What better than a hot hatch to make up for the many miles of driving we’ve missed during lockdown?

Why we ran it: In the absence of a new RS, is the latest Focus ST good enough to be considered a credible flagship fast Ford hatchback?

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Life with a Focus ST: Month 10

The hot hatch turned heads everywhere it went – but not always for the right reasons. Here’s our final report - 1 September 2021

What is it about the colour orange? A recent Twitter poll seemed to suggest it’s a magnet for traffic-light Lewis Hamiltons and teen racers, whether the car in question is a supercar or a hot hatch. Having spent the past few months in the latter, I don’t disagree.

Wherever I went in it, the Focus ST was never short on attention – not all of it good. Had our now-departed long-termer been delivered in a different hue, I’m convinced the otherwise subtle visual upgrades over the standard car would have let it fly under most people’s radars. The £800 expense is one I’d leave off the options list.

Admittedly, it’s up for debate whether the ability to drive incognito at times should be a prerequisite for a hot hatch, and in many respects the Focus is one of the more restrained cars in its class. Personally, I like that the larger alloys, tweaked bodykit and neatly integrated rear spoiler don’t demand constant attention, in the same way the uber-aggressive Honda Civic Type R or decal-laden BMW 128ti do. The twin exhausts might give the game away, but they aren’t the loudest pipes around.

Colour aside, then, the ST fulfilled its brief brilliantly throughout its time with us. Under first custodian Andrew Frankel, it covered the bulk of its 10,000-plus miles and claimed a number of scalps. We decreed it more entertaining on a British B-road than a Honda NSX; it even held its own against the Mustang Bullitt, as you can use more of its power reserves more of the time than you can with the V8 muscle coupé.

Crucially, it also scored a big win over the Mk8 Volkswagen Golf GTI. In making its latest hot hatch effort firmer and more aggressive, VW has lost some of what made previous generations so special – while the Ford simply delivers more of what made older STs such fun to drive.

The ST really does come alive on the right road. Ford’s signature quick steering response makes a return, the shift action of the six-speed manual ’box is delightfully smooth and the Recaro seats keep you firmly in place when scything through corners, without the backache afterwards. The optional Ford Performance Pack, which added adaptive damping as well as rev-matching and a track- specific driving mode, was well worth having for the former alone.

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The 2.3-litre engine is the star of the show, giving the car its own character distinct from the crowd of four-pot alternatives. It delivers alarming mid-range punch and an eagerness to chase the redline that could always put a smile on my face.

The synthetic soundtrack is a little overdone, especially in the racier driving modes, but that’s true of just about every hot hatch right now. I’d have loved a custom setting that gave individual control over the sound, steering and throttle response, as each is at its best in a different mode.

Elsewhere, it was a comfortable and practical daily driver, with ample room for rear passengers, a boot that could swallow a week’s worth of family luggage and fuel economy that was decent (if not outstanding) on longer motorway journeys.

The interior was arguably its weakest point, with Ford’s parts-bin approach meaning there was little to elevate it beyond the standard Focus, or indeed the considerably cheaper Fiesta. The use of cheaper plastics put it behind similarly priced rivals, although we appreciated not having to constantly rely on a touchscreen. (Having physical buttons to operate most of the settings will always be a win in our book.)

The only major issue was caused by a nasty pothole encounter, which managed to bend the rim of one of the 19in alloys. It necessitated an entirely new wheel as well as a replacement Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tyre, at a cost of £550 for the pair.

Ford’s Sync 3 infotainment system also took a disliking to my phone, with Android Auto sometimes freezing to the extent that an engine- off reboot was required to bring it back to life. I noticed a few glitches when testing a different car recently, so my handset might have been at fault rather than the car, but it was still an irritating experience when relying on the phone for navigation.

Ultimately, it was painful to hand back the keys: the Focus ST brilliantly blends performance and dynamism with everyday capability, in a way very few rivals can. It hasn’t morphed into a track-day monster, but nor has it been neutered in pursuit of ride comfort. There’s a goldilocks level of performance and usability here that suited my wants and needs perfectly.

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Now that Ford has mothballed the RS badge and doesn’t have a truly lairy flagship hot hatch, there was a danger the Mk4 ST would turn things up a notch too far with the aim of being all things to all people. The firm has resisted the urge, and produced an exceptionally well-rounded car. And yes, that’s true even if you insist on Orange Fury colours.

Tom Morgan-Freelander

Second Opinion

Most pedestrians and road users aren’t petrolheads, so glances attracted by the ST’s crackling exhaust and garish paint will more often be withering than admiring. That said, its capacity to go from station shuttle to gloves- off hooligan on demand makes it easier to forgive the obvious compromises that are part and parcel of a ‘practical sports car’.

Felix Page

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Love it:

Characterful engine It stands out from hot hatch rivals with a 2.3-litre block that delivers grin-inducing performance.

