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-   -   BRZ vs Ford Focus ST - Motortrend Full Comparo - "It's 90 Percent Exotic" (https://www.ft86club.com/forums/showthread.php?t=25849)

nubbster927 01-07-2013 11:54 PM

BRZ vs Ford Focus ST - Motortrend Full Comparo - "It's 90 Percent Exotic"
 
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In our July 2012 issue, we compared two-door performance cars that can be had for under $28,000 to find out which one returns the best driving bang for the buck. In the end, the Subaru BRZ came out on top, beating such greats as the Mustang V-6, the prototypical hot hatch VW GTI, and even the king of the budget sports cars, the Mazda Miata. At the time of the comparison, the Focus ST was still just a blip on the radar, and, because of the two extra doors, would have been a sidebar at best. Now that it's here, and since the BRZ has conquered the two-door competitors, we wanted to see how these two stack up.

First, the obvious differences between Focus and BRZ: front drive versus rear, four door versus two, turbocharged versus naturally aspirated. On paper, these two enthusiast machines couldn't be farther apart, but their mission is the same. Both aim to provide the daily driving enjoyment of a far more expensive car without bankrupting the average track-day enthusiast.

The first order of business is determining which is better on the streets. Each car was evaluated over 112 miles of Orange and L.A. County streets and freeways, then we snaked into the Angeles Forest mountains and onto one of the finest driving roads on the planet. Following a thorough real-world evaluation, we spent a day at the Streets of Willow racetrack with pro driver Randy Pobst. Streets is a technical track that offers a good blend of low-speed kinks mixed with two long stretches that allow you to wind the car out. The back straight isn't about relaxing, however, as it ends in a blind crest with a quick chicane dropping out from under your tires that causes a seat-pucker moment in anything faster than a golf cart.

Ford Focus ST
The everyday rally car


In Motion The Ford is the definite extrovert here. The big front valence, the Tangerine Scream paint, and rear wing add up to a look straight out of a WRC stage. The upright seating position, unbelievably quick steering, and the intake noise pumped into the cabin add to the experience. The ST's turbocharger helps crank out an extra 119 lb-ft of torque over the BRZ's 151. The pair of 2.0-liters aren't quite as far apart in power, with the Subaru winding out 200 hp at 7000 rpm, but the Ford's 252 hp comes at merely 5500 rpm, 900 rpm below the Subaru's torque peak. The big disparity in motivation is almost matched on our scales. The Subaru weighs just 2754 pounds, while the Ford spins the dial up to 3193.

On the road, the Focus ST is a bit of a handful. Associate editor Rory Jurnecka noted, "There's plenty of torque steer, and the steering feels hugely artificial. It seems to get worse with the active torque steer assistance." The brakes are also grabby and the steering darty, and it's more addictive than espresso. This is an old-school hot hatch. It's made for hooning and doesn't know the meaning of the word compromise. It's also a little foggy on subtlety, maturity, and, thankfully, understeer.

In the canyon, the ST turns in ferociously. The quick steering coupled with no perceptible understeer makes you recalibrate your driving style. Flicks of the wrist bend the little hatch around turns like a slot car. So little steering lock is required that it becomes tough to smoothly unwind coming out of tight turns. You end up braking into the turn, getting around it, and then standing on the gas. Getting on the gas early gets the torque vectoring to kick in, grabbing the inside brake, and shooting you toward the inside of the turn, but the torque steer keeps you from unwinding the wheel. You aren't so much flowing with road as cutting it into sections. Brake, turn, and now accelerate.

The track allowed us to get further into the Focus ST's abilities without fear of flight or legal fight. Randy immediately noticed the Ford's ability to change direction: "I haven't driven a front-drive race car that rotates like this. I turn it in and let the back end slide around, and then get on the gas when I want to straighten out."

The car just doesn't understeer -- the faster you turn in, the faster it rotates. It definitely has a learning curve, and I imagine quite a few STs will be wadded up by novice drivers, but it is certainly rewarding. We all were impressed right up to the point when the car started overheating. We had noticed the oil temperature gauge creeping up in the canyon, but didn't think much of it. On the track, however, the oil gauge continued to climb until the coolant temp started climbing as well.

We were still able to get a clean lap out of the ST, clicking off a 1:29.27 time. The term "best-handling front-drive ever" kept circling the pits among the drivers.


Subaru BRZ
It's 90 percent exotic


2013 Subaru BRZ Front The more astute readers have probably already noticed that this is, in fact, our long-term BRZ. Over the past few months, we've been impressed with how comfortable and easy it is to drive on the street. The seating position is all sports car. Driving next to big rigs eyeball to axle feels a bit less secure than in the upright ST, but in the canyons, the BRZ is more Le Mans racer to the Focus' rally car. Steering wheel, shifter, and pedals are all exactly where you want them and operate in the same intuitive manner. While we kept trying to get the seat and steering wheel right in the Focus, everything just falls into place in the BRZ.

