Ford Focus long-term test review: report 5
The Focus was a price point winner in the 2019 What Car? Awards. We're running one for four months to find out how well it copes with being a commuter and a family car...
The car Ford Focus 1.5 TDCi Ecoblue ST-Line Run by Claire Evans, consumer editor
Why it’s here The latest Focus is a big seller and good enough to have been shortlisted for What Car?'s 2019 family car award. It's therefore important to find out what it’s like to live with
Needs to Dispatch the daily commute in a fun yet frugal manner and dispel the popular myth that all diesels are evil
Mileage 10,856 List price £22,850 Target Price £20,983 Price as tested £25,200 Test economy 54.4mpg Official economy 80.7mpg Extras Convenience Pack (£750), Driver Assistance Pack (£500), Sync 3 DAB navigation system with 8.0in colour touchscreen (£350), Ford Pass Connect (£250), Frozen White metallic paint (£250), rear privacy glass (£250)
5 June 2019 – Swap shop
You might not think a Ford Focus would be the most popular vehicle in an office where others are driving everything from a Kia e-Niro electric car to a Cupra Ateca sports SUV. However, when you’ve got a long journey to do, the frugality of a diesel car makes it an appealing option.
So when my colleague Kris Culmer was looking for a low-consumption, roomy car to get him and a friend from Brighton to Nottingham for a weekend of watching the British Touring Car Championship (BTCC) race at Donington Park, he asked if he could borrow the Focus.
He had previously driven a Focus with the same 1.5-litre diesel engine but in higher ST-Line X specification, so he had an idea of what to expect.
He said: “The Focus glided north with no trouble at all. Claire mentioned to me that she thinks Ford has negatively affected this engine through retuning it to pass the EU’s latest emissions tests, but I couldn’t detect any discernible difference at motorway speeds. That said, it had adequate performance and refinement but no more than that.
“Frugality was good, too – I easily did the round trip on one tank – while seat comfort and stereo quality were the two other positives that stuck in my memory.
“It was also rather fitting to see the Focus’s sporty looks validated by the leading Focus RS racing cars in the BTCC – even if they were plastered in Shredded Wheat logos...”
Talking of sporty looks, while Kris was in the Focus, I borrowed a Race Red Fiesta 1.0 Ecoboost ST-Line, because I was interested in finding out how the smaller Ford in the same trim compared. Both cars have subtle bodykits, distinctive fog lamps, smart alloy wheels and rear spoilers that make them stand out from other versions without being too showy, which I really like.
The Focus is all black inside, but the Fiesta has a bolder black-and-red seat trim, which lifts the interior. Many of the controls are also identical in both cars. This is great in the Fiesta, because the touchscreen infotainment system and steering wheel-mounted switches feel rather upmarket for a small hatchback, but it makes you feel like you’ve been shortchanged when you get back into the Focus. I think it would benefit from some more brushed aluminium or piano black trim pieces to give it a more premium feel.
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