1988 Ford Sierra L Estate 1.6 petrol

Summary:

An extremely reliable workhorse

Faults:

Alternator motor bearing failed at 162000 miles. Cost £91.60 to replace (parts and labour) at my local garage.

The accelerator grommet wore out at 143,000 miles (a rubber ring that connects the accelerator cable to the engine). Trivial to replace, but a bit alarming in traffic when the accelerator pedal suddenly drops to the floor. Fortunately there were enough revs on idle to get onto the pavement.

Needed a new clutch cable at 112,000 miles. The plastic sleeve where the cable passed through the body from the driver to the engine compartment wore out causing excessive friction and eventually made it very difficult to engage the clutch.

The car needed a new distributor cap and rotor arm at 100,000 and 124,000 miles. This "need" seems to have gone away since I changed garages and the car is running far better.

The heater matrix (box behind dashboard that transfers hot water from the engine cooling system to the car heating system) failed at 98,000 miles. I noticed that it had gone when the heating failed and my feet were in a pool of glycolated water. This has by far been the most expensive repair to the car. £27 for the part and £160 for labour.

The dashboard clock just shows some random LCD elements. It has never worked. I replaced the radio after a break-in a few years ago and we use the radio clock.

The bodywork is beginning to rust. The rear wheel arches and sills show it worst, although there are rust spots on the doors and one big spot at the rear driver's side corner of the roof. The sunroof is also starting to rust. Rust progress is slow, however, and cosmetically the car still looks well.

Other minor, and more usual, things are:

Rear shocks at 82,000 and 155,000 miles.

Front shocks at 114,000 miles.

Rear exhaust silencer at 106,000 and 148,000 miles.

Intermediate exhaust silencer baffle at 112,000 miles.

General Comments:

I switched to Magnatec oil at 127,000 miles and noticed an immediate improvement in performance.

The car is incredibly reliable and apart from a dead battery at 136,000 miles and some odd fuel-related problems (caused the car to stall temporarily) it has never let us down. It starts first time, every time.

The interior has worn extremely well and belies the car's mileage. The six-speaker sound system is excellent.

I'm probably tempting fate with this, but the car is still on the clutch that was in it when I bought it (the car came with some service history, but there is a gap between 52,000 and 65,000 miles).

We do a lot of European driving and the car will do 90 MPH all day on the autobahn. Despite its size (4 m long and 1 tonne) and relatively small engine, it is enjoyable to drive. My wife finds the lack of power steering a shortcoming when manoeuvring in tight spaces.

I manage to get 32-34 miles per gallon in normal driving.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Yes

Review Date: 9th April, 2002

1988 Ford Sierra GLS 2.0 injection

Summary:

A cheap compromise of power and practicality

Faults:

It has been a very reliable car.

There have been problems with the clutch - the cable has snapped several times, but this is because of the age of the mechanism, which is due to be replaced.

However, it suffers quite badly from rust, but very litle of this is structural, only cosmetic.

General Comments:

I love this car! Although beginning to appear dated, I think it looks good and is well designed.

It handles well, accelerates quite quickly and is fast for its age.

The cabin is well laid out and the only criticism I would make is that it has no cup-holders, which is very annoying. It is comfortable and is reasonably luxurious - this specification is one step down from the Ghia and is kitted-out well.

It's cheap to run and there are plenty of spare parts about - plus it's very easy to work on.

Would you buy another car from this manufacturer? Yes

Review Date: 3rd March, 2002