Ford Focus 2015 News
Ford recalls Focus over fire risk
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By Neil Dowling · 17 Aug 2017
Ford Australia has confirmed it is contacting almost 43,000 Focus owners to warn of a vehicle defect that could cause a fire.
ACCC targets Ford over PowerShift auto transmissions
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By Ron Hammerton · 26 Jul 2017
The Australia Competition and Consumer Commission (ACCC) has commenced legal proceedings against Ford Motor Company of Australia.
How Ferrari softens the blow of a long waiting list
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By Paul Gover · 29 Jul 2016
Waiting for a new car is never easy. It could be a week or it could be a year — even longer — but a delivery hold-up still means delayed satisfaction.
Best new cars of 2015 by segment
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By Paul Gover · 26 Dec 2015
Here's a recap of the year's stars, with impressive arrivals and value added to staples.
Aussie market claiming scalps but the deals won't last
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By Joshua Dowling · 31 Jul 2015
Want proof the Australian new-car market is getting tough? Several models have disappeared from showrooms because they can't handle the competition.
Ford's sales slide will cut profit | comment
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By Richard Blackburn · 17 Jul 2015
In June, Australians bought more new cars than in any single month in history, yet Ford sales were down by 17 per cent. Year-to-date, the slide is even worse.There isn't a major brand that is losing market share at the same rate. Or one that has slipped in share for as long as Ford. Sales have been in decline for more than a decade.In 2004, more than 135,000 Australians bought new Fords. This year, it's on track to be roughly half that number.And that's only half the story. Look more closely at the figures and the picture is bleak for the brand that twenty years ago topped the sales charts.How will sales improve when the brand has trimmed its line-up in the biggest segment of the market?Everybody assumes the sales slump is tied to the impending death of the locally-made Falcon and Territory, but the company's local products aren't the biggest problem.Sales of locally-made Fords are down 9.5 per cent year-to-date. Compare that with the imported Mondeo (down by almost 60 per cent), Focus (down 54 per cent) and Fiesta (down 32 per cent).Which makes this week's decision to drop the cheapest model from the Focus line-up all the more puzzling. How will sales improve when the brand has trimmed its line-up in the biggest segment of the market?There are promising products on the horizon, with Everest and Mustang due this year, but products aren't Ford's problem. Fiesta, Focus and Mondeo are all cars most brands would love in their line-up, but the Ranger is the only one that sells.Ford used to be labelled the Falcon car company. It's now in danger of becoming the Ranger car company.Ford says market share isn't everything and it is building a profitable business. But surely there's a point when the showroom traffic slows to a level where profit suffers?
2015 Ford Focus update drops entry model and boosts prices
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By Craig Duff · 17 Jul 2015
The unusual strategy, which effectively means the price of the cheapest Focus increases by $3100, signals a deliberate move away from fleet sales.In place of four variants with three engines the revised range adopts a 1.5-litre turbocharged engine and the entry price rises to $23,390 for the Trend hatch with a six-speed manual.Ford Australia spokesman Neil McDonald says the decision to drop the entry Ambiente is based on the buying habits of existing Focus customers, most of whom are looking for vehicles with extra features."Essentially the Ambiente represented about 12 per cent of the share of total Focus sales (YTD 2015). The Trend is the overwhelmingly preferred model (about 60 per cent of Focus is Trend)," McDonald says."So by reprofiling the line-up and adding more features, there's a better opportunity for Focus customers, who want more features in their cars."The turbocharged EcoBoost engine is a pearler and its outputs of 132kW/240Nm are 7kW/38Nm up on the 2.0-litre engine it replaces. The previous 1.6-litre engine — used to power the Ambiente — has also been dropped, as has the 2.0-litre turbo diesel."We only had a less than 3 per cent take-up for the TDCi (diesel) engine and with the fuel efficiency being delivered by our EcoBoost technology, customers are getting performance and a broad spread of torque from low in the rev range," McDonald says.The price of the Focus Trend hatch is $1100 up on the outgoing car but the updated model adds Ford's Sync2 infotainment software, satellite navigation and a reversing camera. Opting for a six-speed auto costs another $1000.The most expensive Focus is now the Titanium hatch or sedan with a six-speed auto for $32,690.The price includes an updated version of Ford's Active City Stop automatic emergency braking that operates at up to 50km/h. It also gets blind spot warning and rear cross-traffic alert.Fuel consumption is 5.8L/100km for the manual versions, rising to 6.2L/100km for the automatics and topping out at 6.4L/100km on the Titanium.All models have updated suspension and retuned steering to improve feel. The exterior changes are minor but the button-blinged centre console has been replaced with an eight-inch touchscreen and accompanying decluttered look.The Focus also includes the MyKey control system, where the second car key can be programmed for inexperienced drivers. It limits the speed, controls the volume of the sound system and stops safety systems such as stability control from being disabled.The upgraded Focus range goes on sale in October and Ford will be hoping the revised positioning helps reverse a slump that has seen sales of its small car drop by almost 54 per cent to date this year.
