This V8-swapped 1973 Capri Was Built To Carve Corners

02/16/2022
10 min read

This V8-swapped 1973 Capri Was Built To Carve Corners

02/16/2022
10 min read

Jerry LaCoss of Wichita, Kansas says that while heโ€™s always been fascinated by all things mechanical, his interest in sports cars really took shape after he returned home from military service. โ€œI started watching a lot of rally racing and Formula 1,โ€ he recalls. โ€œAnd that sort of spread out into a larger interest in automotive performance. I fell in love with sports cars, but I was also married and weโ€™d just had a child, so I wanted something that would be big enough for a family.โ€


After reading a Road and Track review of the 1972 Capri V6 โ€“ a car which was produced by Ford of Europe in Cologne, Germany and imported into the U.S. โ€“ LaCoss knew heโ€™d found what he was searching for. โ€œThat really fit the bill for me, so I ended up ordering one from my local dealer. I specโ€™d out a red one with a vinyl top and a sunroof, but the dealer told me it would be about three months to get it โ€“ maybe more. A few weeks later, he called me and said that he had a brown one with no sunroof had just hit the dock, and it wasnโ€™t spoken for. I asked him how fast he could get it here. So that was my start with Capris.โ€

While LaCossโ€™ interest in sports cars led to stints in two-seaters like the Honda S2000, Mazda MX-5, and Toyota MR-2 over the ensuing years, Ford Capris of one sort or another have been a part of his stable ever since. โ€œWhile I had that first โ€™72 Capri, I learned a lot about those cars and just enjoyed the heck out of it,โ€ he tells us. โ€œOne day I was at the bank and they happened to have a repossessed โ€™73 Capri there for a couple hundred bucks, so I bought it. Not too long after that I found another one sitting on a used car lot that was only $200, so I bought that one as well. Then one day my childrenโ€™s church pastor called me to say that heโ€™d found a โ€™74 Capri at an auto auction and that no one would even bid on it. He asked if I wanted it. Suddenly I had four Capris, and I started to realize that maybe that was too many.โ€


LaCoss begrudgingly culled the herd. After some deliberation, he ended up keeping the โ€™74 and pulling whatever usable parts he could find from the other three cars before scrapping them. He continued to drive the โ€™74 Capri for a number of years while other vehicles rotated into and out of his garage. โ€œAnd that brings us up to 2013,โ€ he says. โ€œAt that point I was getting ready to retire, and I started looking for a new project that I could build from the ground up. And as it turned out, a good friend in Columbus, Ohio had an ex-drag race Capri for sale. It was just a roller at that point, but it had no rust and a perfectly good body.โ€


LaCoss brought the car home and started designing his plan of attack. โ€œIโ€™d done months of research on parts ahead of time, and who I wanted to work with on the project,โ€ he says. โ€œI had a fabricator and a body shop lined up for the build, and after I did some prep work, we got started.โ€

The project was completed in late 2015, and itโ€™s a very different machine than the Capris that had graced LaCossโ€™s garage previously. Under the hood is a fuel injected, 302-cube V8 crate motor that sends 375 horsepower to the rear wheels through a T-5 five-speed manual gearbox with a McLeod clutch and a B&M short-throw shifter. Air suspension from Ridetech, along with electrically assisted brakes and steering deliver a modernized driving experience, while custom upholstery, Corbeau sport seats, a Kenwood infotainment system, and an AC system from Vintage Air provide the requisite creature comforts.


โ€œThe body kit actually comes from Ford Racing,โ€ LaCoss points out. โ€œFrom 1970 to 1973, Ford had a factory racing effort with the Capri over in Europe. So the fenders, hood, air dam, rear deck and spoiler are all fiberglass Ford parts.โ€ Completing the road race aesthetic is a set of custom 17-inch three-piece โ€œknock offโ€ wheels from Forgeline wrapped in Yokohama high performance rubber.


We caught up with LaCoss at this yearโ€™s Ford Fest, where the Capri ended up taking home two awards and turning plenty of heads along the way. While the coupe has certainly been restored to show-quality state, LaCoss notes that he built this car to be driven. โ€œItโ€™s got an 18 gallon tank and a 3.23 gear in the rear end, and that makes this a great cruiser. Iโ€™ve taken it on a bunch of road trips and weโ€™ve done Power Tour with it. Iโ€™ve put about 25,000 miles on it since it was finished. Thereโ€™s some small chips in the paint and things like that โ€“ the things that come with regular usage. That doesnโ€™t bother me. I just consider those badges of honor.โ€


As for that โ€™74 Capri he had back in the day? Heโ€™s still got it, and he still drives that one, too. โ€œIโ€™ve got some plans for that one as well,โ€ he says. โ€œItโ€™s got a Mustang V6 with a five-speed in it currently, but Iโ€™d like to swap that out for a 2.7-liter EcoBoost V6 and a ten-speed automatic. And that one will be set up for cruising as well. Cars are meant to be used โ€“ if all youโ€™re going to do is put it in your garage, youโ€™ve basically just got a piece of wall art on wheels.โ€

author

254 Posts

photographer

117 Posts