Just because certain manufacturers deny Canadian car zealots of some
of their better products, doesn’t mean you can’t read about them. Here
is the eleventh in our Unrequited Love series courtesy of our friends at thecarenthusiast.com
November 30, 2005 - The late eighties; heady days of hot hatch nirvana
with the pocket rocket being the ultimate wheels for those in their
twenties and car to aspire to for those not yet of a driving age.
Ford's XR and RS lines had a grip on the market like no other. Sold as
performance for the common man, each big-selling range had an XR or RS
model sat at the top of the tree. All was well and decent performance
was accessible to all and we took such things for granted.
Fast forward to the nineties where the proliferation of car crime and
joy riding began to ring alarm bells with the insurance companies. By
the mid nineties insurance premiums had deterred all but the most
ardent hot hatch fan and Ford had to kill the XR and RS lines in the
face of the harshest market conditions: outside forces killing off
their products. We were left with the relatively tame Si moniker being
the token offering for the enthusiast.

It took quite a while for Ford to regain its confidence enough to
launch an ST product line, and almost a decade for those wounds to
sufficiently heal to make the company feel confident enough to give us
the harder edged Focus RS. That was a real image booster for Ford and a
showcase of their Special Vehicle Team's intent to provide genuinely
desirable and involving cars for the enthusiast. Here we have the
Team's latest baby, the new Fiesta ST150, a range topper from the old
school promising thrills and pace for a sensible price.

Our test car didn't exactly conceal its light under a bushel, with
bright red paint and GT aping white stripes over the upper and side
surfaces ensuring that everyone takes a second look. Luckily Ford has
acknowledged the horses for courses aspect of such things and one can
specify whether one wants the optional extra stripes and if so, which
ones. Personally I'd have the side stripes and leave the roof ones for
someone with a little more of an attention hungry persona.
Other than that the ST is a fairly soberly tweaked Fiesta with beefed
up bumpers, spoilers and sills to increase the road presence along with
the obligatory 17-inch multi-spoke rims. This is where things get a
little interesting; look closely at our pictures and you'll notice that
these 17-inch rims wear some fairly serious rubber, not just in terms
of size, but also in terms of purpose. Pirelli P-Zero Nero are normally
to be found adorning more exotic machinery; their appearance here is
very much a signal of intent.

These tyres endow the Fiesta with a monumental amount of grip, wet or
dry, that combines with the ST150's relatively lightweight, diminutive
dimensions and a chassis of rare depth and completeness to make this
Fiesta a very rapid ground coverer. We never had the chance to try it
but I'd bet it's a quick track car. On B-roads the ST exhibits
excellent body and wheel control and is a real joy to drive hard. The
ST allows the driver to gently adjust its course via the throttle,
something of an essential attribute in a driver's car. Snap the
throttle shut and indulge in delicious controllable lift-off oversteer
of the kind I haven't enjoyed since I owned a Peugeot 306GTi-6,
enabling even faster cornering speeds and rare agility. Granted, the
suspension is on the stiff side and the ride can be a little jiggly on
broken surfaces, but it lends the ST a real darty, go-kart feel. That
stiffness pays off in spades with remarkably sharp turn-in and a dogged
resistance to understeer.

Ironically, the high level of competence has one wishing for a little
more power; 150bhp isn't much in modern hot hatches, but the fact you
can whip every one of the 150 is a pleasure. The gearbox contains
closely stacked ratios accessed through a slick and precise change. The
steering is nice and feelsome too, only heavily contoured or broken
surfaces bring a hint of tramlining thanks to those big tyres. Neither
is there much torque steer to speak of. The driving position is
comfortable and the optional ST seats are great. Our only gripe was
with the brakes that whilst unarguably strong, lacked some feel and
were hamstrung by a spongy pedal. Previous testers may have abused our
hard-driven test car, but a lack of fade or vibration didn't suggest
that there was anything-untoward going on in the stopper department.

