It’s unsurprising, then, that Thornley Kelham is currently offering an 8721km Lancia Delta Integrale Evo ‘Martini 5’ for £115k, or that Silverstone made £114,750 for an 11,000-mile Ford Sierra RS 500 Cosworth in July, while rival auction house Historics sold an E30 BMW M3 Evo 3 last August for £78,400.
And if the M3 sounds cheap in this company, bear in mind that the car in question had covered some 250,000km.
‘The BMW’s clock still ticks with the same quiet precision of 1985, yet time has stood still’
If such sky-high prices sound like a depressing repetition of the spike in values of 1960s classic cars, there are cheaper cars out there that have yet to take off, but if you’re tempted, don’t hang about.
“Things are starting to move when cars reach 20 years old,” says CCA’s Simon Langsdale, who handled the sale of this BMW 6 Series.
“Performance models are what everyone wants. Fast Fords are increasingly popular, but still have potential to climb; the Escort Cosworth, for example, has yet to achieve the same level of collectability as the Sierra, but with time I think it will so it’s one to watch.
“Sapphire Cosworths are also being pulled up – we recently consigned a 29,000-mile 4x4 with a £25-30k estimate.
“I’d also keep an eye on hot hatches such as the Volkswagen Golf GTI and 205 GTI, both of which are iconic ’80s models, and all versions of the BMW E30 – especially the 325i Sport.
“The Porsche 928 is also starting to get noticed after being overlooked for too long.
“With all of these cars, buyers are looking for quality and mileage. People want the best examples, and that’s reflected in the prices.
“Top-class restorations are hard to achieve with cars of this era because the parts supply is nothing like as good as for favourites from the ’60s such as Jaguars and MGs, so properly rebuilt examples are attracting interest just as much as original vehicles.
“There’s definitely a market for both.”
So many aspects of the 1980s and early ’90s seem dreadfully vulgar today, but spend time with a classic car such as this magnificent BMW and you’re reminded that not everything about that era was awful.
“A lot of ’80s cars were rubbish,” concludes Lord Pembroke, “but the best ones really are brilliant.”
The ’80s, ladies and gentlemen, are back with a vengeance.
Images: Tony Baker
This was first in our October 2017 magazine and has been published with light edits; all information was correct at the date of original publication
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Malcolm Thorne
Malcolm Thorne is a contributor to – and former Deputy Editor of – Classic & Sports Car