Ford Focus ST
Is this just a car for wannabe racers? Andrew Noakes gets behind the wheel to find out
Ford Focus ST
There’s always been something about fast Fords that makes people take a second look. Something about the blue oval which makes a performance car seem attainable, maybe. Or perhaps Ford just do a good job of appealing to most of the people, most of the time. Whatever the reason, Ford’s latest hot-shot hatchback, the Focus ST, turns more than its share of heads – even when the Electric Orange of the first press cars and the TV ads is swapped for a slightly more sober metallic blue, as on our test car.
How does it look?
Colour apart, it’s the ST’s wheels which make the biggest visual impression. Years ago, Ford took a side-long look at Porsche’s 928 before it came up with the ‘telephone dial’ XR3 wheel, but this time the inspiration is from Italy: the ST wears Gallardo-esque 8x18in five-spokes, wrapped in slivers of Continental rubber, which fill the arches to perfection.
Other external changes are limited to sill mouldings and deeper bumpers carrying lamp units edged with brushed aluminium, the rear bumper also incorporating spurious sculpting intended to mimic a diffuser.
Inside you find grippy Recaro sports seats, either in boring black or with bright contrast trim. The rest of the interior, like that on other Foci, mostly feels like a high-quality job, though if you have an eye for detail it won’t be long before you spot some rough edges. Never mind: the point of this car is how it drives.
Engine
Up front sits a turbocharged, 2.5-litre in-line five which Ford calls the Duratec ST. It’s a revamped Volvo T5 motor with new injectors, remapped ignition, and a less massive flywheel, all of which mean the ST motor responds more crisply to throttle inputs – a rare pleasure in a turbo engine. Mash the pedal into the carpet until the silver-rimmed rev counter hits 6,000rpm and you will have 222bhp at your disposal, enough to propel the ST from rest to 60mph in 6.5 seconds and go on to almost 150mph.
Yet, impressive as these headline figures are, the real story of the ST is not its outright performance, but the way it delivers.
Maximum torque – 236lbft is available at just 1,600rpm, and the curve is flat all the way to 4,000rpm. On the road the ST seems happy to pull from any speed in any gear. Overtaking is swift and easy, even if you decide against a down-change and let the torque curve do the work. All the time you are accompanied by a quattro-esque straight-five howl through the twin centre-exit exhausts. Beyond 5,000rpm the engine begins to sound strained, but there’s rarely any need to use that many revs: if you do you’ll generally be travelling so fast the noise won’t be your primary concern.
Chassis
The ST sits 15mm lower than the rest of the range, on springs which are 30 per cent stiffer at each corner. There’s also a fatter rear anti-roll bar, and a strut brace between the suspension towers to tighten up the front end. The ride is firm but rarely harsh, and body control is first class: through a chicane or cresting a rise the ST resists sway and float, almost as though it knows which way the road is about to go as well as you do.
Find some smooth, dry tarmac, and the chassis allows you to exploit that responsive engine to the utmost. You can pour on the power on the exit of a corner without triggering massive understeer or electronic intrusion from the ESP system, and even full-bore standing starts barely get the electronic nanny’s light flickering as the ST rockets away. Without ESP -- a £250 option, and it comes with an ‘off’ switch -- rapid getaways need careful throttle and clutch control to avoid epic wheelspin.
But funnelling so much urge through the front wheels was never going to be easy. Throw bumps, cambers and rain into the mix – and they comprised the better part of our time with the car – and the ST needs a firm hand to keep it on course. It’ll happily follow a camber as it accelerates, or dart from side to side over rippled tarmac with the steering wheel writhing away in your hands. On a greasy road the ESP system curtails hooligan getaways entirely if it detects the onset of serious wheelspin, throttling back the turbo five so much it feels like you’ve blundered into the rev-limiter.
Bags of character
As an all-road, all-weather, A-to-B tool the Focus ST can’t match the surefootedness of (more expensive) four-wheel-drive rivals. But it’s not that kind of car. Delivering turbocharged grunt to all four wheels might make it easier to deploy more power more of the time, but that doesn’t necessarily make for more fun behind the wheel. Clinical efficiency is all very well, but the ST has something that’s far rarer among modern cars, and that’s character. It’s genuinely fun to drive, because it demands and responds to the involvement of the driver.