Needless to say the roomy and spacious cabin is carried over from the
regular Fiesta with few cosmetic changes; no bad thing. Rear
accommodation isn't overly generous, but isn't as cramped as some of
the rival offerings. It's clean and clinical but functional and easy to
use as well. One may question whether ultimately this is befitting of a
14k+ car, but at the end of the day the money has been spent under the
skin, where it works most effectively as far as the enthusiast is
concerned.
In summary, the Fiesta ST150 is a little corker. It begs to be spanked
and harks back to old school hatches that were fun and involving.
Ultimately it has few weaknesses, though one is a lack of outright pace
and grunt, and the other is the price. Our test car came to around
16,000 with the extras. This leaves it exposed to very unforgiving
sharks in the dangerous hot hatch waters, most noticeably the Renault
Clio 182. Hardcore enthusiasts will be drawn to the Clio because it at
least matches the ST150 in all dynamic aspects, although it can't match
the interior comfort of the ST150. For many though the Fiesta will
possess enough pace, and the pin sharp handling and looks will satisfy
their sporting urges. Fans of the blue oval rejoice, for you have a new
junior hot hatch hero to aspire to. Many new fans will be converted by
the Fiesta ST150 as well. It bodes very well for the forthcoming Focus
ST.
- By Dave Jenkins

Summary
Performance: 
Decent rather than spine tingling.
Powertrain: 
Tractable and smooth with a cracking gearchange, but lacks va-va voom!
Handling: 
Fantastic. Adjustable, chuckable and involving. Rewards the talented and pampers the novice.
Economy: 
26mpg a good result given how much we enjoyed driving it!
Tactility: 
Lovely steering and controls only let down by a mushy brake pedal. Switchgear is normal Fiesta fayre, which is no bad thing.
Appearance: 
A pumped up Fiesta. Add stripes to taste.
Interior: 
Optional leather seats are a treat, albeit an expensive one.
Safety: 
Dynamic chassis safety plus plenty of airbags. Four stars in the Euro NCAP tests.
Equipment: 
Standard list is good enough, options send the price sky-wards.
Three for the Road:
'08 Luxury AWD Wagons
Preview: 2009 Mercedes-Benz
SLK 350 Roadster
FTLOD Review:
2008 Dodge Avenger R/T
Three for the Road:
2008 Luxury AWD Sedans
Preview:
2009 Volkswagen Tiguan
Feature:
Mitsubishi Evo History
FTLOD Preview:
2008 Mitsubishi Lancer Evolution
FTLOD Review:
2007 Mitsubishi Colt CZT
Tow Vehicle Test:
2008 Chevrolet Tahoe Hybrid
FTLOD Review:
2008 Cadillac CTS4
Three for the Road:
Mini-minivan
2008 Canadian COTY:
Convertibles
2008 Canadian COTY:
Small Cars
Road Trip:
BMW Z4 in the Canadian Rockies
2007 Children's Wish Foundation at Mosport
Feature: Castrol Canadian
Drifting Championship
Three for the Road:
2007 Five-door Subcompact
FTLOD review:
2007 BMW 335i Cabriolet 6M
Three for the Road:
2007 Luxury Cabriolets
FTLOD Preview:
2008 Smart ForTwo
Road Trip:
Smart (almost) Across Canada -
Part III
Road Trip:
Smart (almost) Across Canada -
Part II
Road Trip:
