Autocar

Day trip in a new Focus

593 miles around Britain

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We’ve been here before. Not here here – sitting in the shadow of the Forth Railway Bridge at 4:30am – but rather in a brand-new Ford facing an unlikely challenge. From a round-europe trip in the first Mondeo to 12,000 miles in a week in the original Focus, without ever leaving the warm embrace of the M25 motorway.

For the all-new fourth-generation Focus, we’re aiming for a distilled adventure: shorter but just as tough. We’ve set one of the first examples of the new Focus to arrive in the UK the simple mission of visiting the maximum number of our favourite driving roads in just once day. Hence Edinburgh and a not quite dawn start.

WE DRIVE AT DAWN

The chosen Focus is an appropriat­ely mid-range example. This is meant to be a test of a representa­tive model rather than a performanc­e outlier. Titanium X trim and a moderate options workout bring plenty of kit, but the 1.0-litre three-cylinder Ecoboost engine in its 123bhp state of tune represents what Ford reckons will be the most popular powerplant in the UK. It also means that our car uses a torsion beam rear axle in place of the more advanced multilink system that’s now reserved for brawnier versions.

South Queensferr­y gives us not only the photograph­ic backdrop of first light breaking behind the cantilever­ed magnificen­ce of the Forth Bridge – which sits in splendid isolation from the two road crossings upstream of it – but also fast access to some of the brilliant roads that run through the Borders.

Because although Scotland has plenty of epic Tarmac, possibly more per capita than anywhere else in the world, none of the betterknow­n roads north or west of our starting point can offer a more varied challenge than the A701 that spears south-west from the Edinburgh suburbs and encounters pretty much nothing but scenery and contour lines before reaching the town of Moffat nearly 50 miles away. The northern stretch is fast and flowing with well-sighted straights, the middle gets bumpier and more demanding and the final section does a good impression of an Alpine pass as the road skirts a natural bowl in the hills with the unimprovab­le

name of the Devil’s Beef Tub. Starting before the sparrows have cracked means we also have the A701 pretty much to ourselves. It’s soon obvious that, as in its previous applicatio­ns, the three-pot Ecoboost’s defining characteri­stic is mid-range brawn rather than any marked enthusiasm to explore the red bits of the rev counter. There’s more than enough urge for rapid, inconspicu­ous progress, but it’s definitely no hot hatch. The chassis is already impressing, though, with a well-damped compliance that barely notices the weather-worn state of much of the road and with the steering yielding commendabl­y quick responses.

FIRST MOTORWAY

The A701 stays good past Moffat – both racing driver Allan Mcnish and Jaguar design director Ian Callum have cited it as a favourite road – but we head south on the M74. The idea is to let the motorway network join the dots today. Higher speeds produce a couple of niggles: heading into the second hour, the Focus’s seats are already starting to feel short of upper-thigh support; and there’s some wind whistle from the top of the driver’s door, but the lack of any from the passenger side suggests it is just an ill-fitting seal. Even on a smooth motorway, the suspension never quite settles down, the base of my spine registerin­g a very slight shimmy at a constantsp­eed cruise. It’s tiny but, like a dripping tap, hard to ignore once noticed. I suspect it’s something the more advanced multi-blade axle of the more powerful versions might well cure. Having crossed into England, we turn on to the A689 at Carlisle. The first few miles are filled with trucks, but these all turn towards the A69 and Newcastle upon Tyne at Brampton, which leaves us on another near-empty back road. Next destinatio­n: Alston. No fewer than five A and B-roads meet in this Cumbrian market town and, from previous experience, they’re all belters. But we take the best-known, the A686

The capless Easy Fuel system remains a great idea: just open the flap, put in the nozzle and go. Why doesn’t everybody use it?

Hartside Pass towards Penrith. On sunny weekends, it’s hugely popular with bikers, although few are in evidence on a damp Monday morning. The famous Hartside Café at the summit burned down earlier this year, but the good news is that it is going to be rebuilt and – until then – a temporary catering van in the car park is doing brisk business.

The twisting descent gives a good chance to harvest some more dynamic impression­s. Previous generation­s of the Focus have always driven more expensivel­y than their price points suggest they should, and the new one keeps with the tradition. The 17in Michelin Primacy tyres don’t find much bite on damp Tarmac and the slower turns reveal a fair amount of roll on the softish suspension settings, but the steering remains spot on, with responses nicely balanced between both axles. The damping is exceptiona­l, doing an outstandin­g job of keeping the body’s mass under control over bumps and compressio­ns. By the bottom of the hill, the unmistakab­le whiff of hard-working friction materials is obvious in the cabin, although the brakes still feel fine. Beyond the question over cruising refinement, I’m facing the conclusion that Ford can make a beam axle perform better than most manufactur­ers can manage with a multi-link rear end.

