Skip advert
Advertisement

Ford Focus 1.0 Ecoboost review

Ford has fitted a tiny 1-litre turbocharged petrol engine into the Focus - but is it up to the task?

Evo rating
Price
from £16,254
  • Punchy engine, thrummy soundtrack
  • Will real world economy match claims?

What is it?

It's the most extreme example of mainstream engine downsizing yet: an engine of just 999cc to haul a Ford Focus. This tiny motor is set to replace the regular non-turbo 1.6 that used to be the Focus range's centre of gravity, producing the same 123bhp, a lot more low-end torque and dramatically improved fuel economy, in real driving as well as in the official figures. It weighs 30kg less, too.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Technical highlights?

The engine is a long-stroke three-cylinder, with direct injection, variable timing for both inlet and exhaust camshafts, and a tiny turbocharger that’s able to spin at up to an incredible 248,000rpm.

It's full of clever stuff, such as a water-cooled exhaust manifold to reduce exhaust temperatures and cut down on the need for extra doses of fuel at high loads to keep things cool and detonation-free.

The cambelt runs in oil, so it's silent and everlasting, and the cylinder head's cooling channels are divided so that initially only water from the hot, exhaust side is fed to the Focus's cabin heater and the rest of the coolant stays still for a quick warm-up.

The 'brake mean effective pressure' is the ultimate measure of engine efficiency. A naturally-aspirated engine usually measures around 150psi here (that's the peak pressure on the piston crown), a good turbo well over 200psi. This tiny EcoBoost scores an extraordinary 348psi, all from an engine whose cast-iron block is small enough to sit on a sheet of A4 paper.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Advertisement - Article continues below

What's it like to drive?

It makes the lovely deep, smooth, sonorous hum typical of a three-pot, but makes remarkably little of it. Despite the lack of a balancer shaft – the flywheel and front pulley are deliberately unbalanced to achieve the same result – the engine is extremely civilised. No Focus is more refined.

Advertisement - Article continues below

There's practically no detectable turbo lag, and such is the low-end torque that the engine easily pulls the long sixth gear. There's a thrust and energy to the power delivery you just don't feel in the regular Focus 1.6.

The only downside is the lack of engine braking, partly the result of the engine's very low internal friction (it uses 0W/20 oil). That nose-weight reduction makes the steering more sensitive and the balance more neutral, making this the most agile current-generation Focus so far.

All told, the 1.0 EcoBoost-powered Focus is the best all-round car in the current range. As downsized petrol engines are the future of mainstream car powerplants, we can feel pretty good about life. 

How does it compare?

There's no comparable powertrain in a Focus rival yet, although similar designs must be on virtual drawing boards across the world. Compared with a Focus 1.6, the power is the same, the torque is greater at 125lb ft (available from just 1500rpm) against 118lb ft, and there's up to 30sec of overboost on offer with 148lb ft. There's a £250 price rise, too.

Anything else I need to know?

There is also a less powerful 99bhp version with a five-speed gearbox, and experiments with the engine have shown it’s able to make 180bhp with a bigger turbo. A naturally aspirated version will follow, with around 75bhp. We can expect to see the engine throughout the lower reaches of the Ford line-up, as well as the Focus it will be in the C-Max and B-Max MPVs and – although not officially confirmed yet - the Fiesta. 

Specifications

Engine999cc three-cylinder, turbocharged, petrol
Max power123bhp @ 6000rpm
Max torque148lb ft @ 1500rpm
0-6011.3 secs (claimed 0-62mph)
Top speed120mph
On saleSpring 2012
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

BMW M340i xDrive Touring Fast Fleet test – 6000 miles in the six-cylinder estate
evo Fast Fleet BMW M340i xDrive Touring
Long term tests

BMW M340i xDrive Touring Fast Fleet test – 6000 miles in the six-cylinder estate

The six-cylinder M Performance estate departs the evo Fast Fleet, confirming a renaissance for the everyday BMW
20 May 2024
Toyota GR Supra Fast Fleet test – 11 months in Japan's Porsche Cayman
evo Fast Fleet Toyota Supra
Long term tests

Toyota GR Supra Fast Fleet test – 11 months in Japan's Porsche Cayman

With a 335bhp straight-six and rear-wheel drive, the Supra should be very much our sort of car. But after nearly a year on our fleet, did this prove t…
17 May 2024
The Lamborghini Huracán replacement will get a 10,000rpm flat-plane crank V8 
Lamborghini V8 to replace V10
News

The Lamborghini Huracán replacement will get a 10,000rpm flat-plane crank V8 

The iconic Lamborghini V10 is no more, but its upcoming eight-cylinder successor will pack hybrid drive and a 10,000rpm redline
20 May 2024