Junkyard Find: 1978 Ford Fiesta

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

The Ford Fiesta story is an interesting one, with this car being a huge gamble for Ford’s global operations back in the 1970s. This car was intended for the European market from day one, but a fair number of Mk1 Fiestas were sold the United States for the 1978 through 1981 model years (eventually, the Mazda-designed/Kia-built Ford Festiva filled the US-market Ford lineup spot vacated by the Fiesta. These cars have been rare to the point of near-extinction for decades now, being disposable cheapo commuters and all, but they do show up from time to time in self-serve wrecking yards. I found this ’78 Fiesta Sport in Denver a couple years back, and last month I spotted today’s find in Northern California.

We have a handful of semi-modified Mk1 Fiestas in the 24 Hours of LeMons, and they do pretty well on a road course.

These cars had interiors that were no-frills even by Malaise Era subcompact standards.

American Fiestas got the 1.6 liter version of the Kent pushrod four, which made 66 horsepower.

This one has a Realistic AM/FM radio installed in whatever you call a glovebox with no lid.

Do real aviators also drive Fiestas?

0 to 50 in just 8.8 seconds. The fact that they used a 0-50 standard speaks volumes about 1978.

No baby ever held the road better!







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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  • Rconwath Rconwath on Jul 20, 2014

    Just wondering if anyone knows which Northern California junkyard this car is/was sitting in?

  • Clashboy594 Clashboy594 on Feb 22, 2016

    Dad had a 78. In yellow with the black stripe. I loved it. The fun-est car to drive. Would blow away most cars on the green light. He turned it in on a clunky Ford Tempo in 81. He had promised to let me buy it; but, I guess the lure of the trade in was too great. Still hurts. I would have kept the car to this day !!

  • EBFlex No loss. Ford hasn't had a nice looking vehicle in a very long time.
  • FreedMike Makes perfect sense. Petroleum companies are the ones who have the most to lose from people switching to EVs. Every one sold is a car they don't get to sell fuel for anymore. Might as well cater to those customers too. At some point, petroleum companies would be wise to make the swtich from selling gas to selling ENERGY, and one of those energies could be electricity. Good business is where you find it, guys.
  • Golden2husky 2014 Vette, just front tires so far. Acura TL is a recent acquisition so no expenses yet though the passenger window reverses all the time for no reason. 2002 Buick was mostly trouble free until its 21st birthday. Last year brought five repairs, three of which were window regulator issues. I just had a tie rod separation due to an inproper wheel alignment that had too few threads in the outer tie rod end. Good thing that happened at low speed. No fun when you can't steer....
  • JK Savoy Blue is a thing, but Sestriere White? Sestriere is a ski town near Turin, so I guess it meant to conjure up thoughts of snow. Pretty car. I hope Pininfarina has success. The industry in and around Turin has taken a big hit and is a shadow of its former self.
  • Ravenuer My 2023 CRV EX, 6 mo old, 4800 miles: $0.
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