Smart (almost) Across Canada -
Part I
FTLOD Review:
2007 Chrysler Pacifica Limited AWD
Three for the Road:
Seven-seater CUVs
FTLOD Preview:
2008 Dodge Caliber SRT4
FTLOD Review:
2008 Ford Taurus Limited AWD
FTLOD Comparison:
2007 Sports Compacts
FTLOD Preview:
2008 Saab 9-3 Aero XWD
FTLOD Review:
2008 Audi TT 3.2 quattro
FLTOD Track Test:
2007 Rolls-Royce Phantom
FTLOD Preview:
2008 Dodge Viper SRT10
FTLOD Review:
2007 Mini Cooper S
Three for the Road:
Premuim roadsters
FTLOD Review:
2007 Saab 9-3 Convertible
Unrequited Love #14:
2007 Honda Civic Type S
FTLOD Review:
2007 Porsche 911 Carrera 4S Cabriolet
FTLOD Review:
2007 Honda Element SC
Preview: 2008 Audi A5 & S5
Unrequited Love #13:
2007 Suzuki Swift Sport
Three for the Road:
Sporty V6 Sedans
Road Trip:
2007 Audi RS4
Geneva to Munich
to the Ottawa Valley
Preview:
2007 Saturn Aura Green Line
Unrequited Love #12:
2007 Renault Clio
Renaultsport 197
FTLOD Review:
2007 Volvo C30 T5 6M
FTLOD Review:
2007 Mercedes-Benz E 350 4MATIC
FTLOD Comparo:
2007 Volkswagen City Golf
versus Rabbit 2.5
Road Trip:
Los Angeles to Palm Springs
FTLOD Review:
2007 Volvo S80 V8 AWD
FTLOD Review:
2007 Nissan Altima 2.5 CVT
Three for the Road:
Affordable Roadsters
FTLOD Review:
2007 Porsche 911 Targa 4S
FTLOD Review:
2007 Subaru Legacy Spec. B
FTLOD Review:
2007 BMW X5 4.8i
Three for the Road:
Luxury GTs
FTLOD review:
2007 Volkswagen Eos
FTLOD Review:
2007 Mazda Mazdaspeed3
FTLOD Review:
2007 Audi S6
six straight questions:
2006 Mini Cooper S John Cooper Works
Competition Package
Feature:
Seven for '07
FTLOD Review:
2007 BMW 335i Sedan
FTLOD Review:
2007 Volkswagen GLI
FTLOD Comparo:
2007 Audi A4 3.2 quattro vs.
A3 3.2 S line
2006 AJAC COTY:
SUV/CUV over $60k
2006 AJAC COTY:
Luxury Car under $50k
2006 AJAC COTY:
Sports & Performance over $50k
FTLOD Review:
2007 Porsche Cayman
Feature: 2006 R.I.P.
Preview:
2007 Mercedes-Benz R 63 AMG
six straight questions:
2007 Saturn Sky
Three for the Road:
Five-door compacts
FTLOD Review:
2007 Nissan Maxima SL
Feature:
Calabogie Motorsports Park opens
Road Trip: Jungle Love - Land Rover in Belize
FTLOD Review:
2007 Jaguar XK Convertible
Preview:
2007 Jeep Wrangler
FTLOD Comparo:
2006 Porsche 911 Carrera S vs Cayman S
Road Trip:
2006 Targa Newfoundland
Road Trip Preview:
2006 Targa Newfoundland
Three for the Road:
Off-roaders
FTLOD Review:
2007 Volvo C70 T5
Q&A:
Steve Blyth, President and CEO, Volvo Cars of Canada
Road Trip:
2007 Audi Q7 4.2
FTLOD Review:
2006 BMW M6
Preview:
2007 MINI Cooper S
Road Trip:
2006 BMW M Coupé
Three for the Road:
Sports Compacts
Feature:
Satellite Radio vs MP3s
Interview:
Audi Designer, Dany Garand
Road Trip:
2006 24 Hours of LeMans
FTLOD Review:
2006 Mazdaspeed6
Interview:
Head of MINI Canada,
Stephen McDonnell
Interview:
Marcus Breitschwerdt,
President and CEO of Mercedes-Benz Canada
six straight questions:
2006 Land Rover Range Rover HSE
Preview:
2008 Audi TT Coupé
Three for the Road:
Crossovers
FTLOD Review:
2006 BMW M5
FTLOD Review:
2006 Infiniti FX45
Three for the Road:
Sports Wagons
FTLOD Review:
2006 Saab 9-7X V8
FTLOD Review:
2006 BMW M Roadster