It’s also something of a bargain. If you can live without our test car’s ST-2 pack (£1,000-worth of Xenon lamps, heated screen and MP3-playing head unit) a three-door Focus ST starts at £17,495. Its biggest rival, the unruly 240bhp Astra VXR, is better equipped as standard, but you can add quite a few items from the ST’s lengthy options lists before you get near the Astra’s £18,995 list price.
Or you can spend the difference making the ST even better: Graham Goode Racing, legendary tweaker of Sierra and Escort Cosworths, Imprezas and the previous-generation Focus RS is already at work on the engine and brakes.
But even in standard form, it’s worth a second look.
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wab172uk said:
Now give it 4wd and 300+ BHP. Call it the RS, and I'll consider one.
Even better, stick a Cosworth lump in it.
I'd say it's more likely to get a modular V8 and RWD than go back to the old pinto based YB. Considering how much power some of those swedes are getting out of the Volvo engines the new engine should be more than a match for the old cossie lump.
Anyway if you want one (the waiting lists are bad) I know where there are 2 brand new Uk ones available !!
Personally I'd of had the Golf GTi and then visited the turbo shop. Much more subtle and grown up & the resale value will hold much better.
S2 Giles said:
Personally I'd of had the Golf GTi and then visited the turbo shop. Much more subtle and grown up & the resale value will hold much better.
It might hold value better in % terms but not in real money.
To spec a Golf GTI to the same as my ST2 you're looking at £22.5k. Say the Golf holds onto 50% of its value over 3 years, you need the Focus to retain just 40% of its list price to drop the same £11k (not even factoring interest charges). I very much doubt that there will be a 10% difference in retained value, especially with the favourable reviews the ST has received.
And then you need to consider those who've paid under list for an ST like mine with a £2.5k discount.
The GTI is a very good car and a return to the good old days for VW. If the GTI and ST cost the same and depreciation wasn't an issue I'd have had a very difficult decision. But when you're looking at £6.5k more...
Golf is very grown up - but is over priced, underspecced and (maybe) a little too boring?
Megane has excellent mid-range, but just isn't the whole package (good grip and grunt, poor quality etc....)
Citroen C4VTS was SLOW. Not bad looking and some interesting ideas inside
Astra VXR is a typical old school hot hatch. It is fast, but seriously unruly and ultra twitchy on the power.
Skoda Octy VRS. The new one is pretty good but it is bigger, heavier and slower than golf and really is a more grown up choice again. Not much fun, really.
Only the new Civic Typre-R and new Seat Leon Cupra on the horizon, but we'll have to wait and see...
Let's see how the ST handles a few exta "optimised" horses.... I'll let you know!!
Good car to drive though - Great sounding engine - As highlighted in the review it is VERY unpleasant in the wet and/or on a bumpy road. At the end of the day it still only a front driver hatch, nothing wront with that but it does not defy the laws of physics.
nickfrog said:
There is no waiting list on an ST - Otherwise there would not be such big discounts
The waiting list for ordering a new ST through a main dealer currently stands at 6 months as demand has completely outstripped supply. The discounts offered by dealers are for vehicles in stock and pre-registered and very few have any options above the base spec.
The discounts offered by online brokers are paper (or should that be pixel?) discounts. There are people who ordered their cars in Nov/Dec and they still haven't been given a build date, let alone delivery dates. Ford have effectively closed the fleet discount loophole and have refused to supply the cars. I am one of the very fortunate ones who've managed to get a car via the web and even then it was only because I altered my order.
nickfrog said:
The guy who mentionned the need to spec up a Golf to get to ST2 level has missed the point. Extras are worth next to nothing come resale time so anyone with half a brain would simply buy a Golf with very ltd extras.
I think you may have missed the point. Some people (myself included) want metallic paint, 18'' wheels, xenon headlamps, mp3 stereo etc. As you so eloquently put, the ST and GTI are only front drive hatches, and neither will been bought by people as an out and out sports car so practicality and creature comforts are actually rather important. I'd be very surprised if there are any bargain spec Golf GTI's out there, even driven by people with half a brain.
And by the way, the ST might have its faults but being VERY unpleasant in the wet is not one of them. Did you see it on Top Gear where it had so much grip it cocked the rear wheel in the soaking wet? Or how about when Autocar tested it round the Millbrook wet testing track? It was the quickest car they've tested. Not just the quickest hot hatch, the quickest car they've ever tested humbling a 997S and AMV8.
>> Edited by thekirbyfake on Friday 21st April 11:28
thekirbyfake said:
nickfrog said:
There is no waiting list on an ST - Otherwise there would not be such big discounts
The waiting list for ordering a new ST through a main dealer currently stands at 6 months as demand has completely outstripped supply. The discounts offered by dealers are for vehicles in stock and pre-registered and very few have any options above the base spec.
The discounts offered by online brokers are paper (or should that be pixel?) discounts. There are people who ordered their cars in Nov/Dec and they still haven't been given a build date, let alone delivery dates. Ford have effectively closed the fleet discount loophole and have refused to supply the cars. I am one of the very fortunate ones who've managed to get a car via the web and even then it was only because I altered my order.
nickfrog said:
The guy who mentionned the need to spec up a Golf to get to ST2 level has missed the point. Extras are worth next to nothing come resale time so anyone with half a brain would simply buy a Golf with very ltd extras.
I think you may have missed the point. Some people (myself included) want metallic paint, 18'' wheels, xenon headlamps, mp3 stereo etc. As you so eloquently put, the ST and GTI are only front drive hatches, and neither will been bought by people as an out and out sports car so practicality and creature comforts are actually rather important. I'd be very surprised if there are any bargain spec Golf GTI's out there, even driven by people with half a brain.
And by the way, the ST might have its faults but being VERY unpleasant in the wet is not one of them. Did you see it on Top Gear where it had so much grip it cocked the rear wheel in the soaking wet? Or how about when Autocar tested it round the Millbrook wet testing track? It was the quickest car they've tested. Not just the quickest hot hatch, the quickest car they've ever tested humbling a 997S and AMV8.
>> Edited by thekirbyfake on Friday 21st April 11:28
Good news everybody!!!!
All my local dealers have stock of a car that customers will have to wait 6 months for!!!!!
NOt knocking the product, and understandn your support of a product you have just bought, but they are available from stock from many dealers. If you want a specific combination that is not available then there is a 12 week lead time.
PS
As for quick on the track, did Tiff not beat the ST hands down in an Astra VXR on 5th gear last night? One handed ??!!
caspy said:
There is no waiting list on an ST
thekirbyfake said:
There is a waiting list at the dealer. Dealers have vehicles in stock that and pre-registered and very few have any options above the base spec.
caspy said:
All my local dealers have stock of a car.
If you want a specific combination that is not available then there is a waiting list
Erm...
Correct me if I'm wrong but isn't that what I said?
caspy said:
As for quick on the track, did Tiff not beat the ST hands down in an Astra VXR on 5th gear last night? One handed ??!!
It wasn't beaten hands down. It was beaten hand down
thekirbyfake said:
caspy said:
As for quick on the track, did Tiff not beat the ST hands down in an Astra VXR on 5th gear last night? One handed ??!!
It wasn't beaten hands down. It was beaten hand down
But I'd still rather have the ST. Besides, I suspect the Astra is already running at close to it's maximum potential (without major mods like a replacement turbo). The ST on the other hand is apparently good for somewhere in the region of 270 BHP with a simple remap.
Also, they have already given away a Focus ST on 5th Gear. So it wouldn't supprise me if the 5th gear producers had a large say in what car won.
Incidently, both cars were a couple of seconds quicker around the track (wet) than the Impreza the week before (also wet, very wet).
5th gear seems to be going down hill. How often do you drive around a track with an arm taped to your side.
westy04 said:
Incidently, both cars were a couple of seconds quicker around the track (wet) than the Impreza the week before (also wet, very wet).
But that was Vicky Butler-Jolly-Hockey-Sticks-Squealing-Henderson. I'm absolutely certain Tiff would be quicker in a Scooby than either the ST or VXR, particularly in the wet.
westy04 said:
5th gear seems to be going down hill
Going? I'm pretty sure they're already at the bottom of said hill...
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