Ford Capri
The Ford Capri is a car which was built by Ford of Europe from 1968 to 1986. It is a fastback coupé and was designed by Philip T. Clark, who had been involved in the design of the Ford Mustang. It used the mechanical components from the Mk2 Ford Cortina and was intended as the European equivalent of the Ford Mustang. The Capri went on to be highly successful for Ford, selling nearly 1.9 million units in its lifetime. A wide variety of engines were used in the car throughout its production lifespan, which included V6 engines named Essex and Cologne at the top of the range, while the straight-four (Kent) and V4 (Taunus) engines were used in lower-specification models. Although the Capri was not officially replaced, the second-generation Probe was effectively its replacement after the later car's introduction to the European market in 1994.
Text adapted from “Ford Capri” on Wikipedia ↗ · CC BY-SA 4.0 ↗ · retrieved 2026-07
Contains public sector information licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0 · DVLA VEH0124 ↗
Contemporaries
Matched on body class, era and origin from register data — never hand-picked.
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