Precise handling Our Focus ST was brilliantly agile and fleet-footed at all times, with super-responsive steering.

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Perfectly practical At the end of the day, it’s a Focus – comfortable, sensibly sized and with plenty of room in the boot.

Loathe it:

Paint ain’t subtle Orange makes it impossible to get to your destination without being a beacon for wannabe racers.

Synthesised sound What’s heard inside the cabin doesn’t quite match up with the exterior soundtrack.

Final mileage: 12,201

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Life with a Ford Focus ST: Month 9

Brightens my day - 21 July 2021

You normally need sunglasses to look at it face on, but even Ford’s Orange Fury paint can appear a little dull once a layer of dust and grime settles. Regular impromptu rinses courtesy of the recent bad weather have kept it looking fairly bright, but a proper wash is now overdue. Dirt has an uncanny ability to get into every seal and crevice.

Mileage: 10,751

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A rotary reminder of how yesterday’s performance cars compare with today’s crop - 14 July 2021

The Focus ST got several chances to stretch its legs last week, with multiple trips towards England’s south coast: one for a socially distanced wedding reception and the other to experience Mazda’s heritage fleet, marking 30 years since the fabled 787B won the Le Mans 24 Hours. No offence to the bride and groom, but I’m sure you can guess which I was more excited about, having limited experience of driving cars from before the 1990s – and no experience at all of rotary engines.

Ford’s 2.3-litre Ecoboost is no shrinking violet, with peak power arriving at 5500rpm and a 6500rpm redline. Yet despite two sizeable and throaty-sounding tailpipes, plus some in-cabin enhancement, it was never going to have the aural drama of an RX-8’s Renesis motor. Previously described on these pages as “sounding like a Hoover on full chat” in the way it screams all the way to 9000rpm, the suicide-doored coupé can be heard approaching from an impressive distance away.

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The power delivery of a second- generation RX-7 was equally eye-opening. Turbo lag has been almost entirely engineered out of modern cars, and most (although not all) models that use forced induction do so in a fairly linear manner – including the Focus ST. Peak torque may arrive by 3000rpm, but not all in one big shove. In contrast, the Mazda comes on song in a rather hilarious manner, all in one go and complete with the unfiltered sounds of the turbo spooling up.

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They don’t have true classic car status just yet, but there’s clearly something entertaining about cars like these that present-day hot hatches such as the Focus ST struggle to match – not if its maker has any intention of passing safety, noise and emissions tests, anyway.

The experience did give me a greater appreciation for the Ford’s brilliantly calibrated steering rack, which may be power-assisted but is still delightfully precise – and doesn’t require a gym session to gain the strength to perform low-speed manoeuvres. I also now value being able to jump into any modern European car and know instinctively which steering wheel stalk controls the indicators.

The reputation that rotary engines have for grenading themselves, deserved or not, put me off the prospect of ever owning one a long time ago, but I could have happily spent the rest of the day sampling the ones fettled by Mazda’s press garage. When the rain came in, though, I was glad to be leaving in the Focus ST, with its anti-lock brakes and AEB.

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Over the course of 200 motorway miles, it averaged 35mpg and kept me toasty with its heated seats and steering wheel, while in Normal driving mode the engine note fell back to a mild drone while cruising. Even the M25’s barbaric concrete section couldn’t drown out the Bang & Olufsen-supplied speakers. The ST is as easy to live with as any Focus, then, which is entirely the point.

Even the four-seat RX-8 felt like a special-occasion car, whereas the Focus can be relied on for every kind of journey. It can keep pace with a Porsche 718 Cayman on a twisty road when asked, but 99% of the time it flies under the radar. Or at least it would, were it not for the bright-orange paint.

Love it:

Driving position Recaro seats hug your posterior and give plenty of support, with enough adjustment that you aren’t forced into an upright stance.

Loathe it:

Wireless charging If you want to use your phone for Android Auto or Apple CarPlay mirroring, this is a £125 option that you can go without.

Mileage: 10,603

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Orange paint might as well be a neon sign saying ‘fancy a race?’ - 7 July 2021

What is it about a bright-orange hot hatch that invites tomfoolery from other drivers? Last week, I was approached three times by separate... enthusiasts, let’s call them, who wanted me to put my foot down and be embarrassed/ vindicated by the impressive/ lacklustre pace of their Audi S3/ Citroën Saxo VTS in what would essentially be a drag race – on public roads, and with me already cruising at the speed limit.

Having identified our Focus ST by its warbling engine note and Orange Fury paint, these would-be Max Verstappens felt that they had to give it a run for its money. I guess its dismissal of the Volkswagen Golf GTI in our recent twin test wasn’t proof enough of its dominance.

