Junkyard Find: 1988 Ford Escort GT

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

Most of the Escort GTs you see these days are the Mazda-based cars that came out starting in the 1991 model year. The first-gen North American Escort, loosely based on its European counterpart, was built from 1981 through 1990, and examples are becoming very rare in wrecking yards. We saw this first-half-of-1988 Escort GT last month, and now I’ve found this “1988.5” model in a Southern California yard.

You could get a 5.0 “HO” V8 in the Mustang and Continental Mark VII, and so Ford just had to label the 1.9 CVH engine as an HO as well. 110 horsepower out of this engine, which was two more than the ’88 Honda Civic Si had.

I am experiencing an 80s flashback, looking at these tape graphics. Makes me want to loot an S&L.

Not much left of the interior. This might have been an interior-parts donor for a nicer GT.

The rear wing, which did a fine job of trapping a couple of decades’ worth of dirt, won’t be going to The Crusher with the rest of the car.






Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • Jdowmiller Jdowmiller on Feb 22, 2015

    Sometime in '92 or '93 - junior year of high school - I picked up a black on gray 1989 GT. I was acutely aware of the superiority of the Civic but by this time the Ford had experienced profound depreciation and the Honda was still out of my price range. I also liked the look of the GT. It was a handsome car at the the time. The interior design was clean and practical. The rear seats folded down and a bike could be fit through the hatch. A short time later, my best friend bought a red on gray '90. We had the only two GTs in the high school parking lot. 115 hp fuck yeah. We drove the absolute crap out of them with our ultimate goal to get the speedo needle to go well beyond that 85 mph mark while careering down deserted Ohio back roads. While my friend's car inexplicably remained free of issues, mine experienced every possible component failure including the motorized shoulder belt getting stuck in the open position. I eventually bought a '94 Ranger 4-cylinder (HA!) and sent the GT on its way to the scrap heap. My friend sold his not long after and bought a Nissan Stanza which was a far superior car. That car experienced some catastrophic failure the origins of which I can no longer remember and my friend bought a '95 Ranger which he still owns and drives to this day.

  • Djfunkmasterg Djfunkmasterg on Mar 03, 2015

    I don't know why people thought these were junkie cars (NON-GT) I always considered them the TIMEX of Cars. I had one as a Winter Rat when I put my Mustang away for the harsh weather and it went on to serve me well for 5+ years just needing brake pads and oil changes. I passed it on to a College age kid for the same amount I paid for it and I kind of miss it.

  • FreedMike I would find it hard to believe that Tesla spent time and money on developing a cheaper model, only to toss that aside in favor of a tech that may or may not ever work right.
  • EBFlex “Tesla’s first-quarter net income dropped a whopping 55 percent”That’s staggering and not an indicator of a market with insatiable demand. These golf cart manufacturers are facing a dark future.
  • MrIcky 2014 Challenger- 97k miles, on 4th set of regular tires and 2nd set of winter tires. 7qts of synthetic every 5k miles. Diff and manual transmission fluid every 30k. aFe dry filter cone wastefully changed yearly but it feels good. umm. cabin filters every so often? Still has original battery. At 100k, it's tune up time, coolant, and I'll have them change the belts and radiator hoses. I have no idea what that totals up to. Doesn't feel excessive.2022 Jeep Gladiator - 15k miles. No maintenance costs yet, going in for my 3rd oil change in next week or so. All my other costs have been optional, so not really maintenance
  • Jalop1991 I always thought the Vinfast name was strange; it should be a used car search site or something.
  • Theflyersfan Here's the link to the VinFast release: https://vingroup.net/en/news/detail/3080/vinfast-officially-signs-agreements-with-12-new-dealers-in-the-usI was looking to see where they are setting up in Kentucky...Bowling Green? Interesting... Surprised it wasn't Louisville or Northern Kentucky. When Tesla opened up the Louisville dealer around 2019 (I believe), sales here exploded and they popped up in a lot of neighborhoods. People had to go to Indy or Cincinnati/Blue Ash to get one. If they manage to salvage their reputation after that quality disaster-filled intro a few months back, they might have a chance. But are people going to be willing to spend over $45,000 for an unknown Vietnamese brand with a puny dealer/service network? And their press photo - oh look, more white generic looking CUVs. Good luck guys. Your launch is going to have to be Lexus in 1989/1990 perfect. Otherwise, let me Google "History of Yugo in the United States" as a reference point.
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