six straight questions:
2006 Jeep Commander V6
Feature:
Mercedes-Benz Defensive/Performance Driving School
FTLOD Review:
2006 Lexus IS 250 AWD
six straight questions:
2006 Chevrolet Malibu Maxx SS
Interview:
Studio Chief Designer, Volvo, Simon Lamarre
Three for the Road:
Luxury Sport Sedans
Interview:
Audi Board Member for Sales & Marketing, Ralph Weyler
FTLOD Review:
2006 Jeep Commander Limited
Preview:
2007 Honda Fit
FTLOD Review:
2007 Volkswagen GTI
Feature:
Overseas Deliveries
Feature:
Auto Auctions 101
six straight questions:
2006 Subaru Impreza WRX
Preview:
2007 Toyota FJ Cruiser
Preview:
2007 Toyota Camry
Preview:
2007 Toyota Yaris
six straight questions:
2006 BMW 325i
Road Trip:
2006 Mercedes-Benz R500
Three for the Road:
Premium Mid-sized SUVs
Interview: Head of Audi Design,
Walter Da Silva
six straight questions:
2006 Volvo Ocean Race XC70
FTLOD Review:
2006 Porsche Cayman S
Three for the Road:
Luxury AWD Sedans
six straight questions:
2006 Hummer H3
FTLOD Review:
2006 Lexus GS 430 RWD
FTLOD Preview:
2007 Mercedes-Benz S550
Three for the Road:
Gas vs. Hybrid vs. Diesel
Feature:
Busting some hybrid myths
FTLOD Review:
2006 Audi S4 Sedan
Interview:
Camaro Concept creator
Tom Peters
Feature:
Best Family Car Under $35k
Feature:
2006 AutoWeek Design Forum
FTLOD Review:
2006 Porsche Boxster S
FTLOD Review:
2006 Pontiac G6 GTP Coupe
Interview:
Head of BMW Design Studio, Adrian von Hooydonk
Three for the Road:
Premuim Compacts
Interview:
Stephan Winkelmann, Lamborghini's new CEO
Road Trip:
The Rosso Bianco Collection
Interview: Hau Thai-Tang
Ford's SVT Boss
FTLOD Preview:
2006 Jeep Grand Cherokee SRT8
FTLOD Review:
2006 Ford Mustang GT
FTLOD Review:
2006 Mercedes-Benz
B 200 Turbo CVT
Unrequited Love #11:
Ford Fiesta ST
FTLOD Review:
2006 Porsche 911 Carrera S Cabriolet
FTLOD Review:
2005 Dodge SRT4
FTLOD Preview:
2006 Dodge Viper SRT10 Coupe
Three for the Road:
Stretched Luxury Sedans
FTLOD Review:
2005 BMW M3 Competition Package
Road Trip:
Ottawa to Sudbury via the 911
FTLOD Review:
2005 T-Rex
FTLOD Review:
2006 Pontiac Solstice
FTLOD Review:
2005 Honda S2000
Unrequited Love #10:
Alfa Romeo 147 JTD
Interview: Ian Callum,
Director of Design, Jaguar Cars
Three for the Road:
Luxury Convertibles
Interview: Freeman Thomas,
Ford's Director of Strategic Design
FTLOD Review:
2006 Mazda MX-5
FTLOD Review:
2006 Dodge Charger R/T
Interview: Pierre Savoy,
BMW Canada's Driver Training Chief Instructor
Feature:
Sommet des Légendes at Circuit Mont-Tremblant
Unrequited Love #9:
TAD LMP SE
FTLOD Review:
2005 Audi A8 4.2
Feature:
Backseat Driver - Rolls
Royce Phantom vs Maybach 57
FTLOD Review:
2005 BMW 645 Ci
Interview: Gary Moyer
King of Ford's British empire
Unrequited Love #8:
Vauxhall Monaro
FTLOD Review:
2006 Mercedes-Benz CLS 500
FTLOD Review:
2005 Volvo V50 2.4i
Feature:
Reality TV for Racers
Unrequited Love #7:
Daihatsu Copen
FTLOD Review:
2005 Jaguar XJ8 Vanden Plas
Interview: Dr. Mario Theissen,
BMW's Motorsport Director
FTLOD Review:
2005 Porsche Cayenne Turbo
Feature:
Will your next ride be a
certified pre-owned car?
