Top Car

(BrasilTuga) #1

60 TOPCAR.CO.ZA|January 2016


2016’s most wanted:FOCUS RS


WENTYTHOUSANDdollars. To
the Nitrous blue bundle of fury on
these pages that’s the cost of to oling
the brackets for a slightly thicker rear
anti-roll ba r, beca use nothing in the
existing Ford parts bin was suitable.
But moresignificantly, it’s the
difference between ‘a bar that’s going

to change the whole character of the car’ and a compromise.


So says vehicle engineering manager Tyrone Johnson,


explaining that it wasn’t a compromise he was prepared to


make. ‘You don’t ask for $20000 in mainstream


engineering,’ he says with a laug h, ‘becausethat is a big


deal.’ But for the new Focus RS? Nothing was impossi ble.


Almost ev erything ab out this third-generation Focus RS

is extraordinary. Which is not the same as without


limits. As the man in charge is quick to point out, th ere


had to be a business case for everything he and his team


chose to do; spen ding that $20k there meant $20k less to


spen d elsewhere. But seriously – name another car that


has a four-whe el-drive system with a dedicated Drift


Mode? Ford has built one into a five-door family hatch,


given it 257kW and stuck with a manual gearbox. If we’re


currently in the midst of a mega-h atch war, this thing


looks like a serious escalation.


Can it possi bly be as good as the company claims? We’ve

spoken to both Johnson and Focus RS chief programme


engineer Jürgen Gagstatter, and cadged a passenger ride at


Ford’s Lommel Proving Grou nd in Belgium to try to find


out. This is the story of the hot hatch of 2016.


It’s been morethan three years in the making, and has
enjoyed support from right at the top since the start. ‘Raj
Nair really wanted this car,’ Johnson says; Nair is Ford’s vice
pres ident and chief technical officer. ‘He really wanted this
car. We probably wouldn’t be sitting here without him.’
This kind of cheerleading brings opportunities, but also
challenges. There was no way Nair was going to let Johnson
engineer the RS only for Europe, which would have been
easier , and cheaper, than taking it into America as well.
Instead, they had to figure out a way to make it work with
both US and European safety regulations, and then come
down a single production line in Saarlouis, Germany,
amongst every ot her European Focus. ‘This was very, very
difficult,’ he says. ‘Almost moving worlds.’
To understand the scale of the challenge, you have to
understand just how different the RS is to its ordinary
brethren – and that process starts with th e four-whe el-drive
powertrain. 257kW didn ’t emer ge out of the fog of war, so to
speak, as a frantic response to what Audi, Me rcedes and
Honda were up to ; it’s been the figure from the beginning.
But uprating the 2.3-litr e Ecoboost four from the 228kW it
produces in the Mu stang involved changing the turbo, the
cyli nder liners, the intake system, the exhaust and the
cyli nder head – the latter assisted by noneother than
Cosworth. The intercooler is physically the biggest unit that
will fit in a Focus, while the aggressive front bumper not
only contributes to the ‘zero lift’ aerodynamics target, it
features the largest possi ble cooling aperture and a grille
with greate r gaps in its mesh. Yet come the car’s debut at the
Geneva motor show in March, when the output was dueto
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