Needless to say, I waved them away and backed off to show that such hooliganism is best left to the track – although on arriving home, I was afraid that my neighbours might assume that I’m just that sort of boy racer. The reverberative acoustics of our estate ensured that everyone knew I had returned, and parking up between a black Toyota Yaris and a silver Seat Ateca did nothing to help it blend in.

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Not a wallflower, then. Perhaps it’s best served in black or grey for a bit of sleeper status?

Mileage: 10421

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Life with a Ford Focus ST: Month 8

Missing volume - 16 June 2021

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In-person motorsport resumed for me with British Rallycross at Lydden Hill. The car park was crammed with hot hatches, and I was surprised at how quiet the ST sounded compared with some of them. It’s no shrinking violet, but a lot of what you hear in the sportier driving modes is synthesised. It isn’t a huge head-turner at low speeds, and it’s quite the contrast to that orange paint.

Mileage: 9899

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Run-in with a quick Skoda helps put our hot hatch into context, for better and worse - 9 June 2021

Our Focus ST has only recently swapped the Wye Valley for the Surrey commuter belt, but it had an impromptu homecoming this week when I was asked to assist on a group test in the Brecon Beacons. It was the first proper bit of long- distance driving that I had managed since being handed the keys and an opportunity to see how it stacks up next to a Volkswagen Group rival.

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Near-constant rain on the outward journey meant being able to test the Slippery driving mode, which dials back the throttle mapping, ramps up the stability control and tames the electronic limited-slip differential.

The ST still feels potent like this but stays impressively stable under a heavy right foot, which gives a lot of confidence on wet roads. Some torque steer remains, but not enough to wrench the wheel from your grip.

Being able to toggle between driving modes with a button on the steering wheel means not having to take your eyes off the road, and the digital dashboard makes it obvious which one you’ve selected. That should ensure that you don’t accidentally engage Track when looking for Slippery – which would strip back the stability controls, rather than turn them up.

Having a separate button dedicated to Sport mode is great, but it would be nice if pressing it a second time took you back to whichever mode you were in previously. In the dry, I’m torn between the sharper throttle response and louder exhaust note of Sport and the lighter steering and softer dampers of Normal, so I frequently jump between the two. It’s a real shame that there’s no custom mode here, as with the Hyundai i30 N, but I guess that would be a little too much complexity for what’s arguably one of the most straightforward hot hatches on sale.

It’s also one of the more practical ones, with a decent boot and plenty of room for rear passengers. I’ve even been able to fit in a commercial Euro pallet with the seats folded down.

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Still, for sheer breadth of ability, it’s hard to argue with the Skoda Octavia vRS that was waiting for me in Wales. It has nearly twice the boot space of the Focus ST and feels much roomier in the back – although when parking the pair nose to nose, it had never been clearer to me that the Octavia vRS is more a junior performance saloon than a traditional hot hatch.

The Skoda offers a more sedate driving experience, too, with a softer ride and lighter steering, along with less aggressively bolstered front seats. The Volkswagen Group’s familiar EA888 2.0-litre engine is also more economical than the 2.3-litre Ecoboost, having managed a motorway MPG figure in the low- 40s, whereas the Ford got 32mpg at best. For those frequently doing long journeys, it would be easier to live with the Octavia than the Focus – although not nearly as exciting.

The Skoda is down on power by some 30bhp compared with the ST, and the EA888 isn’t nearly as sonorous as the Ecoboost. Both also have synthesised exhaust notes that get louder in the sportier modes, but Ford’s sounds more authentic.

The ST is ultimately more entertaining, which should be near the top of any prospective hot hatch owner’s priority list. Also, you can’t have one in orange, which in my book automatically gives the win to the ST.

Love it:

Boot space Seats up or seats down, there’s plenty of room for cargo, and the wide lip makes loading it easy.

Loathe it:

Picky USB ports The infotainment doesn’t like the USB cable I use in all cars and often disconnects from Android Auto.

Mileage: 9654

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Match made in Rev-en - 26 May 2021

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Unlike with the GR Yaris, which I had a brief drive in this week, it doesn’t seem to be possible to disable the rev-matching function in the Focus ST’s sportier driving modes. The Toyota has a dedicated button on the transmission tunnel for when you want to do it yourself. Happily, Ford’s system works so well that I doubt I would switch it off even if I could.

Mileage: 8993

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Ecoboost rudely awakens our man from his electric dreams - 19 May 2021

The surprise early arrival of the Focus ST’s replacement warranted an impromptu custodian change this week.

I’ll leave it to Andrew Frankel to reveal exactly what usurped his Ford in a forthcoming issue, but suffice to say there’s now a brightly coloured hot hatch parked alongside the monthly subscription Hyundai Kona Electric outside my flat.

Considering I’ve been running a string of EVs for the past six months, it’s a timely reminder of the appeal of internal combustion – and the perfect example of how a burbling exhaust note can transform how you feel about a car.

