Home - Car Reviews - 2006 Ford Focus ZX5 SES Road Test
2006 Ford Focus ZX5 SES Road Test
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Sometimes, you can tell a lot about an object by its wrapping, other times, you cant. Case in point is the badge on the back of this Ford, which reads, "FOCUS" in a rather authoritarian font style, instead of the old and somewhat funky non-capitalized logo. By the looks of things, Ford seems to have matured the new car into something less cheerful, exchanging screen-printed tee and acid-washed jeans for suit and tie. This message of change was double, no, triple-underlined with a reworked facelift received early last year, that stressed sensibility and quality, inspired by the big, and somewhat somber looking Five Hundred sedan.
But even with a facelift, Focus is lost amidst a growing market of compact
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| The very European Focus is still a strong contender after all these years. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
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| Tail lights have an unusual home on the rear C-Pillar. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
Let your fingers take a walk through the reworked cabin; most noticeably theres a new, symmetrical dashboard, which, much like the nose, is somber and mature. While its better looking than the mad, sweeping triangular dash and console that it replaces, its neither soft-touch, nor fabricated from matte materials resulting in some particularly nasty dash-top glare. From a functionality standpoint, everything
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| Plastics are neither soft-touch, nor fabricated from matte materials resulting in some particularly nasty dash-top glare. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
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| Fords five-speed manual is one of the sweetest gearboxes in the compact segment. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
Oh, but to drive, is a completely different story. You see, on face value, its not difficult to dismiss the Focus as just another average compact; theres nothing that overtly hints at how much of a drivers car this is, except perhaps the formed, chunky steering wheel and the cloth bucket seats whose bolsters look like theyve had an anaphylactic allergic reaction. But behind it all, theres a big dynamical surprise party just waiting to happen every time you hit the road - fun time is where the ball is in the Focus court.

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| Focus 2.0-litre Duratec engine is tractable and refined at all speeds. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
All "Focii", bar the top of the line performance ZX4 ST are powered by a 2.0-liter Duratec 20 inline-four engine with dual overhead cams and sixteen valves. Generating 136 horsepower, and about equal amounts of torque, it lingers towards the middle of the class, mustering up figures that are merely average, but once again, the numbers fail to paint the whole picture. So what if it doesnt have variable valve timing or direct injection; the sweet sounding, free-revving engine delivers its power across its rev range without being prone to coarseness and grittiness, even at the top end. It may not set the road ablaze, but somehow, this might
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| Offset stereo controls are intuitive and easy to use. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
Should you calm things down, the Focus gold-medal refinement still remains. Around town, the engine delivers its pull and twist within a range thats actually accessible during everyday driving, a nice change from high-strung engines that seem to serve a single purpose of chasing power curve diagrams. The engine makes a fine mate for the sporty gearbox and light clutch; gearchanges arent hampered by any notchiness or balkiness whether youre taking it easy or rushing through the cogs. The shift action is well-oiled, with each gear easily engaged. Also commendable is the ride, which despite having excellent body control is even able
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| Neat looking body kit; shame that the wheels and ride height dont match. (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
New for this year, and equipped on my test car is the Street Appearance Package I, an aesthetic kit that seeks to tap the tuner deep down inside. It does a pretty good job at mimicking Fords previous WRC car efforts, with deeper fascias, blackout diamond mesh, a roof-mounted spoiler, and rear bumper with faux diffuser insert. I might even hazard a guess by saying that its a pretty serious looking machine, if it werent for the fact that the poor thing looks woefully under-wheeled; the 16-inch alloys on highish 50 profile tires give it the appearance of a shopping trolley, and theres enough of a wheel gap to park a couple of cars underneath (OK, 1:18 scale model cars at least). While the body kit is macho, and pumped up, the stance could do with some work. Verdict: keep the extra $1,295 in the bank, at least until Ford offers 17 or 18-inch
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| Why oh why did they have to can the Focus SVT? (Photo: Justin Couture, American Auto Press) |
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