arthur Daley


    Interesting thing about the Maxi, it's big selling point was its cavernous cabin, it was a big spacious family car for the 70s. Even the name tells you it's a big practical thing.

    It's dimensions are actually smaller than the current Ford Fiesta.


  • Registered Users Posts: 943 ✭✭✭Enright


    The parents drove a Peugeot 504, classy car, I got my first car in 1981, a 5 door Renault 6, the gear lever was on the dashboard, I had to keep the car covered during the winter to stop it freezing,


  • Registered Users Posts: 550 ✭✭✭zinzan


    We had a rust holed Fiat 124, the auld lad swapped it for a Triumph Dolomite off a guy leaving the country - I think the 124 was left at the airport!
    Renault 4 Van with seats bolted into the back of it - and then upgraded to the Renault 4 car (fancy!). The van was parked in a hedge where it dissolved.
    Moved onto Subaru L Series (I learned to drive in that) and Volvo 740 SE in the 90s.. what a difference!


  • Registered Users Posts: 555 ✭✭✭Philb76


    Interesting thing about the Maxi, it's big selling point was its cavernous cabin, it was a big spacious family car for the 70s. Even the name tells you it's a big practical thing.

    It's dimensions are actually smaller than the current Ford Fiesta.

    The father had a gold coloured one it was awful but came with a 5 speed gearbox and a wooden dashboard


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,384 ✭✭✭✭road_high


    Lots of Renault 18s

    Citroens were not big sellers, and again a brave and unusual choice in Ireland, until the BX which made a bit of dent in the market. Citroens became a lot more popular in the 90s and 00s in Ireland.
    Peugeots had a reputation as almost like French Mercs, built on the 504 and then the 505, and their diesels would cruise past 100,000 miles even in a 205, which was rare enough mileage at the time. The main reason they prospered and went on to lead todays PSA. I think it's really only in the last 25 years that we routinely expect intergalactic mileage from diesels and big petrols.

    Irish buyers weren’t very keen on Citroen’s- still don’t really, they had a reputation as being too complicated I think. Much more popular on the continent.
    In fairness Renault and Peugeot are very popular here despite being often maligned. Both fairly consistently in the top ten sellers with a solid dealer network


  • Registered Users Posts: 28,324 ✭✭✭✭AndrewJRenko


    You could drive on a provisional licence on your own. I think my old man did it for about 30 years until he was basically made take a test about 10 years ago. Absolute madness in terms of who was allowed to drive back then.

    I don't think it was legal to drive on the provisional. I remember reading the wording on my own, which was that it was OK to drive on your second year of provisional, but not before and not after. It was widely ignored though.
    TrailerBob wrote: »
    Now that I think of it, cars broke down a lot more back then. Reliability is in a different league now. Remember an engine fire in a Beetle, and a Renault 18 that just gave up on the way to bring us to school (sad day!!).

    Yeah, it was very regular to have to give someone a push start on the road. I remember having to park my Opel Kadett on hills for months, to make sure it would start.

    Motoring highlight of the 80s was working in the UK for a few weeks, and getting access to the boss's Granada 2.8 Ghia for the weekends over there. Bit of a change from my Fiat 127 at home. And of course, being the 80s, I had lots of emigrant mates in the UK, so I drove up and down the country each weekend, went on the tremendous piss on the Saturday night, and drove back up north on the Sunday.


  • Registered Users Posts: 5,728 ✭✭✭George Dalton


    colm_mcm wrote: »
    Nissan Bluebirds used to smell amazing inside.


    Cars in general used to smell amazing! New Fords in the 80's smelled lovely, BMWs weren't bad either but nothing could beat the smell of a Montego or Maestro with the velour seats. I saw one at the NEC Classic Car Show in Birmingham a few years ago and had to go over for a quick sniff. The lads still take the p1ss out of me over it :D


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,384 ✭✭✭✭road_high


    Cars in general used to smell amazing! New Fords in the 80's smelled lovely, BMWs weren't bad either but nothing could beat the smell of a Montego or Maestro with the velour seats. I saw one at the NEC Classic Car Show in Birmingham a few years ago and had to go over for a quick sniff. The lads still take the p1ss out of me over it :D

    The Maestro and Montego weren’t especially popular here were they? I never remember many of them about really. Talking late 80s/early 90s when I first started noticing cars.
    One family had a light blue Montego estate in my local village. That was about it though


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,651 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    There were a decent amount of Maestro's and Montego's around. More so if you had a local Rover dealer. We had an Morris Ital for a while. Ours was well maintained and never gave too much trouble.

