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Ford WT Fiesta: first drive

  • By Neil Dowling
  • The Sunday Times
  • image

    Refinement is a word used to describe gentlemen?s etiquette, not usually light-car handling and ride comfort. Yet the Ford Fiesta manages to add the word to its vocabulary. Photo Gallery

Neil Dowling road tests and reviews the Ford Fiesta.

Getting into a small car has never been so difficult or as rewarding.  The good news is that the light and small car segment are now red hot with value - the bad news is that you have to choose which one suits you best.

The task today just became harder as Ford unveils its nine-car Fiesta range that is jam-packed with models that are great drives, great value and pretty good to look at.

There’s choices of diesel and petrol and sedans and hatchbacks. There’s a five-speed manual and a new six-speed dual-clutch automatic. The new auto replaces the previous four-speed unit that was only available with a 1.4-litre engine.  And just quietly, there’s room for an XR4 model in the future.


Value

Prices start from as low as $16,990 (CL petrol manual hatch) and climb through the list to the specialised - and very popular - ECOnetic diesel hatch that costs $24,990 and remains Australia’s most economical car.

In between there is the mid-range LX in either automatic or manual and diesel or petrol from $18,990 to $21,490, and the sports-oriented Zetec that officially gets here in January and is very appealing at $20,990-$23,490.

Ford says pricing is on par with the outgoing models yet extra kit is valued at $600-$1000, indicating just how competitive the baby-car market has become and how serious Ford is to climb back up the sales ladder.

Safety

Standard equipment includes electronic stability control that’s linked with traction control and electronic brake assist.

The base model CL has two airbags but the other models have seven. Ford says the optional safety pack that restores seven bags in the CL costs $600 and lifts its ANCAP crash rating to five stars from four.

However, Ford has taken away the spare wheel. All Fiestas - now built in Thailand after the change from Germany - have an aerosol “mobility kit” in the boot’s vacant wheel well. A spare wheel is an option.

“It’s one of the trade offs,’‘ says Ford Australia’s general marketing manager, David Katic.  “We’ve chosen deleting that ahead of adding features - such as ESC and Bluetooth, for example - which buyers want ahead of a spare wheel.’’

Technology

In the move from Germany to Thailand, the small car has had a big increase in noise reduction - a factor of concern in the previous model.  It gets substantial underbody sound dampening that, combined with improvements to the suspension, give the Fiesta a level of ride and comfort above its class.

The engine line up is an 88kW/151Nm 1.6-litre petrol and 66kW/200Nm 1.6-litre turbo-diesel rated at 6.1 litres/100km and 4.4 l/100km respectively.

The six-speed dual-clutch automatic is only available in the petrol models. Ford says “we’re working on’’ an auto-diesel combo but there’s a lot of resistance from the drivetrain suppliers in Europe.  Ford won’t talk sales numbers with the new Fiesta. But is expects a healthy rise in interest.

The sales split is expected to be 20 per cent sedan and 80 per cent hatch, with an overall 15 per cent swing to diesel.  “This is a car that will change people’s perceptions of Ford,’‘ says Katic.  “We are seen as a big-car company. This Fiesta will bring a lot of people into Ford showrooms.’’

Sales

Ford won't talk sales numbers with the new Fiesta. But is expects a healthy rise in interest.  The sales split is expected to be 20 per cent sedan and 80 per cent hatch, with an overall 15 per cent swing to diesel.

"This is a car that will change people's perceptions of Ford," says Katic.  "We are seen as a big-car company. This Fiesta will bring a lot of people into Ford showrooms."

Driving

Refinement is a word used to describe gentlemen’s etiquette, not usually light-car handling and ride comfort.  Yet the Ford Fiesta manages to add the word to its vocabulary.

And it did it on a day that would possibly be the worst in Adelaide’s 2010 calendar. Tuesday.  Storms pummeled the hills of the city, the rain blinded the driver’s view and made the little Fiesta fight for traction. But what a little hero.  Over debris and flooding that coursed over the twisting hills roads, the latest Fiesta handled itself brilliantly and rose above the ranks of many of its rivals.

