Uh-Oh, The New Ford Capri Is An Electric Crossover
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It’s a risky business for a car maker to revive one of its beloved past nameplates and slap it on a car totally different to the original. Yes, nostalgia and heritage are powerful marketing tools, but you risk enraging some of your brand’s die-hards. Ford’s clearly willing to make that sacrifice, because it’s just unveiled this: the new Ford Capri.
Yep, a name once given to a brawny, working-class hero coupe with the option of a punchy V6 now sits on an electric crossover. Ford may want to limit its social media comments for a while.
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The name’s going to inevitably define online discourse around this car, just as it did when the Mustang and Puma names were given to crossovers (potentially more so this time – at least the old-school Mustang remains on sale alongside the Mach-E, and the revived Puma offered a lot of fun in ST guise until it became a downsized, auto-only disappointment).
The thing is, it’s Ford’s name to do as it pleases with, and the slightly unfortunate truth is that there’s more money these days in sloping-roofed crossovers than fun, punchy sports cars. So that aside, what are we actually looking at here?
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Like its close sibling, the Explorer, the Capri is based on Volkswagen’s MEB electric car platform. Where the Explorer is basically a VW ID4 with some butch, American-style looks, the Capri is an ID5 wearing a slightly retro, sporty suit.
As such, it comes with two powertrain options, both shared with the equivalent VW: a single-motor, rear-wheel drive version with 282bhp, or a dual-motor, four-wheel drive setup with 335bhp. The rear-drive car will accelerate to 62mph in 6.4 seconds, while the four-wheel drive one drops that to 5.3 seconds. Both get a limited 112mph max speed.
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Unsurprisingly, opting for the more powerful car means sacrificing some range: the single-motor car will travel a quoted 390 miles on a charge, while the dual-motor version can manage 368 according to the official numbers. Both versions will charge from 10 to 80 per cent in under 30 minutes on a rapid charger.
Both drivetrains can be paired with one of two trim levels. The basic car, the Capri Select, gets standard heated front seats with a massage function for the driver, and a 14.6-inch portrait infotainment screen which can be slid up and down to suit driver preference and to reveal a hidden storage cubby.
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The Capri Premium, meanwhile, throws in 20-inch wheels, a Bang & Olufsen sound system, and a few other niceties.
Right now, pricing kicks off at £48,075. Further down the line, less powerful, cheaper versions will arrive. Ford reckons the first cars will be with UK customers in mid-autumn this year.
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