RE: Unique Zinc Yellow Escort RS Cosworth for sale

RE: Unique Zinc Yellow Escort RS Cosworth for sale

Sunday 7th July

Unique Zinc Yellow Escort RS Cosworth for sale

On offer for the first time since being delivered new to Cosworth, here's your chance to own a unicorn fast Ford


All the way back to black Model Ts, plenty of notable Fords have been offered in just one colour. Or not very many at all. The first Focus RS was Imperial Blue only, the second one only offered three colours, the three-door Sierra Cosworth was similar and so on. Bucking the trend somewhat was the Escort RS Cosworth, to this day perhaps the most famous Cossie-badged road car around. Maybe even the best-known Ford Escort, too, but we’ll leave that debate for another day…

Across its five years on sale and assorted special editions, buyers were offered red, black, white, grey, a trio of blues, Mallard Green and the superb Jewel Violet. Not all were offered all at the same time, but it remained a surprisingly broad palette from Ford given its history. Special editions (some offered in the UK, some not) included the Wolf Edition, Martini Racing Edition, Arrows F1 Escort and Monte Carlo, though none are as rare as this one: the only RHD Zinc Yellow Escort RS Cosworth ever made. Fast Ford fans, form an orderly queue. 

Supplied new towards the end of the production run in 1995, this RS has been the property of Cosworth for almost 30 years. In case it wasn’t historically significant enough already. It’s now being sold for the very time since being supplied new by Ward of Wellingborough nearly three decades ago. The advert says this was the only right-hand drive Zinc Yellow one made, ordered through Ford’s Special Vehicle Operations. Given how close the relationship was back in the early '90s, presumably Cosworth was free to choose whichever colour it wanted for its very special Escort.

It’s not clear exactly how the Cossie has been used, though presumably as values started to rise in the past decade or so - and its special status became even more so - it will have been driven less. The odometer is showing almost 30,000 miles, so it won’t have been static all its life. That being said, it presents almost like a museum exhibit, with the original dealer stick and tax disc holder still present. The Zinc Yellow paint has lost none of its impact and the interior looks… well, it looks like the very bland kind of interior Ford specialised in back then. Albeit a beautifully preserved, very original one, complete with cassette player, sunroof and leather Recaros. 

As a late Cossie, this is a small turbo model, typically regarded as the best of the breed. (It’s actually one of very few that got the later Mk6 font on the boot. Very odd to see an ‘Escort RS’ badge like that.) Whether a new owner will want to drive their Cossie much remains to be seen. It’s obviously accrued some miles in its time, but likely when homologation specials weren’t quite so revered - or valuable. The list price in 1994 was £22,050 (it’s not clear what was paid for the special order paint), which is £45k in today’s money. Yet of the nine currently on PH, there’s not a single Escort RS Cosworth for sale at less than £75,995. Both the Jewel Violet Monte Carlos are in six figures. 

The Zinc Yellow car is POA; arguably its unique status makes it hard to value. A comparable Cossie in terms of age and mileage is for sale at £85k, so best consider that the start point. Add to that the Cosworth link and the colour and it’s a full house for fast Ford collectors - who’ll surely be willing to pay for the privilege. If recent results like the £600k RS500 and the Princess Diana Escort are anything to go by, there’s clearly still a lot of demand for the most special example. And a one-off Escort RS owned by Cosworth themselves certainly qualifies on that score.


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Author
Discussion

cerb4.5lee

Original Poster:

31,506 posts

183 months

I remember the days when you could pick a nice one of these up for £12k. If only I knew back then what I know now!

RSTurboPaul

10,798 posts

261 months

I presume the wonky Cosworth badge on the back is standard Ford QC at its finest tongue out

200Plus Club

10,863 posts

281 months

A bit naff in yellow tbh, one off or not.
Someone will happily pay stupid money for it and pack it away for the next 10+yrs. Ideal for trailering to static shows with a set of mirrors underneath it...

Leins

9,550 posts

151 months

I’m not sure yellow would be my first choice for one of these, and I normally like yellow cars

Is that 3rd brake light in the wing standard? Not sure I’ve seen that before, but maybe it was integrated at the end of the production run

GreatScott2016

1,285 posts

91 months

RSTurboPaul said:
I presume the wonky Cosworth badge on the back is standard Ford QC at its finest tongue out
biglaugh I don't think my OCD could live with that. Not sure about yellow though TBH, but lovely to see nonetheless.

Orchardab

462 posts

129 months

Something don’t look right with that exhaust.

Mysstree

484 posts

49 months

Best known Escorts would be the RS2000 and Mexico.

David87

6,701 posts

215 months

I’m sure this has been used in magazine tests in the past. Think I remember a test between a yellow Escort Cosworth and mk2 Focus RS when it came out, maybe in Autocar or something.

Mike1990

991 posts

134 months

Not a fan of colour - Imperial Blue or nothing else for me!


Rob 131 Sport

2,652 posts

55 months

Love the colour and the car. After some poor cars in the mid to late 80’s Ford were really starting to get it together in the early to mid 90’s.

fantheman80

1,509 posts

52 months

I grew up obsessed with the escort cossie and if my numbers come up I will have one, but not in yellow,

Richtea1970

1,215 posts

63 months

RSTurboPaul said:
I presume the wonky Cosworth badge on the back is standard Ford QC at its finest tongue out
To be fair the whole thing looks a bit ‘off’ to me. Drivers door looks a different colour to the rear panel? I’m not sure this is quite as original as they make out.

Turbobanana

6,468 posts

204 months

I love a yellow car, but this just emphasises the dumpy styling of the 90s Escort and highlights the poor panel fit and alignment.

s m

23,392 posts

206 months

David87 said:
I’m sure this has been used in magazine tests in the past. Think I remember a test between a yellow Escort Cosworth and mk2 Focus RS when it came out, maybe in Autocar or something.
That was the old Ford Heritage car to celebrate Acropolis win that had different seats

ChrisCh86

886 posts

47 months

I've never seen one of these with the high level brake light integrated into the wing, that must have come at the end of the production run.

I suspect this will go for well over £100k

Frankychops

672 posts

12 months

These are so over valued. Not a patch on the contemporary Toyota or lancia.

Augustus Windsock

3,404 posts

158 months

I actually saw this yesterday, literally a couple of minutes walk around the corner from my mum’s house.
I actually drove ‘around the block’ to see if my eyes were deceiving me, but then dismissed it as a wrap or respray.
Anyhoo, I’m sure it has its place in Ford history but as others have said, not for me, the colour is very, erm, subjective, and I’m sure someone will feel the compunction to pull the trigger.
If you look elsewhere other than PH there are other Escort Cosworths available for less than the article suggests btw…

loudlashadjuster

5,264 posts

187 months

That high-level brake light also seems off-centre…

It’s a no from me.

Firebobby

594 posts

42 months

It looks a bit "peely wally" in that colour, far to weak IMHO! Even in a stronger colour I wouldn't pay anywhere near the asking price. I recently had a drive in one and was underwhelmed with it. Noisy gravelly engine, it didn't feel particularly quick and the ride was harsher than my 140i on runflats!

Kuwahara

897 posts

21 months

Some yellows work (Renault liquid) and some don’t ….this doesn’t…