Why we’re running it: In the absence of a new RS, is the latest Focus ST good enough to be considered a credible flagship fast Ford hatchback?
Month 4 - Month 3 - Month 2 - Month 1 - Specs
Life with a Ford Focus ST: Month 4
Ford meets Honda for another hot hatch showdown - 25 November 2020
With the Focus ST fresh from a surprising yet convincing win over the new Volkswagen Golf GTI and having already put a V8 Mustang back in its box, I pitched it against my favourite hot hatch, the Honda Civic Type R. Could it claim this most prized scalp? Er, no. Not as a thing to drive, at least, but it was a very close contest in all-round terms.
Mileage: 4444
Ford’s most potent take on its family hatch has a fine engine at heart - 21 October 2020
Engines in fast hatchbacks are curious things. Today’s turbo technology means we can now prise huge power from their necessarily small capacities and install them in relatively affordable packages, so we tend to forgive them their faults. So what if they have a peaky delivery and sound rubbish? For that much power, and for this much money, what did you expect?
Which is just one more somewhat unexpected reason why I’m finding myself getting on with this Focus ST so well. Under its bonnet is anything other than just another hot hatchback meat-and-two-veg lump of high-output, forced-induction mediocrity. In this application it is actually quite brilliant.
Context is everything. This engine is also offered in the Mustang coupé. In that car, and despite it being presented in a more powerful state of tune, you cannot help concluding that this is the engine you have to have simply to keep your tax and fuel bills under control, when the thumping, thundering V8 is, of course, the motor you would choose in a heartbeat if only you could.
In the Focus, it provides no such dilemmas. There’s plenty to like here, most obviously its sound, which has such a characterful edge you can find yourself wondering if there are five cylinders under the bonnet rather than the claimed four. There are not.
But I like also that it’s not a very stressed motor. It has 276bhp, which is a little down on the 300bhp par for this kind of car, yet it comes from a somewhat bigger capacity of 2.3 litres rather than the 2.0-litre norm. And far from this being evidence of Ford not being on top of its game, it simply indicates a different, more subtle and more effective approach. Because while, yes, it has less power than the acknowledged leaders of this field, the Volkswagen Golf R and Honda Civic Type R, it actually has more torque than both, and when you accelerate it is torque, not power, that you feel. And it has a higher compression ratio than these rivals, so there’s less lag, too.
Join the debate
Add your comment
Average MPG?
In each report, can you please let us know your average MPG for the month - knowing a real world figure is very useful.
And in keeping with Mr F's normal eloquence and brevity, can we henceforce ban the irksome and estate agent-esque phrase 'prior to' - the word 'before' will suffice. Ta :)
Fiesta XR2, why? The whole
Fiesta XR2, why? The whole point of a car like this is driver engagement!
The fact that an automatic st exists is deeply worrisome to me, the manual gearbox is an endangered species; just try buying a 3 series without an auto box, you won’t get beyond a 318d saloon.
You know the standards of Autocar
have been drastically reduced, when the monthly report of a long term test is a presence of water dripping from the exhaust.. Did Andrew Frankel actually drive the car and write this, or was it the office junior?