But it isn’t all highlights for the Fiesta.  It makes a lot of difference which Fiesta model is chosen for the drive.

There isn’t much between the sedan and the hatchback, perhaps the small extra weight making the sedan’s tail sit better and the superior rigidity of the three-box design helping handling.

But there is a big gap in the diesel and petrol. Though smooth and quiet, the 1.6-litre petrol is gasping on the hills. It is very rewarding in the mid-range of the tachometer but feels weak below 2000rpm and breathless above 5000rpm.

That is fine in the five-speed manual version, but even the lauded six-speed dual-clutch automatic has problems getting hold of the powerband and then placing it on the road.

For general driving, the Fiesta petrol auto is fine. But push it a bit and it feels lacklustre.  The diesel, by comparison, is sparkling. Also 1.6 litres in capacity, it is down on power (66kW to 89kW) but stronger on torque with 200Nm against the petrol’s 151Nm. And it is delivered much lower in the rev range.

That translated into a car with manual transmission being such a fun ride. The flexibility of the diesel engine means it can be left in second or third for the really tight stuff, then pulled up to fourth and fifth as the road straightens.

The basic Feista that was first introduced in January 2009 remains. But in the move this month to the Thailand plant, changes were made to key areas of sound deadening.

That, combined with the new diesel-dual clutch auto drivetrain option, creates a light car with small to mid-size ambitions and refinement.  It rides with surprising compliance. Noise levels from the suspension and tyres are low.  Even the electric-assist power steering is responsive and not overly vague.

The CL and LX models get standard suspension and seats while the Zetec model - on test here but not in showrooms until early 2011 - has sports suspension (tighter springs, retuned steering rack and 195/50R16 tyres) and front seats with more side bolsters to enhance the ability of the Fiesta’s chassis.

The Zetec does this without compromising the ride qualities and, as such, deserves attention by buyers who enjoy driving. In fact, the best model of the range is the diesel-manual Zetec ($23,490) or the LX sedan diesel-manual ($21,490). Such a shame the diesel can’t be mated to the dual-clutch auto.

Ford Fiesta

ECOnetic 5-door hatch: 66kW/200Nm 1.6-litre turbo-diesel, 5-speed manual $24,990.
CL 5-door hatch: 89kW/151Nm 1.6-litre petrol, 5-sp man (opt 6-sp auto)...$16,990.
CL 4-door sedan: 89kW/151Nm 1.6-litre petrol, 6-speed auto....................$18,990.
LX 5-door hatch: 89kW/151Nm 1.6-litre petrol, 5-sp man (opt 6-sp auto)...$18,990.
LX 4-door sedan: 89kW/151Nm 1.6-litre petrol, 5-sp man (opt 6-sp auto)...$18,990.
Zetec 5-door hatch: 89kW/151Nm 1.6-litre petrol, 5-sp man (opt 6-sp auto).$20,990.

Origin: Thailand
Engines: 1.6-litre turbo-diesel; 1.6-litre petrol
Power/torque: 66kW/200Nm (diesel); 89kW/151Nm (petrol)
Fuel economy: 4.4 litres/100km (diesel); 6.1 l/100km (petrol)
Transmissions: 5-speed manual; 6-speed dual-clutch auto
Suspension: MacPherson struts/torsion beam
Steering: electric-assist
Brakes: disc/drum, ESC, ABS, EBD, brake assist
Wheels: 15-inch steel (CL); 15-inch alloy (LX); 16-inch alloy (Zetec); no spare
Length (hatch/sedan): 3950mm/4244mm
Width: 1722mm
Height: 1485mm
Wheelbase: 2490mm
Weight: 1022kg-1062kg
Boot (seat up): 281 litres

