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Ford Focus: MPG-Real World Numbers

77 messages, Last post on Dec 04, 2009 at 9:05 AM
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Replying to: fapar47 (Sep 15, 2006 4:36 pm) |
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Replying to: KarenS (Sep 02, 2005 7:22 am) |
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These results are for a 2005 Ford Focus ZX4 ST with the 2.3 liter Duratec engine and 5-speed manual transmission (as are all STs)and 25,000 miles. I bought the car used but there are no obvious signs of wear. It is fully optioned (so I assume the heaviest version.) It easily passes for new. It does mean someone else did the initial break-in of the engine. The original owners were happy enough to replace the Focus with a new Ford Fusion -- a returning customer is a good sign with a used car. So far with about 2,000 miles of experience, I am averaging 27-28 mpg. My standard gasoline is a 10% ethanol blend that may cut economy some as ethanol has a lower energy density than pure gasoline. My mix of highway and city is about 60/40. The lowest measurement was an all-in-town tank at 24.8 mpg. Interstate driving at 70 mph + is yielding right at 30 mpg with several runs between Des Moines and Minneapolis at around 70-75 mph (the prevailing speed). I've really only done one long road trip on 55 mph roads and as an experiment pegged the cruise at 55 to see how much better I could do than at Interstate speeds. Pretty good as it turns out. Over 250 miles it yielded 37.9 mpg. I'm happy with these results as the 2.3 liter manual is a very flexible drive train in the Focus. In town it cuts and thrusts with verve. Freeway entrance acceleration is great. My only complaint is road noise at highway speeds, but it is an economy car, not a Buick. The road noise is more tire noise than wind noise. The throaty exhaust note is great and part of the fun and I wouldn't change it. The ST delivers a fun, flexible sedan that can be sporting when your foot is heavy and efficient when you're willing to go slow. It is tempting when the engine responds so willingly. There are cars that do much better but the cost of acquisition is generally much higher or they are much smaller. I had a much loved Suzuki Swift for many years that was reliable as could be but frankly a tin can for safety. I never tested the Swift's crash worthiness but was always aware I didn't want to hit anything in it. The Focus by contrast is a real car, larger and more solid, with only slightly less fuel economy and a huge boost in perceived power and sophistication. I still don't want to hit anything but the ST has better active safety (serious P6 tires, ABS and traction control) and reasonable passive safety (side air bags and reasonable front collision scores for a small car). In the value equation the Focus ST scores well in my experience.
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Replying to: basiliskst (Oct 18, 2006 6:55 am) my car has slightly smaller tires, so it gets a bit better mileage. it has never been on a 250 trip. wish i had that exhaust system to 'st' has. |
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i thought this forum was for svt focii strictly, all i see is focus wagon and sedans , whats up ???
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Replying to: svt_rs (Dec 16, 2006 6:05 pm) |
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2001 Focus, 2.0 liter 16 valve engine, 5sp trans. I get 32 mpg on a regular basis - 35-36 on trips (drive to DC from the Philly area 1-2/month). One trip to North Carolina got 40mpg. Best car I ever owned!! FTN |
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28.25585295 mpg 140517.6 miles 4973.044 gallons 11/26/2000-2/22/2007 (Purchased 11/20/2000 with 20 miles) 2000 Ford Focus SE 16 valve 2.0L Zetec Also: $5779 in maintenance costs Maintenance Cost per mile: $0.04/mile Gas Cost: $.08/mile Total Purchase Price: $21000 Cost per mile (200000mile lifespan): $.105 Total CPM: $.225/mi |
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Replying to: basiliskst (Oct 18, 2006 6:55 am) The comments on the 2005 ST also pertain to the 2007. It is a wonderful little car, IMO, the best "bang for the buck" in compact cars today. If I could change one thing, it would be to make it RWD. I traded a 1999 Miata in for the Focus, and the Focus is as much fun, in it's own way. If it were convertible and RWD, I'd not miss the Miata at all. I've only made 2 modifications to the car. I replaced the stock rear sway bar with one 1mm larger, which gave the car near neutral handling, and replaced the mediocre Pirelli P6s with Goodyear Eagle F1 GS-D3s, of the same size as stock. Those two things really transformed the car. I have kept very detailed records of fuel economy. Overall is 27.01MPG with roughly 75% of that on cross country trips. Worst fuel economy has been 20.41MPG with pure short trips and lots of idling. The next tank under the same conditions got me 21.96. Normal Houston city commuting has been in the 24-25 MPG range. Highway fuel economy has been higly dependent on speed. Best has been 32.33MPG keeping speed in the 65-70MPH range. 70-75 usually gets 29-30MPG, while 80-85 nets 27-28MPG. Looked at on a graph, fuel economy has been steadily climbing, especially in the first 5000 miles. I wish the car had a higher final drive like the 2004s. I'm sure the fuel economy would be a good deal better, and I doubt acceleration would be hurt much, as the engine has torque to spare. |
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Replying to: basiliskst (Oct 18, 2006 6:55 am) This ST is like the Escort on steroids. Very fun to drive, loaded like the Nissan was and I'll take Ford reliability over Nissan any day. If you're thinking Focus, you owe it to yourself to test drive an ST! |
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