by Vicky Parrot of www.autocar.co.uk
Is the new Civic Type R packed with enough fun to ward off Ford's staple hot hatch?
There’s a corner at the far end of the straight at Bedford
Autodrome’s East Circuit: a fast right-hander that tightens into a
double apex. To add to the fun, you have to get the car balanced early
as you exit to dive straight into a tighter-still left-hander.
Here,
our fast front-drive duo were like pigs in the proverbial. Nothing but
the Caterham jinked with such precision through that complex. Yet it was
also here that the differences between the Honda Civic Type R and the Ford Focus ST were most telling.
Let’s
start with the Civic. As the all-new contender to the Focus’s mild
refresh, the Type R waded into this class with the meek humility of a
bull charging a matador. With trick suspension, adaptive dampers and
mechanical diff to make the most of the raging 306bhp 2.0-litre
turbocharged motor, it dispatched our circuit using brute force tempered
with fierce traction.
Stick it in R mode, to perk up the
suspension, diff and throttle response, and it turns in to the complex
with just the right amount of keenness, keeping body roll to a minimum
before settling into a face-warpingly grippy steady state.
The steering builds nicely in weight as the tyres load, and when you
do push it hard enough to trouble the grip limits, a subtle lift-off
snaps it out of understeer and back into line with no lairy oversteer
pending.
The flipside is that there’s little of the playfulness
that the Focus serves up. You can trail the Ford’s brakes to keep the
nose pinned as you enter the right-hander, then jump on the throttle to
modulate your angle of attack and keep the playful rear end where you
want. Its chassis feels so much more adjustable than the Civic’s.
But
the Focus has its flaws. Sure, the revised front spring and damper
set-up and stiffened body structure of this 2015 update result in keener
turn-in, but the steering still feels more scrappy than you might hope.
It’s overly keen to self-centre and has little of the natural building
of weight that the Honda delivers. It’s just a bit harder to place the
Focus precisely at that key moment as a result.
The Ford’s
reliance on electric systems to rein in the 247bhp of its 2.0-litre
turbocharged engine denies you the traction levels of the Civic, with
its proper diff. This is as obvious on the road as it is on a circuit.
Exit a tight junction with any gusto and it becomes an exercise in
moderate throttle application to avoid spinning the inside front wheel,
resulting in more weaving than actual progress.
The Civic isn’t
faultlessly grippy, either. It has torrents of power going through its
front wheels, so you do get torque steer on occasion, but it is
remarkably manageable, given the power. You can be more heavy-handed
with getting on the power in the Civic, and it just sucks up the
punishment, gathers itself together and fires you up the road, with the
engine spinning through a broad torque band and on to 7000rpm.
Although
the shorter-lived, heavy boost of the Ford has its own mid-range
merits, the Honda’s
motor has the sort of rev-hungry attitude that has
echoes of the VTECs of yore.
Yes, it’s a bit lacklustre at low
revs, but keep it on the boil above 3000rpm and it delivers the frenetic
character that you expect, given its caricature looks. That snappy
gearshift, with a throw supposedly identical to the NSX’s, is an
absolute joy, too, and more so than the Focus’s precise but slightly
softer-feeling shift.
In fact, the whole car feels like a
caricature – from how it claws its way through corners, to the
supportive yet comfortable bucket seats, the bonkers rear wing and
chin-heavy fascia. Even the damping is over the top. Or perhaps ‘under’
would be more accurate, given that in firmer mode it tends to amplify
rather than cushion small ruts and bumps. Certainly, this is not the
most comfortable car, although the softer setting is more palatable and
ticks the ‘everyday usable’ box adequately for such a focused car.
The
Focus is the more forgiving in terms of ride comfort and the more
playful but, ultimately, it comes second here. It falls short of the
Civic’s ferocious performance and handling machismo, making the latter
feel somehow closer genetically to Gordon Shedden’s weekend wheels than
your average cooking Civic. For that hilarity alone, it gets the nod.
Junior handling test 2015 - how much fun for £30,000?
Ford Focus ST-2
Price £23,995; Engine 4 cyls, 1997cc, turbocharged, petrol; Power 247bhp at 5500rpm; Torque 266lb ft at 2000-4500rpm; Gearbox 6-spd manual; Kerb weight 1437kg; Top speed 154mph; 0-62mph 6.5sec; Economy 41.5mpg; CO2/tax band 159g/km/26%
Honda Civic Type R
Price £29,995; Engine 4 cyls 1996cc, turbocharged, petrol; Power 306bhp at 6500rpm; Torque 295lb ft at 2500rpm; Gearbox 6-spd manual; Kerb weight 1382kg; Top speed 168mph; 0-62mph 5.7sec; Economy 38.7mpg; CO2/tax band 170g/km/29%
Get the latest car news, reviews and galleries from Autocar direct to your inbox every week. Enter your email address below:
Source;
http://www.autocar.co.uk/car-news/new-cars/everyday-handling-heroes-honda-civic-type-r-versus-ford-focus-st-2
No comments:
Post a Comment