FTLOD Review:
2005 MINI Cooper S
Unrequited Love #6:
Peugeot 206 GTi 180
FTLOD Review:
2006 Audi A4 2.0 T Avant
FTLOD Preview:
2006 Mercedes-Benz M-Class
FTLOD Review:
2005 Pontiac G6 GT
FTLOD Review:
2005 Ford Five Hundred AWD SEL
FTLOD Review:
2005 Saab 9-2X Aero
Unrequited Love #5:
Alfa Romeo GT
2005 BMW 545i vs.
2005 Audi A6 4.2
FTLOD Review:
2005 Chrysler 300C
FTLOD Review:
2005 BMW 325i
FTLOD Review:
2005 Porsche 911 Carrera S
Unrequited Love #4:
BMW 120i
FTLOD Review:
2005 Mercedes-Benz
SLK350
FTLOD Review:
2005 Pontiac Pursuit Se Sport
Unrequited Love #3:
Mitsubishi EVO VIII 260
FTLOD Review:
2005 Dodge Magnum R/T
FTLOD Review:
2005 Mercedes-Benz
E55 AMG Sedan
FTLOD Review:
2005 Jaguar S-Type 4.2
Unrequited Love #2:
Lotus Elise 111R
FTLOD Review:
2005 Subaru Outback 2.5 XT
FTLOD Review:
2005 Ford Focus ZXW SES
FTLOD Review:
2004 Audi S4 Cabriolet
Unrequited Love #1:
Smart Roadster Brabus
FTLOD Review:
2004 Audi TT 3.2 DSG
FTLOD Review:
2004 Saab 9-3 Convertible
FTLOD Review:
2004 Volkswagen
Touareg V10 TDI
FTLOD Review:
2004 Mazda RX-8
FTLOD Review:
2004 Infiniti G35 Sports Coupe
FTLOD Review:
2005 Mercedes-Benz
E320 CDI
FTLOD Review:
2004 MINI Cooper S
FTLOD Review:
2004 Mercedes-Benz
E500 4Matic Wagon
FTLOD Preview:
2005 Land Rover LR3
FTLOD Review:
2004 Mazda6 Sport GT-I4
FTLOD Review:
2004 BMW X5 4.4i
FTLOD Review:
2004 Mercedes-Benz CLK500
Cabriolet
FTLOD Review:
2005 Subaru Legacy 2.5i
FTLOD Review:
2004 Volkswagen Passsat W8
FTLOD Review:
2004 Ford Mustang Mach 1
FTLOD Review:
2004 BMW Z4 3.0i
FTLOD Review:
2004 Mazdaspeed Miata
FTLOD Review:
2004 Mercedes-Benz C230
Kompressor Classic
FTLOD Review:
2004 BMW X3 3.0i
FTLOD Review:
2004 Lincoln LSE V8
FTLOD Review:
2004 Mazda6 Sport Wagon
GT-V6
FTLOD Review:
2004 BMW 745Li
FTLOD Review:
2005 Smart ForTwo
2003 Mitsubishi Eclipse GT
FTLOD Review:
2002 Mazda Miata SE
FTLOD Review:
2002 Lexus IS300 L-Tuned
FTLOD Review:
2002 BMW Z3 3.0i
test 07

