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Ford Ecosport Test Drive Review

Date: 12 February 2016   |   Author:

Category: Crossover
Key rival: Vauxhall Mokka
P11D: £16,590
On sale: Autumn 2015

Sales of small crossovers are growing rapidly, with the Peugeot 2008, Renault Captur and Nissan Juke all making hay, while the Vauxhall Mokka even made it into the top 10 biggest-selling new cars of 2015.

In only its first full year of sales, the Ford Ecosport was another crossover that enjoyed success. However, Ford has already moved to address criticisms of a car that, having been developed primarily for Brazil, wasn't made with European tastes and requirements at its heart.

The large-scale revamp includes interior, exterior and engineering changes, the most obvious of them being the removal of the rear-mounted spare wheel. However, it can be refitted as a cost option.

Retuned suspension, a 10mm reduction in ride height, and optimised power steering and ESC systems are designed to improve the driving experience. It's better, although still out of kilter with the rest of Ford's
fine-handling range.

On the inside, the handbrake has been repositioned for better accessibility, while thicker sound deadening materials boost refinement.

In 125hp petrol form, the Ecosport is more refined and relaxed than its predecessor, while the interior tweaks, which include a restyled instrument cluster, give it a lift.

The cabin still trails rivals in overall quality, though. Whole-life costs are encouraging. Competitive pricing, residuals that are in the same postcode as the car's rivals (if 1.5 percentage points off the Vauxhall Mokka, the best of the bunch) and reasonable emissions the Vauxhall cannot match, mean the Ecosport has an impressive cost per mile of 40.1p. That's lower than every rival bar the Renault Captur.

It's still challengingly tall, certainly not pretty and still not the best example of Ford's improved product quality, but the Ecosport does at least make a case for itself on paper.

Ford Ecosport 1.0 Ecoboost Titanium

Model price range £14,245-£17,340
Residual value 34.8%
Depreciation £10,815
Fuel £5230
Service, maintenance and repair £1873
Vehicle Excise Duty £220
National Insurance £1511
Cost per mile 40.1p
Fuel consumption 53.3mpg
CO2 (BIK band) 125g/km (20%)
BIK 20/40% per month £55/£111
Warranty 3yrs/60,000mls
Boot space (min/max) 333/1238 litres
Engine size/power 999cc/125hp

Verdict


Impressive costs and the worthy engineering rework can't hide flaws
7/10
  • Improved engineering is noticeable
  • Running costs stack up well compared with rivals
  • Still looks ungainly and the driving experience doesn't match Ford's usual impressive standards

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