Wheels Australia - June 2018

(Ben Green) #1

@wheelsaustralia 57


Next year, the Fiesta ST
will be the only Fiesta
you’ll be able to buy
brand-new from an
Australian Ford dealer.
Why? Because with
production of the
new-gen car now
centralised in Europe,
there’s no longer a fat
enough profit margin in

lower-grade Fiestas to
enable a business case
on our shores. However
with a $25K-plus price
tag, the Fiesta ST
has enough meat on
the bone to make it
economically worthwhile
for Ford Australia and the
dealerships that will
sell them.

the brake-based virtual LSDs used by every other


B-segment hottie, and while it’s optional in Europe,


Wheelsunderstands it’s likely to be standard-issue in


Australia. Helping it out is brake torque vectoring,


which varies braking force between the left and right


wheels to aid turn-in response and mitigate understeer.


MEANWHILE, back to the Route Napoleon. It’s


Ascension Day, a public holiday in France, and


everyone with a fast car or motorcycle seems to have


gravitated toward this road. Little wonder, considering


the exceptional mix of fast sweepers and tight corners


that can be found on the route around the town of


Castellane. Prime hot-hatch territory. We’re in a three-


door ST equipped with the LSD and 18s – the lightest,


most focused configuration – and it feels eager to attack.


The rubbery shifter isn’t especially precise, but the


vague friction point that plagued the old car’s clutch


pedal has been banished for good. Tipping in the


throttle, the first impression is that the engine is far


gutsier than expected of a 1.5-litre, and the swell of


torque from just off idle endows it with outstanding


tractability. In sport mode with the muffler flaps


flipped open, the three-cylinder has a meaty burble –


and surprisingly vocal crackles on the overrun.


And the more revs you give it, the better it becomes.


It’s torque-rich, yes, but it doesn’t mind chasing the


redline either. Keep the needle above 3000rpm and


response is swift up until 6000rpm, where thrust begins


to taper off ahead of a 6200rpm redline.


That straight-line go is matched by a properly tied-


down front end. The Michelin/LSD combo lays power


down beautifully, with just a smidge of torque steer


when at greater steering angles. And while the Quaife


diff is yet to be locked in for Australia, the profound


Forget the


rest, we


get the


best


EQUIPPED WITH THE
TRICKY DIFF AND STICKY
18s, THE SMALLEST
FORD STANDS TALL FOR
DRIVER INVOLVEMENT
Free download pdf