    For me the 80s where all about the Sierra. It was a watershed going from square boxy shapes to curved. That's probably lost on people who weren't around at the time.

    The other side of it was dominated by cars like the VW Jetta Mk1 and Mk2. We had a series of Mk2 Jetta's until we had the barge like Vento. Parents never went back to VW after that horror.


  • Registered Users Posts: 19,384 ✭✭✭✭road_high


    beauf wrote: »
    There were a decent amount of Maestro's and Montego's around. More so if you had a local Rover dealer. We had an Morris Ital for a while. Ours was well maintained and never gave too much trouble.

    For me the 80s where all about the Sierra. It was a watershed going from square boxy shapes to curved. That's probably lost on people who weren't around at the time.

    The other side of it was dominated by cars like the VW Jetta Mk1 and Mk2. We had a series of Mk2 Jetta's until we had the barge like Vento. Parents never went back to VW after that horror.

    People loved the Vento didn’t they? It was the perfect Irish country car! Very popular in the 90s and well beyond. Or the Venito as my da called it.
    My aunt had a diesel MK 1 Jetta and raved about it for years. Had the mark 2 which she hated- too slow and cumbersome I think.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,651 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    Vento was a barge. Drove like a boat. But huge boot and bomb proof Non Turbo Diesel. But the quality wasn't the same as previous VWs.


  • Registered Users Posts: 3,817 ✭✭✭Darc19


    Not sure if it's been mentioned, but the Renault Fuego was the wannabe yuppie and the Toyota celica was the posh yuppie's car of choice.

    I had Datsun cherry, Ford escorts, golf GTI and then my favorite, Nissan Maxima which just happened to be white - same colour and model as the unmarked garda cars. Now that was FUN!


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 22,651 ✭✭✭✭beauf


    Nissan Maxima and Camry for the time they were fast cars.


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,191 ✭✭✭RandomViewer


    beauf wrote: »
    There were a decent amount of Maestro's and Montego's around. More so if you had a local Rover dealer. We had an Morris Ital for a while. Ours was well maintained and never gave too much trouble.

    For me the 80s where all about the Sierra. It was a watershed going from square boxy shapes to curved. That's probably lost on people who weren't around at the time.

    The other side of it was dominated by cars like the VW Jetta Mk1 and Mk2. We had a series of Mk2 Jetta's until we had the barge like Vento. Parents never went back to VW after that horror.

    Rover 213 would have been the commonest, rust prone but otherwise good wee car (Honda mechanicals) Metros sold okay for a few years until people realised how **** they were


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,191 ✭✭✭RandomViewer


    beauf wrote: »
    Nissan Maxima and Camry for the time they were fast cars.

    First gen Camry would have only slightly bigger than a Carina, Cressida was the Granada rival


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,191 ✭✭✭RandomViewer


    Darc19 wrote: »
    Not sure if it's been mentioned, but the Renault Fuego was the wannabe yuppie and the Toyota celica was the posh yuppie's car of choice.

    I had Datsun cherry, Ford escorts, golf GTI and then my favorite, Nissan Maxima which just happened to be white - same colour and model as the unmarked garda cars. Now that was FUN!

    Fuego was Renault 18, most were running the 1340cc , rear drive Celica would have been scarce ,


  • Registered Users Posts: 6,191 ✭✭✭RandomViewer


    beauf wrote: »
    Vento was a barge. Drove like a boat. But huge boot and bomb proof Non Turbo Diesel. But the quality wasn't the same as previous VWs.

    Vento is a nineties car, not eighties


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  • Registered Users Posts: 6,191 ✭✭✭RandomViewer


    beauf wrote: »
    Nissan Maxima and Camry for the time they were fast cars.

    First gen Camry would have only slightly bigger than a Carina, Cressida was the Granada rival


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