Eén van de beste allrounders onder de auto’s ooit gemaakt, de Ford Focus Mk1

De Ford Focus is met zijn 23e levensjaar bezig en het is nog maar de vraag of er na de huidige versie een nieuwe Ford Focus hatchback of wagon terug zal keren. Er gaan teveel geluiden rond die min of meer laten doorschemeren dat dit tijdperk ten einde is gekomen.

Met de opkomst van elektrische modellen zal de Ford Focus misschien ooit terug keren als volledig elektrisch, of dit in een hatchback of wagon zal zijn, lijkt helemaal niet vanzelfsprekend.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 Private picture Focusmania.com

Alleen bij het idee al bekruipt ons (ja nu al), een weemoedig gevoel. Tot de ontknoping zullen we het met berichten zoals deze over de zo geliefde Ford Focus moeten doen.

Autoexpress uit de UK, zet het allereerste model uit 1998 nog eens in het zonnetje, het was niet zomaar een nieuwkomer, ondanks dat niet iedereen zijn Edgie uiterlijk kon waarderen. Toch waren de auto journalisten het al gauw eens ‘wat een wegligging’ iets waarmee hij zeker op heel veel liefhebbers kon gaan rekenen.

In 2013 werd de Ford Focus Mk1 door AutoExpress bekroond met de titel 
‘Auto Express’s car of the last 25 years’.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 by AutoExpress

De teller van het aantal geproduceerde exemplaren van de Ford Focus alleen uit de fabriek in Saarlouis Duitsland stond in 2019 op 15 miljoen!

Een leuk stukje geschiedenis van de huidige Ford Focus en de fabriek in Saarlouis, is hier nog eens zien, klik!

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 by AutoExpress

Icon Review: Ford Focus Mk1 (1998 – 2004)

One of the best all-round cars ever made – the Mk1 Ford Focus

The original Ford Focus proved that cars don’t need lots of power, an exotic badge or a massive price tag to be brilliant – especially when it comes to how they drive.

The Focus arrived at exactly the right time for Ford. By the end of the last millennium, the Blue Oval needed a top-quality product to replace the ageing Escort, and the company invested massively in ensuring the Focus was a success.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 by AutoExpress

No two ways about it, the Escort that the Focus replaced was rubbish. It was outclassed by much more modern family hatchbacks, didn’t drive very well, and was long in the tooth, surviving for the last years of its life only on the loyalty of Ford fans, the goodwill of buyers, plus heavy incentives from dealers.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 by AutoExpress

But then the Focus came along. This sharply styled all-new family hatch changed everything with its refreshing design, improved packaging and a clean-sheet engineering approach that proved even family cars could be great fun to drive.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 by AutoExpress

Key to that was the car’s Control Blade multi-link rear suspension that married the packaging of a simple trailing-arm set-up with the sophistication and geometry of a double-wishbone unit, masterminded by Ford engineer Richard Parry-Jones. It gave the Focus incredible agility, composure and ride comfort for something so affordable.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 Private picture Focusmania.com

The engines weren’t quite as special, but the 100bhp 1.6 and 113bhp 1.8-litre four-cylinder units still felt fresh and fast enough in a car that was relatively light, weighing as little as 1,163kg depending on spec. The smaller 1.4 was a bit gutless and while the larger 2.0-litre was powerful, it was rather thirsty. The mid-spec models were where the sweet spot really lay.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 by AutoExpress

Don’t forget, this was a time before downsized turbocharged engines dominated, so naturally aspirated petrols were all the rage; even the diesel craze wasn’t yet in full swing.

Which was just as well, because those peppy petrols suited the way the car was set up. The Focus relished being driven hard, yet it didn’t sacrifice comfort thanks to what was a very sophisticated suspension layout for a family hatch at the time.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 by AutoExpress

The packaging of the suspension also boosted practicality, so the Focus offered plenty of passenger room for the time, plus 350 litres of boot space in both the three and five-door models, which is only 31 litres less than a brand-new VW Golf Mk8.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 by AutoExpress

What’s it like today?

Suspension design and damping have come on a lot in the past 20-odd years, too, but you still get a lovely sense of how the car tucks into corners with a little lift of the throttle.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 by AutoExpress

Many buyers might not have cared how the Focus did this when it was new, but we know they were glad it did, because in 2013 the Mk1 model was crowned Auto Express’s car of the last 25 years. That’s thanks to it still feeling fun; and while it lacks the low-down grunt of today’s turbocharged equivalents, there’s enough performance – just.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 by AutoExpress

It’s the chassis and steering’s effect on the ride and handling that makes it such an iconic car, even if the trend now is for family transport to ride on larger wheels with firmer dampers. The Focus still offers a relatively high degree of precision, comfort, fun and refinement for a car that’s nearing a quarter of a century on the roads.

Icon Review – Ford Focus Mk1 1998-2004 by AutoExpress

The importance of the styling can’t be underestimated, either. The sharp lines and triangular graphics were a world away from the blobby, round shapes of Ford’s past models.

Next to a modern hatch the styling still looks remarkably fresh. Good design is good design, no matter how old.

Source | AutoExpress.co.uk – Photographer | Otis Clay

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