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The Kona with which the Focus ST will be sharing driving duties for the next week is only 0.5sec slower to 60mph. With no clutch to worry about, I suspect it would be quicker to 30mph at a set of traffic lights – but it gets you there in silence, save for the whine from its electric motor.

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The Ford’s 2.3-litre petrol engine is so much more evocative, especially in Sport mode, where it happily sounds like a shooting range on the overrun. Yes, it’s childish, and no, I don’t care.

I’m also loving just how low slung Recaro bucket seats can be when there are no batteries to accommodate underneath.

Mileage: 8556

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Life with a Ford Focus ST: Month 7

It seems our all-conquering hot hatch has finally met its match - 5 May 2021

It was early. Early enough for me to leave home in time to be at Lotus HQ at 8am. I live 250 miles from Hethel. But the Focus had a new noise. A pinging sound. And a new warning light on the dash. A flat tyre light. But I had nothing else to drive, the spare was only a spacesaver and it was too far to travel, even if the time taken to change it and the 50mph limit wouldn’t already mean I would be so late as to make the journey not just miserable but pointless, too.

So thank heaven for that on-board monitoring system, as it said not only that a tyre had lost pressure but how much. Despite the fact the car had sat for a couple of days, it was only about 5psi down on the others. So I pressed with only a slight vibration through the wheel to suggest all wasn’t quite right. But the pressure held steady, so I cruised slowly to Lotus, arriving without further incident.

Asked how my journey had been, I explained. So the kind chap from Lotus said that while I was skidding I about the test track in the last Elise, he would get an engineer to look at it. I didn’t see what could be done, because Lotus would hardly have a spare tyre for a Ford Focus ST, but I appreciated the gesture.

So I was somewhat surprised to have the car returned wearing exactly that. By freakish good fate, it turns out the rear tyre of an Lotus Evora and the front tyre of an ST are the same. Not just the same size, but the same make, speed rating, everything. More fortuitous still, Lotus was about to bin a new pair that had been so mildly flatspotted that only a Lotus chassis engineer would have been able to tell.

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In the process, they had found that the problem wasn’t the old tyre (which still got binned for safety) but a bent rim, courtesy of one of the myriad potholes where I live. They had balanced it and said it would get me home. Unlike the old tyre, this one didn’t hang onto its air for long, but in these Covid times, I didn’t fancy handling air lines in every service station from Norfolk to Wales.

So I went to my brother’s house not far from Lotus, borrowed a cigarette lighter-powered pump, then limped home, one eye glued to the pressure readout, stopping every 15 minutes to reinflate it. In the end, a four-hour journey took six. It was only later I realised that I would have been quicker on the spacesaver after all…

Love it:

Pressure monitoring Without it, I would probably have abandoned my journey. I was so grateful to be able to determine the extent of the problem.

Loathe it:

Ropey rubber Those tyres look cool, but their liquorice-thin profiles take no punishment. A few weeks later, I hit another pothole and split a tyre wide open.

Mileage: 7997

Focus st front wheel

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Easy target - 21 April 2021

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A male blackbird has taken against the Focus. He is the same as – or a direct descendant of – the one who tried to peck my long-term McLaren 720S to death a couple of years back. This time it’s a dirty protest. I’m told by someone who knows that he’s spotted another male blackbird invading his territory and hasn’t twigged he’s just looking at himself in the door mirror...

Mileage: 7992

Focus st bird attack

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Life with a Ford Focus ST: Month 6

Hot Focus meets hot Puma - 3 March 2021

Ford sells two hatchback STs for around £30k. The Ford Puma ST is less powerful than the Focus and smaller inside, and it has a beam rear axle in place of the Focus’s multi-link set- up. Why would you buy one? If you care about driving or ride comfort, you wouldn’t. The Focus now has its first home-grown scalp to add to its growing tally of victories.

Mileage: 5997

Focus st meets puma st

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Life with a Ford Focus ST: Month 5

What most interests people about our hot hatch? That’s right, its paint colour… - 27 January 2020

What question have I been asked most frequently since the Focus ST came into my care? Does it concern the performance of its 2.3-litre four-cylinder turbo engine? It doesn’t. Perhaps people are more interested in the balance of its front wheel-drive chassis or its ability to marshal the considerable potential of said powertrain? Not even close.

Maybe they save their enquiries for more practical matters, such as whether it will still transport a family of four across the countryside in a reasonable level of comfort? No, no, thrice no. By far the most popular question, which I’m probably asked more than all others combined, is: “Did you choose that colour?”

The answer is a resounding no. It’s just how the car came, its optional Orange Fury paint the work of some bright spark in the Ford press office who took the view that, all other things being equal, it would be better if the car were to stand out on the pages when stories like this were published. And it certainly does that.

