Say Hello To The New Three-Cylinder Ford Fiesta ST

Ford has revealed the ST version of the new Fiesta, and it's packing a 197bhp 1.5-litre inline-three-cylinder engine
Say Hello To The New Three-Cylinder Ford Fiesta ST

That didn’t take long, did it? Just a few months on from revealing the boggo seventh-generation Fiesta, Ford has shown the hot ST version for the world.

Let’s get the big piece of news out of the way: you know the surprisingly muscular 1.6-litre inline-four turbo in the outgoing car? It’s gone. As was first rumoured a little while ago, the ST has indeed dropped a cylinder and a little bit of displacement, switching to a 1.5-litre three-pot.

Say Hello To The New Three-Cylinder Ford Fiesta ST

This does give some cause for concern given that three-cylinder engines don’t tend to be as eager as their four-pot cousins for various reasons, but we’ll reserve judgement until we’ve had a go. Plus, it sounds like an interesting powerplant.

It’s presumably derived from the existing 1.5-litre Ecoboost unit, although Ford describes it as an “all-new” engine. It’s been given a new turbocharger with an “optimised” turbine design to reduce lag, plus “Twin-independent Variable Cam Timing. It’s good for 197bhp and 214lb ft of torque.

Both of those figures are the same as what the outgoing car achieved when its ‘overboost’ function kicked in. The new car will do 0-62mph in an “anticipated’ 6.7 seconds, although there’s no word on top speed just yet. There isn’t an MPG figure available right now either, but Ford is expecting CO2 emissions of around 114g/km, which would be astonishing.

The car gets a torque vectoring by braking system just like the old one, plus three driving modes. The ‘Normal’, ‘Sport’ and ‘Track’ modes each alter the steering, throttle response and traction/stability controls to varying degrees. Stick it in ‘Track’ mode and the traction control goes entirely, with the ESP set to ‘wide slip’ mode. Or if you’d prefer, you can switch off ESP completely.

Say Hello To The New Three-Cylinder Ford Fiesta ST

On the inside it’s a sportified version of the Fiesta cabin we’ve already seen, which means a far plusher space than we’ve been used to seeing from Ford’s ubiquitous supermini.

The ‘Sync 3’ system is present on a floating tablet-style setup, which should prove to be much less frustrating than the clunky old infotainment, and keeping your back and buttocks very happy will be a pair of Recaro bucket seats.

In the cabin you’ll also be - I’m afraid to say - treated to some ‘Electronic Sound Enhancement’, but this does at least work in tandem with an active exhaust valve.

Say Hello To The New Three-Cylinder Ford Fiesta ST

Want one? You’ll be waiting for a little while I’m afraid, with Ford gunning for an early 2018 launch for the car in both three and five-door forms. The outgoing ST was - and probably still is - pound-for-pound the best new performance car around, so this new one should be worth the wait.

It’ll make its public debut at the Geneva Motor Show in a few weeks.

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Comments

Anonymous

Enter your comment…

02/24/2017 - 14:03 |
2 | 22
Tomislav Celić

197hp from a THREE CYLINDER
Holy sh!t, in 10 years we will get 10000000hp from a 0.00001l 1 cylinder if this continues

02/24/2017 - 14:03 |
304 | 10

First a 200 hp Yaris, now a three-pot 200 hp Fiesta, this must be a hard time for GT86 owners

02/24/2017 - 14:36 |
226 | 2

Maybe the car doesn’t need an engine to move it 😂

02/24/2017 - 15:25 |
0 | 0

True, but we won’t get anything from a naturally-aspirated V12 if the turbocharging trend continues.

02/24/2017 - 15:32 |
24 | 0

Next up is a 900hp Suzuki Alto

02/24/2017 - 18:32 |
6 | 0
FLixy Madfox

Is it just me or does that paint look suspiciously like the M2’s…..

02/24/2017 - 14:04 |
54 | 6

You are not alone…

02/24/2017 - 14:06 |
2 | 2

I’m pretty sure that is the “Ford Performance” blue that Ford likes to use for reveals (Focus RS and Ford GT used the same color) but then when they go to sell it you can’t actually get the color. Because reasons

02/24/2017 - 15:15 |
26 | 0

Shame won’t care,he’ll buy both!

02/24/2017 - 17:18 |
0 | 0

Shmee won’t care,he’ll buy both!

02/24/2017 - 17:19 |
0 | 0
Roadster / Tail Red

Still waiting for the RS version…

02/24/2017 - 14:04 |
36 | 2

YES, also chat pls

02/24/2017 - 14:05 |
2 | 2

Stick the old ecoboost in and turbo the mechanical daylights out of it! Some tuners can get 270 out of it

02/24/2017 - 14:15 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

[DELETED]

02/24/2017 - 14:04 |
0 | 0
muricanmuscle

Coming to the us

02/24/2017 - 14:29 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

How do you completely remove the electronic noises? I just don’t like the thought of it

02/24/2017 - 14:31 |
2 | 0
InjunS2K

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Usually it’s just a fuse somewhere, we’ll figure it out :P

02/24/2017 - 15:04 |
6 | 0
Matt Robinson
Matt Robinson

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

No word of whether or not you can in the press release, but it sounds like the driving mode has an effect on it. There’s usually a fuse somewhere you can yank out to stop these things…

02/24/2017 - 15:14 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

Matt: am I wrong in thinking you meant “eighth-generation Fiesta” in the first paragraph?

02/24/2017 - 14:44 |
0 | 0
Matt Robinson
Matt Robinson

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Seventh-gen is correct :)

02/24/2017 - 15:16 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

This sounds like the perfect car to get to know your local Ford mechanic with. That much power from that little engine plus guaranteed hoonigan behaviour equals very regular service.

I thought downsizing was over anyway? It didn’t help at all right?

02/24/2017 - 14:44 |
26 | 0
Matt Robinson
Matt Robinson

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

It is, or so VW would have you believe. The trouble is a lot of these smaller engines will have been in development for a while, so even if downsizing is truly over, we’ll probably still be seeing the its effects for a little while. Will be genuinely interested to see how the efficiency of this new 1.5 compares to the old 1.6…

02/24/2017 - 15:06 |
22 | 0
Wogmidget

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

On the topic of downsizing, it occurred to me that the new engine has larger individual cylinders than the outgoing four-pot (1.5/3 vs 1.6/4). I’d be interested to see if the increased bore and/or stroke does anything to counteract the loss of a cylinder

02/25/2017 - 08:24 |
4 | 0
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

The 1.0 Ecoboost dont agreed with you on the regular service thing.

02/28/2017 - 08:13 |
0 | 0
Lane_5.0

God I love it, and that’s good because I am 14 and that is potentially my first car.

02/24/2017 - 15:02 |
2 | 4

As a first car? Geez it’s 200hp, that’s a recipe for disaster haha

02/24/2017 - 16:52 |
4 | 2