Comments on this story

Displaying 3 of 8 comments

  • I’ve had my 2011 Fiesta LX diesel sedan for 2 months. Awesome fuel economy and handling. Bought it for $17,990 drive away! No problems yet. It pays to shop around for a good price. Only minor complaints, not enough adjustment in driver’s rear vision mirror for tall drivers, dash turn indicators spaced too wide and obscured by hands on steering wheel, no temperature gauge - only warning light, lack of centre console storage bin and wipers don’t cover large parts of upper windscreen. No spare wheel, but you can buy cheap new mag wheel for $180 + $100 tyre, $15 jack from wreckers. Ford charge $500 for optional spare wheel kit.

    Greg Thomas of LENNOX HEAD, NSW 2478 Posted on 31 October 2011 8:52pm
  • I have a 2009 green ford Fiesta Zetec built in Germany. Well the car salesman kept throwing at me its German quality and thats what I thought too.
    1. Driver door is ajar and dealer keeps dodging it to get repaired, over a year now
    2. Aircon only half gassed from the factory and still on a 40c day it struggles badly to cool the cabin.
    3. Steering rack makes a loose banging noise been repaired 3 times and now it’s back.
    4. I’ve done 40000km and have started to notice the foam in my drivers seat is loosing it padding eg going flat.
    5. Blue tooth module has been replaces but that was my mobile was short circuiting it.

    I still think its the best looking small car, handling is above average and the 1.6 motor is strong and peppy.

    I have had a look at the Thai built model and have notice they have taken out bits, like dash is hard plastic, red led light above glove box is gone and no spare wheel, also the USB port is gone as well :-(

    Think I’ll be trading mine in soon…...

    Peter Quattro of adelaide Posted on 02 April 2011 8:29pm
  • I decided not to go for a full size spare in my new Lancer since i have never had a wheel that has needed changing in nearly 20 years of driving. But there is no way known i would settle for an aerosol. Ridiculous!

    The Masked Commenter of Brisbane Posted on 15 December 2010 2:41pm
  • Not too sure why the complaints over supply issue. I bought my new WT Fiesta LX sedan, early November, and collected the car slightly more than 2 weeks later. No issue at all. Love the car. Maybe I was just lucky.

    Gavin of Melbourne Posted on 14 December 2010 11:09pm
  • Ford is a disappointment. We laid a deposit down after endless research from Swift to Polo to Mazda2 etc, and it turn out that they have no stock and have to wait months(3+) for this Thailand built car to be available. Wasn’t happy, and skip Ford for something else… if only the Fiesta don’t have a Ford badge the car might perform better in the market… Ford is not a aspiring brand.

    phuong of canberra Posted on 14 December 2010 2:53pm
  • There is a reason you don’t see a lot of Fiestas on the road.Supply problems from Germany meant this great little car couldn’t get any sales traction. Ford Australia doesn’t complain and passes the buck to it’s dealers to explain huge delays to their once excited customers who eventually buy another product in desperation. The solution is to move production to Thailand .Out of the frying pan into the fire it seems as the Press launch is a good six weeks after the vehicle arrives in dealerships.The excuse will be the Zetec wasn’t in production and it was important to have a hero car for the press to drive.If Ford are serious this time build what the dealers are selling not what the Thailand plant wants to build.Fix the supply chain and the car will sell itself .

    shaer Posted on 14 December 2010 7:51am
  • Prejudiced and biased perhaps, but honestly speaking, I personally am not so confident to drive a Thai-made car even if it’s from a multi-national car company.

    While we understand that companies have outsourced to lower production cost in globalisation, can anyone tell us whether the built quality has been compromised when the production is shifted from Germany to Thailand?

    Zes Maniac of Glen Waverley Posted on 13 December 2010 3:06pm
  • This is what you should do on every model release, a break down of cost across the hole model range. I work at a dealership and probably see less than 5% base models sold.  This gives a better indication of cost

    Vdubdetailer Posted on 11 December 2010 3:25pm
Read all 8 comments

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