What’s interesting to me is that no one is indifferent to the colour. Some absolutely love it, while others feel at least as strongly about it in the other direction. Apart from me. I’m genuinely not bothered about it either way, apart from when the car is dirty.

That’s partly because I’m colourblind, which doesn’t mean that I can’t see colours but does mean that colour means less to me than most people. My family are always banging on about the beauty of autumn leaves while I just see that they aren’t the same colour as they were in summer.

The other reason is that I sit on the inside looking out, so I spend very little time looking at or thinking about the colour of my car. Given the choice, I would always choose something dark and discreet, because the only thing I do know about bright colours is they attract attention, which I absolutely hate.

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So I was minded to let the Focus get filthy to lessen its visual impact – and discovered I hate that too. If there’s one thing worse than a bright orange car, it’s a dirty bright orange car. So now I clean it every week – a small price to pay for a car that, in all other ways, is proving one of the most enjoyable long-termers I’ve ever run.

Focus st dirty

Love it:

Decent design The overall look of the Focus is growing on me. It is not a design classic but is a decently styled example of its class of car.

Loathe it:

Keep it clean I hate how the car looks when dirty, especially the fingerprints around the tailgate. It makes it look old and neglected, of which it is neither.

Mileage: 5333

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Not convinced it beats a Mk8 Golf GTI? This might persuade you - 6 January 2020

Focus st meets golf

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The significance of the victory of our long-term Focus ST over the brand-new Volkswagen Golf GTI published on these pages a few months back shouldn’t be underestimated.

First, it wasn’t a contest the Ford was expected to win. The previous ST wouldn’t have stood a chance against any of the modern iterations of Volkswagen’s iconic hatchback. Second, the margin of victory was not small. It may not have been a comprehensive dusting, but there was clear air between them, leading to the biggest win I can remember a fast family Ford scoring against its most bitter rival.

I’m not going to delve back into it all now, but the ST won for two reasons: first, the Golf made it easier for the Focus by trying to be a bit more like it in the way it went down a decent road, spoiling the comfort and class that has for so long been the Golf’s USP. But it’s the second point on which I want to dwell for just a while now, namely that while the Volkswagen was getting less good at the things it has traditionally done well, the Ford was getting better and better in its particular area of expertise, turning the Golf’s mission into something of a fool’s errand.

And that area is handling. With clever front suspension, a limited-slip differential and what feels like a very robust approach to the stiffness of the rear anti-roll bar, it takes the unprepossessing formula of a nose-heavy, front-wheel-drive car with a gratuitous amount of torque and simply bends it to its will.

It has only a touch less torque than the old Focus RS (and a much better torque-to-weight ratio), yet it deals with it so well that I haven’t once ever thought the car would be improved in any way that matters to me by the addition of four-wheel drive. Indeed, I expect the additional mass would ruin its charm, at least in part. Torque steer is limited, traction impressive and electronic intervention delayed until you actually need it, not merely when the car thinks its most lily-livered driver might feel reassured by its presence.

But most of all, I love the way it gets into a corner. This is a very expressive car, it’s a fan of extravagant gestures and it’s not remotely afraid to wave its back end around if that’s what’s required to keep the trajectory of the front nailed into apex.

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It’s extremely pitch-sensitive, perhaps not quite up there in the Peugeot 205 GTi league but more eager to allow weight transference to affect its attitude than any rival car, which is what gives the Focus such extreme agility for such a car.

What makes it really clever, however, is not this – which can be achieved by using something akin to a train rail as a rear bar – but how the car has been tuned so as still to feel trustworthy and stable. It’s a very neat trick, and the Honda Civic Type R is the only rival that does it so well.

Otherwise, all is well. Nothing has gone wrong – not that you would expect it to – and the ST continues to provide happy, indulgent daily transport. Long may it continue.

Love it:

No compromises The way it manages to be one of the most entertaining and responsive hatchbacks while retaining sufficient civility still to cut it as a daily driver.

Loathe it:

…Well, maybe just one There is a price to be paid in ride quality, but no more than you would expect in this class of car. The suspension is more firm than harsh, which I consider acceptable.

Mileage: 4722

Focus st panning

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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

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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.

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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.

My only concern was the engine’s thirst, but even this is coming under control now it’s been nicely loosened with a few thousand miles under its wheels. It had been struggling to better 30mpg but now seems to be settling at around 35mpg across all settings. That still isn’t great, but if it’s the price to pay for such a cracking motor under your right boot, then that’s what I’ll continue to do.

Love it:

Engine Smooth, characterful and responsive. Sparkling real-world performance and a touch of class.

Loathe it:

Fuel consumption Improving, but still worse than I’d hope for from even a hot family hatchback.

