Unique Cars

FORD FALCON EB GT

25 YEARS AFTER THE XR GT THE EB RETURNED TO ITS GT ROOTS

-

Launched in 1992, it seems to have taken the EB GT Falcon forever to get on the collector radar. However now that it is, be warned the prices will – over the long term and ignoring the odd dip in the economy – continue to firm up. It may be the XYs of this world that are demanding telephone number prices right now, but it’s the EBs that hold appeal for a generation that grew up with them and for whom the era has some real meaning.

The late Howard Marsden – head of Tickford Product Planning at the time – was keen to point out at the launch of this car that manufactur­ers no longer were obliged to build homologati­on specials, so the EB GT was always a road car first and foremost. In that respect, it could draw a clear line to the first XR GT, launched 25 years earlier.

While the car shared its shape with the Ford V8 Supercars of the day – something that will help its value long-term – it was really a quick luxury car, or Grand Tourer in the truest sense, rather than a thinly-disguised production racer.

The five-litre powerplant claimed a healthy 200kW at 5250rpm and a torque figure of 420Nm at 4000. Top speed was around 230km/h and a standing quarter was achieved in 15.2 sec. In truth, its contempora­ry the S-XR6 could give it a serious nudge, but that wasn’t the point. Ford fans were ver y pleased to have the V8 cars in the line-up, particular­ly in anything with reintroduc­ed GT badging. And it made all the

right noises when you stepped on the loud pedal.

A distinctiv­e body kit including bonnet scoop, rear wing and side skirts bulked out the monster, while a lowered ride height and distinctiv­e wheels with f lares on the guards gave it the right stance.

Inside it was more of a mailed fist in a silk glove approach: leather seating and walnut in the dash.

With developmen­t by Tickford, this was something a bit special. The ride was set to be comfortabl­e rather than race-track harsh and overall it gave the impression of being a quick point-to-point car.

Three colours were available (blue, black and red) while you could option for an auto transmissi­on rather than the five-speed manual.

For reasons which are difficult to explain, we’ve seen prices of these cars languishin­g in the doldrums for many years. Certainly the financial crash of a decade ago didn’t help and nor did the inf lux in cheap and serviceabl­e new cars with ultra-long warranties, They made it a whole lot harder to justif y owning an older V8 at a time when fuel prices were breaking records

With age comes a little more dignity, apparently. At 25 years the GT is just old enough to be put on club plates in one or two places, while it’s finding a new audience that now has the cash to consider buying one as a toy/collectibl­e/ investment.

A year ago, you might have scratched up a decent one for $25k, but that opportunit­y seems to be slipping away. Mint examples are hitting the $40k mark while $35k should find you a good tidy one.

“IT MADE ALL THE RIGHT NOISES WHEN YOU STEPPED ON THE LOUD PEDAL”

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia