RE: Ford Focus ST: Driven (briefly)

RE: Ford Focus ST: Driven (briefly)

Monday 1st July 2019

2020 Ford Focus ST (Mk4) | Track Review

The full review is coming soon; here's what it's like on Ford's test track



There would be something rather amiss if a new fast Ford didn’t impress on one of its development routes. Not that the Lommel test track is the only place the Focus ST has been subjected to a good thrashing – the UK, northern Spain and that German racetrack also featuring – but it’s one with a great deal of significance attached. While not a dedicated track area like Fiorano or Hethel, the Lommel facility has a multitude of testing surfaces for any fast Ford flaws to be exposed.  And, well, think of some of the recent successes: both of the most recent Fiesta STs and every fast Focus since the middle of the last decade, just for starters – they’re doing something right.

So here’s the plan: right now, the world’s media is driving the new Ford Focus ST on the roads around Nice (assuming they haven’t melted), a story we’ll report on as soon as humanly possible. Here we’ll detail a few impressions from driving the ST at Lommel during the tech day, which involved a few circulations of the famed ‘Number 7’ handling track and wherever else the group was escorted (no pun intended).


Spoiler alert for starters, because we’re all keen: this Focus ST is good. Really, really good, competitive across the board against what is a really talented group of rivals. Now, of course, it was always going to feel good at the Ford test facility; something would have gone chronically wrong if it didn’t. Though even allowing for that, there’s reason to be encouraged.

Leo Roeks, Ford Performance’s boss in Europe, spoke through the day of being a “friction fetishist”, his desire being to get all unnecessary resistance out of the car’s controls, while also maintaining a sense of connection. That work is immediately apparent, steering (through an overly large wheel) being pleasingly clean, crisp and consistent, avoiding current trends either for hyper alert responses (despite just two turns lock to lock) or gratuitous weight. This point stands even when cycling through the drive modes – Slippery, Normal, Sport and Track – with the wheel not afflicted by that odd cloying sensation off centre that’s sometimes there when ‘sporty’ steering is attempted. Whether it’s preferable in its less aggressive modes is a point to clarify soon – memory suggests it might be.


The six-speed manual gearbox is borrowed from the Edge (presumably for the torque capacity), but with bespoke ratios here - there wasn’t opportunity to try the new automatic gearbox, which is coming later in the year. Like many Ford manuals, it’s an entirely acceptable gearbox without being much more; despite the work of Roeks and his team, it never delivers the swiftest or slickest of shifts. Handily, the Focus benefits from few of its rivals – Civic excepted – boasting great manuals, so it’s perhaps not the problem it could have been. 

If the gearbox isn’t tremendous, the brakes seem pretty damn good, with more aggressive pads than the old ST and an electric brake booster to keep the pedal firm. Certainly it felt nice on the test track, braking power great – better than the old RS apparently – and, just as crucially, easy to modulate and meter out via the pedal. Perhaps the only disappointment is that the auto rev match that comes with the Performance Pack can’t be switched off – one to investigate in France.


Dynamically, it should come as little surprise to discover that the Focus hits the mark, again with the caveat that this is exactly the place where it should do so. Though not as hyperactive as a Fiesta ST or quite so serious as an RS, this ST feels to strike a nice compromise in between. The fitment of a BorgWarner LSD has also given it better track manners than before, while still boasting that famed Ford neutrality and adjustability. It feels a right old giggle without being loutish, essentially; capable as well as good fun. 

By and large the engine is a worthy sidekick, delivering bountiful torque – 310lb ft is more than anything else in the class – as well as a pleasingly rorty soundtrack through a new exhaust and sound enhancer. It maybe isn’t the revviest unit in the world, though, as with the gearbox, Ford is fortunate that the class isn’t chock full of scorching powertrains. It feels an ideal fit for the job at hand, Roeks’ friction obsession seemingly even extending to the swift throttle response and pretty minimal turbo lag.

Those are some initial impressions then, ones to be bulked out in the next few hours. That there’s still a lot more to discover, and that the prospect of doing so is pretty exciting, bodes very well for the new Focus ST. We’ll know for certain shortly, but anybody in the market for a C-segment hot hatch shouldn’t move before the verdict is in – it could well be near the top of the class.

Click here to read our following road drive of the Focus ST.


SPECIFICATION | 2020 FORD FOCUS ST (Mk4)
Engine:
2,261cc, turbocharged four-cyl
Transmission: 6-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 280@5,500rpm
Torque (lb ft): 310@3,000-4,000rpm
0-62mph: 5.7 secs
Top speed: 155mph
Weight: 1,508kg (lightest kerbweight with 75kg driver, full fluids and 90 per cent fuel)
MPG: 35.7
CO2: 179g/km
Price: £31,995

 














Author
Discussion

Jon_S_Rally

Original Poster:

3,406 posts

88 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
Seen a couple of these in the metal now at various outings for work, and it's a nice looking car I must say. Pretty standard ST fair; sporty body kit, nice Recaro seats etc.

Always liked the previous gen ST, but felt it lacked a bit of drama. Will be interesting to see what this is like.

treeroy

564 posts

85 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
Jon_S_Rally said:
Seen a couple of these in the metal now at various outings for work, and it's a nice looking car I must say. Pretty standard ST fair; sporty body kit, nice Recaro seats etc.

Always liked the previous gen ST, but felt it lacked a bit of drama. Will be interesting to see what this is like.
yes I agree, like the mk1, mk3 focus ST is a bit boring, compared to the Fiesta or focus RS. mk4 looks the same. Mk2 is the only exciting one.

Jex

838 posts

128 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
The Recaros look a bit wide. I suppose that's to allow for people being wider on average than they used to be.

steveb8189

473 posts

191 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
As discussed in a previous thread I was pleased to see the exhaust placement may allow for a towbar and it seems there are kits available. Now I've seen the underside I'm not sure how it would fit - at least not without a massive bumper cut.

Fastdruid

8,643 posts

152 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
steveb8189 said:
As discussed in a previous thread I was pleased to see the exhaust placement may allow for a towbar and it seems there are kits available. Now I've seen the underside I'm not sure how it would fit - at least not without a massive bumper cut.
Having played with the configurator it's a factory fit option and if it's anything like the factory fit one on my Mondeo the cut-out is a small rectangle about 5cm by 15cm on the horizontal underside of the bumper. It is totally invisible except if looking up from underneath.

In the Configurator photos it appears to reach beyond the "diffuser" - www.ford.co.uk/s/aYZM

Limpet

6,310 posts

161 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
I wouldn't bet against this being a cracking hot hatch.

Just had a play with the configurator, and it's nice to see that the options list is relatively sensible at just 8 items, and unless you need a "track mode", launch control and shift lights, you don't even need to bother with the Performance Pack. Especially if it gives you rev matching that can't be turned off.

Think I'll have a drive of one when the local dealer has a demo.

greenarrow

3,595 posts

117 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all

With Honda having the track day ready hard-core hot hatch segment nicely sewn up, I reckon Ford could do very well with this in the slightly less hard-core, more road car friendly segment... Renault seem to have dropped the ball a little with the new Megane, so I'd like to see this new ST compared with the dark horse and highly regarded Hyundai i30N. New Golf GTI on the way soon as well in under a year isn't there?

Have we ever had it so good in terms of the quality and variety of hot hatches available? There really isn't a duffer out there.

treeroy

564 posts

85 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
greenarrow said:
With Honda having the track day ready hard-core hot hatch segment nicely sewn up, I reckon Ford could do very well with this in the slightly less hard-core, more road car friendly segment... Renault seem to have dropped the ball a little with the new Megane, so I'd like to see this new ST compared with the dark horse and highly regarded Hyundai i30N. New Golf GTI on the way soon as well in under a year isn't there?

Have we ever had it so good in terms of the quality and variety of hot hatches available? There really isn't a duffer out there.
yes and the Fiesta is more suited to track days (and far more popular) than the Focus anyway. It doesn't need to be hardcore.
That said, I still find the Focus ST a bit dull.

Terminator X

15,080 posts

204 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
"a pleasingly rorty soundtrack through a new exhaust and sound enhancer"

I appreciate all manufacturers are getting battered by WLTP but another car bites the dust sound wise, such a shame and all because of #greentax

TX.

Shiv_P

2,747 posts

105 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
Terminator X said:
"a pleasingly rorty soundtrack through a new exhaust and sound enhancer"

I appreciate all manufacturers are getting battered by WLTP but another car bites the dust sound wise, such a shame and all because of #greentax

TX.
Mk2 and Mk3 ST had "sound enhancer" as well, although maybe not applied in the same way as this car(?)

treeroy

564 posts

85 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
Terminator X said:
"a pleasingly rorty soundtrack through a new exhaust and sound enhancer"

I appreciate all manufacturers are getting battered by WLTP but another car bites the dust sound wise, such a shame and all because of #greentax

TX.
I think this is just the same system used previously, the sound symposer that has a pipe feeding noise from the engine into the cabin. Lots of modern turbo cars sound dull

GTEYE

2,096 posts

210 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
Looks great to me and the Orange suits it. I think it sets just about the right tone to look a bit better than the standard Focus without going to Civic Type R levels of OTT- ness.

In other words, just like a Golf GTI in terms of position.

The only thing I don’t like are the Recaro seats - they look a bit ordinary versus those in the Mk3.5. But perhaps they are less bulky which improves over the shoulder visibility across the car - which is a problem in the Mk3.

Overall, I think they have a winner. Bring on the deals in a few months - it’s not good value at or near list. But that’s true of the competition and will improve in time.

GroundEffect

13,836 posts

156 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
Terminator X said:
"a pleasingly rorty soundtrack through a new exhaust and sound enhancer"

I appreciate all manufacturers are getting battered by WLTP but another car bites the dust sound wise, such a shame and all because of #greentax

TX.
1) WLTP isn't the regulation, it's the test profile
2) Euro 6d has no real impact on the sound - almost all performance cars have had them for the last decade

Terminator X

15,080 posts

204 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
GroundEffect said:
Terminator X said:
"a pleasingly rorty soundtrack through a new exhaust and sound enhancer"

I appreciate all manufacturers are getting battered by WLTP but another car bites the dust sound wise, such a shame and all because of #greentax

TX.
1) WLTP isn't the regulation, it's the test profile
2) Euro 6d has no real impact on the sound - almost all performance cars have had them for the last decade
Eh? GPF is a very modern WLTP "thing" and it is muffling the sound. Same for any car that has a GPF vs the same outgoing model that doesn't.

TX.

GroundEffect

13,836 posts

156 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
Terminator X said:
GroundEffect said:
Terminator X said:
"a pleasingly rorty soundtrack through a new exhaust and sound enhancer"

I appreciate all manufacturers are getting battered by WLTP but another car bites the dust sound wise, such a shame and all because of #greentax

TX.
1) WLTP isn't the regulation, it's the test profile
2) Euro 6d has no real impact on the sound - almost all performance cars have had them for the last decade
Eh? GPF is a very modern WLTP "thing" and it is muffling the sound. Same for any car that has a GPF vs the same outgoing model that doesn't.

TX.
The sound for a turbocharged engine with a GPF is almost the same as those without. You hear more difference with naturally aspirated engines. As I said "No real impact".

The main driver for these sound enhancers is fairly straight forward:

1) More stringent drive-by sound regulations - the cars cannot be loud from outside as they used to be (in default modes)
2) Body NVH improvements mean any sound from the powertrain gets more and more muted, so it's enhanced to bring it back up instead of losing the other improvements (like tyre & wind roar).

Court_S

12,932 posts

177 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
GroundEffect said:
The sound for a turbocharged engine with a GPF is almost the same as those without. You hear more difference with naturally aspirated engines. As I said "No real impact".

The main driver for these sound enhancers is fairly straight forward:

1) More stringent drive-by sound regulations - the cars cannot be loud from outside as they used to be (in default modes)
2) Body NVH improvements mean any sound from the powertrain gets more and more muted, so it's enhanced to bring it back up instead of losing the other improvements (like tyre & wind roar).
There’s a pretty noticeable difference in the noise of a pre-PPF M140 and one with it fitted. The later cars are more muted and don’t pop on the over run like the earlier versions.

Back on topic, I quite like this but I agree that the seats don’t look as god as they have previously done.

geeks

9,186 posts

139 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
Mrs geeks has a new Focus ST-Line X, a cracking bit of kit, I said somewhere on here that if it was indicative of the new ST then it will be a hoot to drive, glad that seems to have tracked (see what I did there?)

Derek Chevalier

3,942 posts

173 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
greenarrow said:
I reckon Ford could do very well with this in the slightly less hard-core, more road car friendly segment
The Civic in comfort mode rides pretty well.

Shiv_P

2,747 posts

105 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
Court_S said:
There’s a pretty noticeable difference in the noise of a pre-PPF M140 and one with it fitted. The later cars are more muted and don’t pop on the over run like the earlier versions.

Back on topic, I quite like this but I agree that the seats don’t look as god as they have previously done.
The exhaust system was not redesigned with this inclusion however. A PPF was banged on and that was that.

kuiper

207 posts

127 months

Monday 1st July 2019
quotequote all
Is there any option to remove the stupid pig ugly unintegrated screen off the dash? They’ve superglued an iPad on instead of doing it properly, which ruins an otherwise nice looking offering and the best Ford interior I’ve seen in ages. Would literally rather not have a screen at all than have that...