Mileage: 3777

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Life with a Ford Focus ST: Month 3

Is our car more Soho or Noho in the confines of the West End? - 30 September 2020

This is the report where I talk about the reasons you might deploy to explain to a significant other why dropping 30 grand on a Ford Focus is, in fact, and perhaps despite some purely superficial evidence to the contrary, an idea touched by genius. Phrases not to mention during this conversation include ‘limited-slip differential’, ‘more torque than the Focus RS’ and ‘exquisite lift-off oversteer’.

Instead, we’ll take it London, droning down the 50mph speed limit formerly known as the M4, park it in a ridiculously cramped underground car park and then take two hours to do three miles. Forget it being quicker to walk. On my journey from the West End to the south side of the Albert Bridge, I genuinely think it would have been quicker to crawl.

The Ford is actually pretty good on the motorway. You only hear the engine in sixth gear if you’re not listening to music, the brilliant Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tyres are commendably quiet and the ride quality is good enough so long as you remember to take it out of Sport mode and put it back into Normal. I’d prefer to keep the sharp throttle and lose the stiff damping for the motorway, but that’s not possible, apparently.

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More important, however, are the excellent sport seats in the front (unless you’re unlucky enough to be sat behind them because they eat rear leg room), fine visibility and radar-operated active cruise control, which is far quicker to react and less annoying than in most other cars, including those costing two or three times as much.

In town, it’s less good. It feels quite big, never more so than when trying to squeeze into a tiny car park under a hotel, and while its Orange Fury paintwork attracts a lot of attention, I’m not convinced it’s always for the right reason. Or maybe I’m just being oversensitive. But the steering lock isn’t exactly generous and, while the clutch is light, if you’re manoeuvring at very low engine speeds and engage said clutch, you can hear the revs fall away quite suddenly before they’re caught by some clever anti-stall safety net.

Even in their totality, these observations don’t amount to serious criticism, just points of which I think anyone thinking of using a manual petrol ST in London should be abreast.

Focus st 1

You should also be aware that the infotainment system, with its blue graphics, isn’t exactly beautiful, but it does work very well. At home we have a 2017 Volkswagen Golf whose colour touchscreen I’ve always considered to be the benchmark for cars in this class, but in terms of ease of use, the Focus’s runs it very close, if not for easiness on the eyes.

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The optional (£100) telephone induction pad also works far better than that fitted to the Mercedes-Benz E300de Estate I ran prior to the Ford. So long as I lob the telephone in its approximate direction, it seems to get charged. In the Benz, I was always fiddling with the telephone to find the right spot and often arriving at my destination for a day’s work with an uncharged handheld device.

All I haven’t yet done in the ST is a really long journey. We were all set for my annual pilgrimage to the Spa Six Hours but, like so much else, Covid-19 ruined that. Hopefully by the next time we meet, I’ll have righted that wrong.

Love it:

Fuel Consumption Not sure I exactly love the above but, as the engine loosens up, it’s getting considerably better

Loathe it:

More choice, please It has four driving modes, but you can’t individually configure the powertrain and chassis maps.

Mileage: 3488

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Focus meets its American cousin - 26 September 2020

I had a fascinating day out with the Focus, discovering whether a frontdrive 2.3-litre four-cylinder hatch costing £30k has any answer at all to a rear-drive 5.0-litre V8 coupé from the same manufacturer costing £20k more. The story containing the answer will appear in the magazine soon, but for now be advised that the highly tuned Mustang Bullitt doesn’t have it all its own way. At all.

Mileage: 3222

Focus meets mustang

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Life with a Ford Focus ST: Month 2

Nothing to see here, honest - 26 August 2020

Pics of long-termers on transporters tend to send their manufacturers into paroxysms of anxiety, but there need be no worries this time. When I recently drove an F8 Spider, I had to leave my Ford at Ferrari HQ, and when they came to collect their car, they brought the Focus ST. Even straight after the Fandango, it felt just fine – which is quite something, when you think about it.

Mileage: 2104

Focus st transporter

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Which is more fun on a mountain road, an NSX or our hot Ford? - 12 August 2020

An interesting, if impromptu test. I had an appointment with the newly revised Honda NSX and it occurred to me that within the broad confines of what may loosely be described as ‘driver’s cars’, you could get further apart than these, but not much.

One is a mid-engined supercar costing £170,000 and has four-wheel drive, three electric motors to supplement its V-formation engine and a paddle-shift gearbox. The other is a front-engine, front-drive hatch with manual transmission and under half the power and costs less than a fifth of the money. Just how humiliated would my poor old Focus ST feel by comparison on a really great road?

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The NSX was flashingly fast in a straight line, had a very pleasant engine yowl and, when it came to the corners, it gripped and gripped and gripped. Its damping control is genuinely outstanding and, by the time I’d flung it across the mountain road and returned, I was full of admiration for it. It is a genuinely impressive, massively competent and very thoroughly engineered car.

But here’s the thing: this £30k Ford is simply more fun to drive.