Corners are combined into one carving motion like stretching a string up and down the mountain's curves. It feels like a 9/10ths-scale front-engine Ferrari as it dances from apex to apex. The Ford is faster, but the Subaru moves around with balanced sliding motions -- no drifting, just enough rotation to let you know it's alive and you're actually driving. In direct contrast to the Ford's, the steering here communicates everything the front tires are doing; the brakes are easy to modulate; even the notchiness of the shifter adds to the mechanical romance of the BRZ.

Randy fell in love with the BRZ during our $28K comparison, and absence had only made his heart grow fonder. "What a great little car. So balanced. So intuitive." His lap time was noticeably slower in the BRZ at 1:30.32, but that didn't necessarily make it any less fun. Surprisingly, the BRZ feels more stable than the front-drive Ford. You can position it more easily, and it isn't so harrowing. The Ford would be tough to wrangle at the limit with other cars around, where you feel like you could squeeze between two cars while drifting the BRZ.

In the end, the champ drives off with another title. We regard the Focus ST as one of the best examples of front-drive cars North America has ever seen, but we can't get past its lack of steering feel, torque-steer, and boy-racer attitude. We think it's one hell of a deal if you buy the base car without all the toys. Our tester was $28,170 with the slightly disappointing Recaro seats and the troublesome Sync infotainment system that crashed and required rebooting on three occasions during our time with the car. The BRZ came in at $28,265, just $95 dearer than the Ford. If it were my money, I would probably stick with the base car here as well, skipping the leather and the rear spoiler. From the artificial steering to the piped-in engine noise, the Focus is definitely built for the video-game generation who may not know or appreciate what a true sports car feels like. We hope they can give the lower horsepower and less flashy Subaru a chance and discover what it's like to connect with a car.


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DarkSunrise 01-08-2013 09:18 AM

Looks like MT and Randy Pobst have been bit by the BRZ bug :D

jadewbj 01-08-2013 09:50 AM

It seems like the only reason the BRZ was there was so randy could drive it again at the track.

Eurasianman 01-08-2013 10:14 AM

I'm glad they did the comparison, but feel like they should have used something else to compare to the Focus ST. Just my $0.02.

I think a 2009 Cobalt SS turbocharged sedan with LSD would have made a nice comparison to the 2013 Focus ST even though it is no longer made and was only made for 1 year.

Nonetheless, nice to see the BRZ still getting praise :)

Admiral Ballsy 01-08-2013 02:27 PM

I find the comments interesting - "nobody would cross-shop these two cars".

I did. Maybe I'm the exception.

Voodoo Rufus 01-08-2013 02:46 PM

I did, too.

Efenys 01-10-2013 05:00 PM

So did i...

pheoxs 01-10-2013 05:26 PM

As did I ... originally was set on the ST. Drove it and though, its a neat car but just ... doesn't feel 'fun' enough for me. Plenty of power, but just couldn't put my finger on it. Drove the FR-S and before I got back to the dealer was set on bringing her home.

mit_peid 01-13-2013 06:54 PM

The Focus ST is a good looking car, has slightly better gas mileage, and is more practical than the 86. The numbers and specs (HP, track times, 0-60 mpg, mpg) sure seem to give the win over to the ST, but the BRZ still "wins" here. I love it that they called our 86 a 9/10th front engine Ferrari; that is damn high praise! I'd take that with a grain of salt, but would even be happy with a 6/10th Ferrari comparison. I've only owned my FRS now for 3 days, but man I look forward to taking the "long way" every chance I get now.

Saab2Frs 01-13-2013 11:28 PM

I cross-shopped. Was a Saab turbo man forever and though "I want another car with a small displacement engine and a strong pulling turbo." Test drove the FR-S. And the rest is history.

LivingLegend 01-13-2013 11:58 PM

That little box under the picture that states the MSRP and Transmission threw me off for a loop. I was like 16.5k for an ST?!?! Then I saw the HP and trq lol.

FT-86 SpeedFactory 01-13-2013 11:58 PM

We have one of each.... ;) Just picked up the ST.

The two cars are not comparable IMO. I could go on for hours about why and etc. Both are awesome in their own.

http://ft86speedfactory.com/images/focusst1.jpg

oldpueblo 01-14-2013 01:24 AM

Having just come from a regular 2012 Ford Focus with the "sport package" I have to agree (The ST is really just a faster version). Both cars are practical and fun, but on different levels.

gmookher 01-14-2013 01:27 AM

we drove the ST again and again, and got a 2nd BRZ, his and hers, I didnt want to have the focus as my DD, and neither did she tho we both liked it, sort of-more in some ways than others. its one of the nicest Fords to date IMHO

Liked the JCW mini more than the ford, but it costs more too, and is much smaller. as far as driving experience

BRZ>Mini JCW> Focus ST

however, the focus ST was oodles more practical as a CAR than either of the above\ we were shopping something in the sport commuter lineup, and the 4 door aspect of the focus was what really turned us off. If It came 2 door, I'd have one too.

very well executed fuckus! but that hood gap, and the suspension just didnt feel anywhere as organic as the BRZ, or other cars in my stable


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