Mark III (1985–94)
In April 1985 the third-generation car arrived, which was essentially a rebadged Ford Scorpio, the Granada name being used in the
United Kingdom and Republic of Ireland only, with the Scorpio badge (which covered the whole range in Continental Europe) being
reserved for the top-range versions. The Mark III Granada was unique in being the first European volume production model with
anti-lock brakes fitted as standard across the range.
Engine options included the familiar SOHC Pinto engine, in either tax-barrier undercutting 1.8 L form, or a more powerful 2 litre
version with fuel injection available. The Cologne V6 engines were carried over from the previous range in short-lived (and not much
more powerful than the 2 L Pinto) 2.4 L, and 2.8 L (later 2.9 L) capacities. In 1991 A new range-topping vehicle was introduced, the
Scorpio 24-valve. It featured a 2.9 L Cologne engine that had been extensively re-worked by Cosworth Engineering and featured quad
camshafts and 24 valves, enough for 200 bhp (150 kW). According to Ford this gavea 0-60 mph time of 8.1 seconds and top speed of
140 mph (230 km/h).
This version of the Granada continued the "Ford family" styling concept from the previous versions; this time the car superficially
resembled a larger version of the Cortina's successor, the Ford Sierra.
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