Surprised? You should have seen my face. But I got into it straight after the NSX and drove it at the same effort level on the same route in the same conditions, and this is what I found.

Focus st 0

I didn’t covet the NSX’s performance as much as I enjoyed the Ford’s eagerness for the open road. When a truck came the other way, I’d lift in the Honda just to give me a little more time to judge the gap. In the Focus, my foot stayed down. In the NSX – and in this respect, I could be describing any modern supercar – I felt I was always using only a fraction of the available ability.

You can’t hold the throttle open for long before unspeakable numbers start to appear on the dial – nor can you sensibly get anywhere near the limit in almost every corner. You feel you’re sampling about 30% of what the car has to offer. In the Ford, it’s nearer 80%. In the corners, you play with the car’s attitude with the throttle pedal, while in a straight line you are entrusted with the task of changing gears all by yourself. Imagine that…

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I’m not saying the Focus ST is a more capable car than an NSX: it’s not and it’d be ludicrous to suggest it were. But it is more involving, and I think for those who love to drive, that is a more important consideration.

Back in the more real world, the ST is getting on with daily driving reasonably well. I like that I can fling my telephone into the central cubbyhole and it just starts charging, but the cheapness of the interior is starting to irk slightly. It’s just a bit too rough around the edges inside.

Love it:

Uncompromised fun Great chassis adjustability, unlimited enthusiasm for the open road but still a great daily driver.

Loathe it:

Some cabin materials Cheap interior plastics are a price worth paying if it means the money saved is spent on making it fun. But I still don’t like ’em.


Img 6678

Mileage: 1566

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A leak that wasn’t - 29 July 2020

It was a colleague who alerted me to a steady drip of water from the Focus’s rear exhaust box. Even I know that’s not a particularly good sign. Water is meant to circulate the engine, not travel through it and exit via the pipes. Happily, as soon as the engine was warm, the drip stopped. Condensation in the pipe – no more, no less. And I breathe again.

Mileage: 1311

Focus st

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The future is orange, but is it bright? We check in at the 1000-mile mark - 22 July 2020

Now that the 1000th mile has rolled under the Focus ST’s elegant 19in rims, a few preliminary thoughts – some, all or none of which may be modified, contradicted or confirmed as the months elapse.

Firstly, and I guess most importantly, it feels like the kind of car that I want a fast Ford to be. Which means it’s more than just fast. It has urgency and attitude, too. It’s not a suave sophisticate like a hot Volkswagen Golf, and nor is it intended to be. Its suspension is notably firm, which would be properly problematic were its movements not so expertly controlled by some exquisite dampers. I want to find out more about them and will over time, and indeed the Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tyres it wears, which my early outings suggest might be very special indeed.

The only interesting journey it has done to date is a cross-country run to Malvern for me to drive Morgan’s new Plus Four and not-quite-so-new Plus Six – and it remains instructive how, despite the fundamental issues of uneven weight distribution and front-wheel drive, a well-developed hatchback can be just as much fun to drive as a classic front/mid-engined, rear-wheel-drive sports car with double-wishbone front suspension.

I gave it a bit of a squirt on the way back, although still within the spirit of the running-in guidance, and was surprised not only by the response of the engine but also its surprisingly tuneful voice. Someone has thought hard about that.

But I’m hoping it starts to use less fuel as the motor loosens up. At the moment, any attempt at even slightly brisk driving drops the average MPG down to the mid-20s, and even if you’re just cruising at the legal limit on the motorway, about 35mpg is about the best you can expect.

If there’s a disappointment, it’s the interior, which looks somewhat downmarket compared with its most plush rivals, although no-one could fault the amount of standard equipment that’s loaded on the ST.

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It all works reasonably well, too; there are just too many cheap hard plastics in there. Even so, these early weeks have proven promising. Next time I report, I’ll have a far better understanding of its capabilities.

Love it:

Promising chassis Grippy and exceptionally damped, yet with more-thanacceptable ride quality.

Loathe it:

Downmarket cabin This may be a £33,660 car, but the interior quality is that of one costing half as much.

Mileage: 1211

St

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Life with a Focus ST: Month 1

Welcoming the Focus ST to the fleet - 8 July 2020

I have been a fan of fast Fords for as long as I’ve known how to drive, a fact I owe almost entirely to my mate Ben. He was a somewhat better-resourced teenager than I, which meant that while I chugged about the place in a long succession of aged, arthritic rusting wrecks that were dead slow even when new, Ben had a Ford Fiesta XR2. The original: white paint, round headlights, pepper-pot wheels and low-profile tyres. I was hooked from the moment I drove it.

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Of course, the fortunes of rapid Ford hatchbacks have ebbed and flowed over the years, but I think the company has been consistently good of late at producing a successful string of cars that combine speed, response and just a touch of back-to-basics honesty just in case you were ever likely to forget that, above all, these are cars of the people. So I’m looking forward to the months to come behind the wheel of this new and quite exceptionally orange Focus ST.