2015 Ford Focus | new car sales price
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By Matthew Hatton · 13 Jul 2015
Ford has confirmed specifications and pricing for the new LZ Focus sedan and hatch, ahead of its local arrival in October.This means the Thai-built mainstream LZ Ford Focus range will arrive five months after the update to the German-built Focus ST hot hatch.As part of the LZ update, Ford has consolidated the engine and model lineup for the Focus. This has also brought a rise in starting price to $23,390, up $3100 from the outgoing model's entry point.All of the 2015 LZ Focus range features a 132kW/240Nm 1.5-litre turbo four-cylinder petrol engine, doing away with the 1.6 and 2.0-litre petrol as well as the 2.0-litre diesel engines available in the outgoing LW MkII model.The new engine will be paired with a six-speed manual or a new six-speed torque converter automatic instead of the current model's dual-clutch unit.The new powertrain delivers an extra 7kW/38Nm over the outgoing 2.0-litre 4-cylinder naturally aspirated engine, while also improving fuel efficiency.With the manual transmission, the Focus achieves 5.8L/100km combined (down from 6.6L/100km), and 6.2L/100km with the auto (also down from 6.6L/100km). The heavier Titanium hatch uses slightly more at 6.4L/100km.The LZ Focus range starts with the Trend model grade in hatch form, with a starting price of $23,390 for the manual. Moving up to the auto adds $1000, with the hatch priced the same as the auto-only sedan. The previous model's Ambiente entry-point has been discontinued.Exclusively available as a hatch, the middle-spec Sport starts at $26,490, with the auto again adding $1000, while the top-spec auto-only Titanium is priced from $32,690 for either the hatch or wagon.Standard across the LZ Focus range is the 8-inch touchscreen with Sync2 smartphone connectivity seen in the Focus ST. The screen brings with it a reversing camera, previously only available on the higher-specced LW Focus variants.The entry-level Trend also features rear parking sensors, Ford's MyKey technology, cruise control, daytime running lights (DRLs), fog lamps and 16-inch alloys.A $300 Convenience pack adds auto headlights and wipers, auto dimming rearview mirror and "follow-me-home" lighting to the Trend models.Moving up to the Sport adds a body kit, sports-tuned suspension, keyless start, dual-zone climate control, nine-speaker audio system, leather steering wheel/shifter, auto headlights/wipers, LED DRLs and 17-inch alloys.Topping out the LZ Focus range, the Titanium adds AEB, park assist, blind spot monitoring, rear cross-traffic alert and leather sports seats.The 2015 LZ Ford Focus will arrive in local showrooms in October.
Ken Block puts the 2015 Ford Focus RS through its paces at Goodwood
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By Aiden Taylor · 27 Jun 2015
Ford has unleashed its new range of performance cars at the U.K’s annual Goodwood Festival of Speed exhibition.Headlining Ford’s display at the show was an appearance from drifting sensation and rally driver Ken Block who piloted the new Focus RS hot hatch up the Goodwood hill climb.Ken Block was a consultant during the development of the 257kW all-wheel drive Focus RS and played a role in defining how the car handles. We suspect Block who is famous for his viral drift videos may also be behind the ‘drift’ mode that has been integrated into the hot hatch’s selectable drive modes.Ken Block was a consultant during the development of the 257kW all-wheel drive Focus RS and played a role in defining how the car handles."I've had so much fun helping Ford develop this next generation of ultimate hot hatch and I'm stoked about the thought of blasting up Lord March's Hillclimb with 350 PS and all-wheel drive at my disposal," said Block before the run.During the run, Block kept it pretty tame adopting a fast and straight style instead of the sideways and smokey we're used to seeing from him and the Focus RS. The RS’s clever all-wheel drive system can send up to 50 per cent of the available grunt to the rear torque-vectoring differential which can then send up to 100 per cent to either wheel. Ford says this all-paw system in conjunction with the active stability control allows for controlled oversteer.The new Focus RS also incorporates a launch control function – a first for an RS – though Ford remains tight-lipped about any acceleration figures.Block made full use of the Focus RS’s tail-happy handling balance, sliding his way up the hill climb in the bright blue monster.Ben Collins, formerly known as ‘The Stig’ on Top Gear, also drove up the Goodwood hill climb in the hardcore U.S-spec Shelby Mustang GT350R track car.The Shelby ‘Stang features a 5.2-litre naturally aspirated flat-plane crank V8 pumping out over 373kW and rides on lightweight carbon fibre wheels sourced from Australian company Carbon Revolution.At this stage Ford is keeping the high performance coupe for left-hand drive U.S markets only, however the dynamic display in the U.K (a RHD market) could indicate the brand is considering a right-hook Shelby for the future.The new 447kW mid-engine Ford GT supercar also made its first official public appearance in the U.K but the carbon fibre stunner did not hit the track for a flat-out blast up the hill.It’s the second time this month we’ve seen the Ford GT in Europe with a race car version starring at the Le Mans 24 hour race a few weeks ago when Ford announced it would compete in the endurance event next year.
2015 Ford Focus RS outputs confirmed
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By Richard Blackburn · 26 Jun 2015
Ford's new Focus RS hatch will have just 3kW less power than a Holden Commodore V8.