By on November 3, 2014

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Aside from the Ford Probe/Mazda MX-6, the collaboration between the Blue Oval and the pride of Hiroshima didn’t produce much in the way of performance cars. But a little know rebadge effort did give Ford a 4WD, rally-derived pocket rocket.

As an attempt by Ford to break into the Japanese market, Ford leveraged their partnership with Mazda to build cars like the Laser and Telstar, which used Mazda mechanicals in an effort to build right-sized cars that would appeal to Japanese consumers. The Laser was also exported to select markets like Australia and New Zealand.

A performance trim, dubbed the TX3, was offered, featuring the Mazda B6 and BP twincam motors used in the Miata and hot versions of the 323. But the TX3 Turbo and Turbo 4WD were the real stars, offering the same running gear and performace as the Mazda 323 GTX. While they offered the B6T and BPT engines of our 323 GTX (and the JDM-only second generation, which used a 1.8L turbo mill), they also suffered from fragile drivelines and uncaring owners.

The Ford Laser TX3 is but a footnote in the canon of Japanese performance cars. Nevertheless, its an under-appreciated bright spot in an ultimately doomed partnership. The similarity between the two cars echoes the near identical nature of the Subaru BRZ and Toyota GT86 – but pre-dated even Subaru’s own 4WD turbocharged efforts by a good 5-10 years.

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28 Comments on “Badge Engineering Gone Right: The Ford Laser TX3...”


  • avatar
    PrincipalDan

    Ohhhhhhhhhhh Sweet. Another cool car we in the U.S.A. never got.

  • avatar
    CoreyDL

    Cover up the front 60% of the car, and what do ya get? Isuzu Piazza/I-Mark.

    Is this a Guigiaro design? It smacks of him.

  • avatar
    raresleeper

    323 meets Sierra Cosworth.

  • avatar
    Drewlssix

    I have a JDM GTR transmission in my garage waiting for an appropriate project car. AWD mx3s tracers and capris have been done. Along with drop in swaps in the rare 4wd protege.

  • avatar
    rosco83

    “The Ford Laser TX3 is but a footnote in the canon of Japanese performance cars. Nevertheless, its an under-appreciated bright spot in an ultimately doomed partnership. The similarity between the two cars echoes the near identical nature of the Subaru BRZ and Toyota GT86 – but pre-dated even Subaru’s own 4WD turbocharged efforts by a good 5-10 years.”

    Subaru had the Leone 4wd Turbo model (circa 1983) prior to the 323/Laser Turbo 4WD models (circa 1985).

    • 0 avatar
      mattmers

      I just logged into say the same thing. I was like wait, I know Subaru has been playing with AWd/4wd since the early 80s and and turbos just as long. Then I remembered the epic “TURBO 4×4” logo I saw on them. I raced to wikipedia and then back to log in.

  • avatar
    MPAVictoria

    Love, love, love those white wheels.

  • avatar
    dragthemagicpuffin

    Yeah! This!

    Back in high school my first car was a ’93 Escort GT, another Ford/Mazda lovechild and a totally underappreciated hot hatch. It was built on the 323/Protege chassis with the Mazda BP DOHC I4 mentioned above. It was always overlooked as “LOL a performance Escort?” but it was quicker than any Civic, Celica, GTI, etc. that I ever lined up with.

    Cars like the 323 GTX and the Laser were legendary among the online Escort enthusiast crowd (laugh all you want). IIRC, a J-spec Mazda BP-T could be had for under $2,000 and could be easily swapped into an Escort GT with only a couple minor modifications to the wiring, which would give you a 2400-lbs turbo hatch with 200+ hp and a sporty Mazda suspension. Pretty damn sweet, but alas it was still just a stupid Escort.

  • avatar
    MPAVictoria

    Apparently Tom Magliozzi, co-host of Car Talk, has died of complications from an illness. I loved those guys. Such a great sense of humour and some good advice.

  • avatar
    wmba

    Even Toyota had a 4WD Corolla WRC car from 1997 to 1999, not unlike this thinly disguised Mazda.

    http://www.rallycars.com/Cars/Toyota_GT4/Corolla_WRC.html

  • avatar
    Acubra

    Ford Telstar, as well as its sister cars from Mazda (Capella sedan and wagon) have never been a good seller there, even in its home prefecture.
    The biggest reason being its excessive-for-Japan width, pushing it outside of 5 Number class (less than 1700 mm) and correspondingly making its taxes too heavy for a mass buyer.

  • avatar
    Big Al from Oz

    These were relatively common in Australia a couple of decades ago.

    From what I’ve read they were quite a quick vehicle for their time.

    With some simple changes and modifications they did look very nice.

    But the V8 guys thought the people who bought and drove these were from the hair dresser set.

  • avatar

    Reminds me of the Ford C1 platform’s extended family:
    Focus (all versions, up through RS), Ford Escape/Kuga, Transit Connect
    Mazda3 (up through ‘Speed3), Mazda5
    Volvo C30, S40 and V50 (up through T5 versions of all)

    If you cut a driveshaft hump, you could conceivably build an AWD turbo Mazda5 with multiple options for a motor.

  • avatar
    Bee

    Didn’t we get this car as the plebian first gen Mercury Tracer?

    • 0 avatar
      Lie2me

      “The Tracer was introduced in 1987 for the 1988 model year. It was a rebadged version of the Ford Laser model already sold in Asia and Australia, which was itself a restyled Mazda 323.” – Wikipedia

  • avatar
    Athos Nobile

    This is what I’ve seen here on the streets. VERY rarely

    http://www.carsales.com.au/private/details/Ford-Laser-1991/SSE-AD-2919235/?Cr=0&sdmvc=1

    And the regular Lasers from this model also have nicer engines than their US counterparts.

  • avatar
    PonchoIndian

    Subaru had turbos in the early 80’s.

    I had a teacher that had a 323 GTX. I remember it being a pretty cool little car that stood out in the parking lot. I haven’t seen another one for a good 20+ years.

    • 0 avatar
      raresleeper

      Those early Subaru’s always had a thing for rust.

      They were quite exclusive over the years. Just about Hen’s Teeth now, if there’s anything left of them.

      Perhaps a fine citizen of Colorado will clarify. The State of Colorado is Subaru Central.

  • avatar
    Robert Gordon

    “The Laser was also exported to select markets like Australia and New Zealand.”

    Actually they were made there!

  • avatar
    outback_ute

    Was there a second generation 323 GTX? There was a second generation TX3 Turbo 4wd, sold in Australia. At the 1991 Bathurst 12 Hour production car race one of these (2nd gen car) came 2nd outright.

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