Anyone who’s paid attention to the long-termers I’ve run on these pages for the last many years will notice they’ve all had very sober colours in common: dark blues and greys mainly. This is not a coincidence: I have no desire to be noticed driving any car at all. I can remember swapping a BMW i8 for a 911 a few years back and delighting in the anonymity the Porsche provided.

Well, I’m clearly not going to be getting any of that here. But I guess if you’re going for an outrageous colour, you might as well go the whole way, and it might as well be on a fast Ford. Needless to say, however, this was not a colour I chose – it just came that way. Indeed, I had no choice in the spec at all other than to insist the car came with petrol rather than diesel power, hatchback rather than estate bodywork and manual instead of automatic gears.

So when it turned up and I started to push and prod about, I was startled by the amount of goodies and gadgets that had been loaded onto it, everything from radar-controlled cruise control to a heated steering wheel. Ford press cars used to be known by journalists as ‘Bob Wright Specials’ thanks to aforementioned (and quite brilliant) Ford press fleet man’s predilection for loading his cars with every available option, so I thought this ST might be some kind of tribute act to the recently retired Bob. But no: it’s all standard.

88 Ford focus st 2020 lt dashboard

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I’ll talk more about this at greater length a little bit further down the line. In the meantime, be advised that, orange ‘Fury’ paint aside, the only actual options this car carries are a wireless charging pad and Ford’s Performance pack, which provides launch control, a track mode, rev-matched downshift and an upshift indicator, all for a piffling £250. The car had only done 150 miles by the time it arrived, almost all accrued on its way from Ford’s UK head office in Essex to my home in the Welsh borders, so it will be a while before I get to drive it in the way I suspect it will shortly beg to be driven. And I’m fascinated by the powertrain.

The engine is a four-cylinder unit, but sourced from America where it’s more usually found in the entry-level Mustang. Its 276bhp output sounds rather modest, particularly when you consider its 2.3-litre capacity – remember Mercedes is now blasting way more than 400bhp from just 2.0 litres – but the devil appears to be in the detail.

A low-inertia twin-scroll turbo promises rapid response and more torque than some far more powerful competitors, including the Honda Civic Type R, the Mercedes-AMG A35 and the Volkswagen Golf R. It also has a form of anti-lag technology on it, where the airflow into the engine can be held open for up to three seconds after the driver lifts off, meaning the turbo compressor wheel is not slowed. And then there’s the differential, which is effectively an e-diff: open most of the time as you would want, but capable of locking up and sending half the power to each front wheel to maximise traction.

97 Ford focus st 2020 lt hero rear

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This, then, seems to be much more than just another rapid hatchback. It may look somewhat garish but deep down it seems that engineers have thought hard about how a car like this should behave on the road and not just gone down the headline-grabbing route, which, with the power that engine could clearly deliver, they could easily have done.

So far, and thanks to Covid-19, it’s only done short local journeys, but as the country opens up, so will its horizons be peeled back. What will it be like to live with relative to, say, a Golf R? How will its handling compare with the aforementioned Civic? Will the already obvious cheapness of some of the cabin fitments make me wish I’d gone for an A35 instead?

I have no better idea than you what the answers to all these questions might be. But I’m already looking forward to finding out.

Second Opinion

The last Ford Focus we had on our fleet was a vision of anonymity. It was an ST-Line model, free of the lurid paint and associated frippery of Andrew’s full-fat ST. I’m excited to find out how its excellent poise is heightened in ST form – even if it does mean drawing attention to myself. 

James Attwood

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Ford Focus ST specification

Prices: List price new £32,510 List price now £33,285 Price as tested £33,660

Options:Orange Fury paint £800, Ford Performance Pack £250, wireless charging £100

Fuel consumption and range: Claimed economy 34.4mpg Fuel tank 55 litres Test average 31.9mpg Test best 36.2mpg Test worst 18.6mpg Real-world range 386 miles

Tech highlights: 0-62mph 5.7sec Top speed 155mph Engine 4 cyls, 2261cc, turbocharged, petrol Max power 276bhp at 5500rpm Max torque 310lb ft at 3000-4000rpm Transmission 6-speed manual Boot capacity 375 litres Wheels 19in, alloy Tyres 235/35 R19, Michelin Pilot Sport 4S Kerb weight 1468kg

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Service and running costs: Contract hire rate £461.12 CO2 179g/km Service costs None Other costs £546.15 Fuel costs £2140.05 Running costs inc fuel £2686.20 Cost per mile 24 pence Faults Bent alloy wheel, tyre puncture

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Join the debate

Comments
6
Add a comment…
xxxx 1 October 2021

£550 for a wheel and tyre is crazy

6th.replicant 2 October 2020

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 :)

jameshobiecat 20 August 2020

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.