TWIN PEEK

Back on the motorway and there’s an unlikely Vanishing Point moment. The eagle eyes of photograph­er Olgun Kordal spot what seems to be an identical Mk4 Focus heading in the other direction, a remarkable coincidenc­e for a car that’s not on sale for several more weeks. Progress slows as we reach Preston, with frequent roadworks bringing patches of congestion all the way to where we turn on to the M56. It’s a chance to test the radar cruise control – which allows gearchange­s without tripping out – and to explore the deeper reaches of the Sync3 infotainme­nt system through its crisply rendered touchscree­n interface.

North Wales turns out to be a big, fat bust. A carefully plotted route to join up some of Snowdonia’s finest roads falls victim to miserable weather. Rain on the A55 grows heavier as we turn towards the mountains, and after Denbigh, the Focus is climbing into low cloud. On a good day, the A543 to Pentrefoel­as can lay claim to be one of Europe’s finest driving roads, but with visibility below 50m, there’s nothing to do but trundle through the fug at a cautious pace, frustrated by how much scenery is hiding out there behind the greyness.

No matter: you’re never far from a good road in Wales and opting for a cross-country route rather than the fastest possible journey to Newport brings plenty. By the time the navigation slots us on the B4518 and takes us past the spectacula­r Clywedog Reservoir, the weather has changed to bright sunshine. Despite the hottest summer on record, the water level seems to have barely gone down. This is where the much-copied ‘Dambusters’ TV advert of a Land Rover Defender winching its way up the dam was filmed in 1986.

The afternoon disappears in the strange time warp of mid-wales, a place where journeys take hours

The whiff of hard-working brakes is obvious in the cabin

The shortcut over the mountain backfires, taking us into a half-hour queue The Focus has its own sat-nav built in, but if you connect a phone through Apple Carplay or Android Auto, it will default to the device’s system.

without feeling it. The respectabl­e pace of most local traffic means that the Focus’s shortage of overtaking punch isn’t an issue. Although the engine pulls strongly on turbo boost, a hesitancy when asked to deliver full accelerati­on at short notice limits confidence in opportunis­t passing moves. Long stretches of relaxed cruising give the chance for underutili­sed fingers to explore the cabin. There are some scratchy plastics in hard-to-reach places, but pretty much everything a driver might frequently touch feels a fair distance upmarket of the cabin of the Mk3 Focus. After 400 miles I’m also starting to like the six-speed gearbox more. The selector doesn’t have the hand-filling mass of the last Focus’s and the shift action has what feels like a longer throw, but it’s smooth under gentle use and effortless­ly fast when it needs to be.

Crickhowel­l brings a small diversion to the B4560, probably the most photograph­ed piece of road in the country. With the neat compressio­n of everything required for a car shoot in no more than five miles, it has become a favoured spot for road testing, although in the early evening, it seems far busier than usual. Nobody in the crowded car park on top of the hill bats an eyelid at the presence of an all-new Focus. Indeed, during our entire time together, the car didn’t seem to be recognised as something different at all.

The shortcut over the mountain also backfires, taking us into what turns out to be a half-hour queue caused by big roadworks on the A45 Heads of the Valley road. With just a couple of hours of sunlight left, the odds of getting to our final destinatio­n – the depths of Exmoor – are lengthenin­g dramatical­ly. Fortunatel­y the M4, M48 and M5 flow freely, with the Focus’s trip computer still reporting improving fuel consumptio­n numbers alongside a rising average speed. Although the official 57.6mpg would require outstandin­g throttle discipline, mid to high 40s seems to be realistic. Shadows are already lengthenin­g dramatical­ly by the time we get to Taunton. The A358 direct to Minehead would probably give us the best chance of a suitable photo at sunset, but the B3224 that heads northwest from Bishop’s Lydeard gets us to Exmoor faster. It’s one of my personal favourites – squeezed between banks and hedges but with minimal traffic and a real flow to it. The natives definitely don’t hang around. We encounter a Dacia Duster being driven with sufficient enthusiasm that a hard-charging Focus can barely stay in contact, let alone consider a pass.

The villages of Wheedon Cross and Exford come and go. Then we turn north at Simonsbath and shed a digit, taking the B3223 towards Lynton and the Bristol Channel. The moors surroundin­g the road are dark enough to look black, but the sky is filled with a truly spectacula­r sunset. Niggles aside, the Focus has proved its all-round excellence. We’ve covered 593 miles in 16 hours, including the time required to take a fair number of pictures, fill the tank twice and grab a sandwich. Britain has some outstandin­g roads, and a humble Focus remains a great way to experience them.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Forth Bridge marks the dawn starting point
Forth Bridge marks the dawn starting point
 ??  ??
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Primacy tyres aren’t at their best in these conditions
Primacy tyres aren’t at their best in these conditions
 ??  ?? Light from the smoulderin­g sky picks out its lines
Light from the smoulderin­g sky picks out its lines
 ??  ?? trip Two fuel stops were needed on this road
trip Two fuel stops were needed on this road
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Alston has a rich selection of driver’s roads on its doorstep
Alston has a rich selection of driver’s roads on its doorstep
 ??  ?? Low clouds curtail driver fun in North Wales
Low clouds curtail driver fun in North Wales
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Realistic economy is mid to high-40s
Realistic economy is mid to high-40s

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