What is it?
A Ford Fiesta with the sporty looks of the ST but without that car’s sparkling performance. As part of a rejig of its award-winning Fiesta line-up, Ford has replaced Zetec S trim with the Ford Performance-inspired ST-Line.
No shrinking violet, ST-Line versions are easy to spot because they wear a full body styling kit, including a rear diffuser and bigger rear roof spoiler, a lip spoiler on the front bumper, a black honeycomb-style grille and dark surrounds for the foglights. Sports suspension that lowers ride height by 10mm and intricate 17in eight-spoke alloys complete the exterior alterations.
On the inside, there are red-stitched sports seats, a leather-clad steering wheel, aluminium pedals and ST-Line kick plates.
There’s slightly less to get excited about when it comes to engine options: initially, there are three versions of the three-cylinder 1.0 petrol unit plus the 94bhp 1.5 TDCi diesel. We tested the entry-level turbocharged Ecoboost petrol, which produces a cost-conscious 99bhp.
What's it like?
The racier styling of the ST-Line ups the anticipation before you get behind the wheel. Pushing the start button on the dash is a bit deflating, though, because it results in a weedy sounding trill from the little three-cylinder lump under the bonnet. Still, that's hardly a surprise.
Shift the closely spaced five-speed manual gearbox into first and pull away and the disillusionment continues. This ST-Line’s 0-62mph time of 11.2sec isn’t going to get you away from the lights before many other cars. That’s the price you pay for this model's frugal official combined economy figure of 65.7mpg and its eco-friendly 99g/km of CO2 emissions.
However, there’s more to this little hatch than off-the-mark acceleration. We’ve seen how well this diminutive engine performs in other Fords, including the ST-Line’s predecessor, the Zetec S, in the past few years, so we know it should be good.
True to form, if you crank it up past 1400rpm it starts to zing. Its 125lb ft of torque may not sound like a lot, but it's enough for the ST-Line to zip around slower moving traffic on urban roads and get up a good head of steam on quiet A-roads.
Working the little powerplant hard makes it sound great, too; it’s not the throaty hum of the ST-Line’s far more potent big brother, the ST200, but it’s a pleasant, whizzy thrum. This is a good thing, as engine noise is the main accompaniment to driving, especially at higher speeds when it blocks out most tyre or wind noise.
The deft handling of the 10mm -owered chassis, the superbly weighted and accurate steering and the short, crisp gearshifts all add to the mix, making the ST-Line a joy to drive. The suspension is a bit softer than that of its brawnier siblings, so it crashes a little less over uneven surfaces, but Ford hasn’t turned the ST-Line into a wallowy soft touch and it still clings to the road with little body lean through bends.
It’s not a perfect package though. Inside, the Fiesta's switchgear is showing its age compared with newer rivals. The plethora of switches on the dashboard and the tiny, hard-to-read 4.2in TFT infotainment screen look like they should have been put out to pasture a long time ago. At least it has Ford’s SYNC hands-free Bluetooth mobile phone connectivity, so you can call a friend while you spend an entire journey trying to retune the radio.
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40 MPG, bad fuel economy.
Same old sponsored story
Jeez, look at that interior - it looks like somebody got there first and was sick on it already. I would have any of the mentioned alternatives to this vile monstrosity, including those which are fitted with French electrics. In fact I would rather use buses than own another Ford.
Puny?
The original Fiesta had a similar versions, the 1.3S and Supersport, both of which had cosmetic upgrades, with fairly standard engines.
It will sell reasonable well, as the speed limit is an unobtainable target most of the time you are on the road.
Timelord wrote:
11+ seconds is a joke for a car with a spoilers and skirts, IMO. YMMV.
Timelord wrote:
You appear to have your Tardis set for 1963.