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Winding Road

‘08 Geneva: It’s a Party for Ford’s 2009 Fiesta

Written By: Evan McCausland

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2009 Ford Fiesta

Not two hours into the press week for the Geneva Auto Show, and Ford’s stand was already rocking with hordes of journalists crowded around the new Fiesta. We’re not surprised - the production car, making its production debut here in Switzerland, is a more-than-attractive entry into the B-car segment.

Most of the Fiesta’s form carries directly from the trilogy of Verve concepts, especially that of the three-door hatchback shown at last year’s Frankfurt show. What is a surprise is the five-door hatch, which - although never shown in concept form - keeps most of the three-door’s looks without any sacrifice of style.

(Click through for more on the Fiesta, including a gallery of live shots and a release from Ford)

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The Fiesta launches in Europe later this year with both gasoline and diesel variants, with petrol motors including a 59- and 79-horsepower 1.25-liter I-4, a 90-horsepower 1.4-liter I-4, and a range-topping 1.6-liter four-banger, delivering 113 horsepower. Diesel offerings include 1.4- and 1.6-liter I-4 common-rail turbodiesels, rated at 67 and 89 horsepower, respectively. A five-speed manual is standard on all offerings, although a four-speed automatic is optional with the 1.4-liter gasoline motor.

Most of those power options won’t be available for the North American Fiesta, which will also be sold primarily as a conventional sedan. Ford’s reportedly investigating the viability of the hatches in the ‘States, so tell us - what do you think of the production Fiesta - and do you want one in hatchback form?

FORD RELEASE


Ford of Europe is reinventing its small car range for a new generation of customers in 2008, starting with a stylish and exciting all-new Fiesta. The car makes its global debut in both three- and five-door hatchback bodystyles at the 2008 Geneva Motor Show.

Designed and developed in Europe for sale in Europe, Asia, South Africa, Australia and the Americas between 2008 and 2010, the new Fiesta is the first major product of Ford’s new global product development process. Its stylish and dynamic flair combines with all the traditional Ford small car strengths to create a confident, contemporary introduction to the next chapter of the Fiesta success story.

The new Fiesta opens another chapter in the story of the popular Ford small car that has sold more than 12 million units since its introduction in 1976. Charismatic and individual, the new model makes major strides in craftsmanship, quality of materials and product choice while continuing to represent Fiesta’s traditional strengths of practicality, value for money, agility and safety. It also brings a host of big-car features to the small-car segment for the first time.

New Fiesta clearly embodies the hallmarks of ‘kineticdesign’, which has so convincingly infused emotion into the core of the Ford range in Europe. The Geneva debut confirms that new Fiesta will bring the most appealing elements of Verve, a trio of concept cars shown recently around the world, to production reality.

It also ends speculation surrounding the name of Ford’s new-generation small car for global markets.

“This new car embodies the very essence of Fiesta – fun, vitality and emotion,” said John Fleming, President and CEO, Ford of Europe. “We know there isn’t a better name for the new model, and we have over thirty years of investment in the Fiesta brand to consider.

“We’re confident that the combination of dynamic new ‘kinetic design’ exterior, great interior design and craftsmanship, and a host of new technologies and features will provide compelling reasons for a new generation of customers around the world to take a fresh look at the Ford Fiesta. I know they will be both surprised and delighted with what they see and feel,” Fleming added.

Small Car with Global Plans
The new Ford Fiesta is closely related to the exciting Verve Concept vehicle that was revealed to great acclaim at the 2007 Frankfurt Motor Show. The Frankfurt car was one of three Verve Concepts, with the others, both four-door sedans tailored for regional market tastes, shown recently at Guangzhou in China and the North American International Auto Show in Detroit.

Together, these concepts paved the way for the company’s new global small car programme for the 2008 to 2010 period, with the European Fiesta first to debut in production guise.
Ford designers and product development engineers in Europe have led the vehicle’s global development process.

“For Ford, this is truly a world premiere,” said Joe Bakaj, Vice President of Product Development, Ford of Europe. “The new Fiesta is the first car born from our new global product development process. More than ever, we’re leveraging our global product development expertise, and this car sets the scene for future great products for customers around the world that are already being developed behind it in the Ford Global Product Development System pipeline.”
European production of the new Fiesta commences in the autumn of 2008 at the company’s Cologne plant in Germany. Later, as production ramps up, the Valencia Assembly Plant will bring additional Fiesta capacity on line in 2009.

“Fiesta has its heart in Europe but its eyes on the world,” said Marin Burela, Ford’s Global Executive Director for small-car development. “We’re building on Ford’s heritage of excellence in small car development to give the new Fiesta truly global reach and identity. By 2010, this new small-car family will be manufactured in Europe, Asia and the Americas and be marketed as Fiesta in all of the world’s key automotive markets.”

The new vehicle range will introduce several Ford firsts for a small car, including – from later in 2008 – another model in the new Ford ECOnetic range promising CO2 emissions of fewer than 100 grams per kilometre.

Fit and Trim

* New model retains predecessor’s compact size, but is lighter and stronger
* Intelligent Protection System includes new driver’s knee airbag
* Detailed enhancements to acclaimed driving character include Electric Power Assisted Steering (E-PAS) and reduced road, wind and powertrain noise

Unlike key competitors in the European small-car segment which have grown in size and weight, the new Fiesta stands on virtually the same footprint as before. The new-generation Fiesta is actually lighter than its predecessor.

“Staying small and resisting weight gains were key objectives of the new Fiesta development process,” said Joerg Beyer, Fiesta Chief Carline Engineer. “We’ve been absolutely committed to keeping Fiesta a compact car and having a razor-sharp focus on cutting weight. That really pays off when it comes to fuel economy and CO2 emissions.”

Component by component, the Ford development team scrutinised for weight but refused to compromise on key areas that are important to customers. One of the biggest is safety, where new Fiesta makes a bold step forward with an extremely robust safety structure and the Intelligent Protection System of safety technologies that brings a driver’s knee airbag to Fiesta for the first time.

The new Fiesta makes extensive use of ultra high-strength steels in its body structure. A remarkable amount of these specialist steels, including boron steel and dual-phase steel, is the secret to Fiesta’s quantum leap in structural stiffness for its light weight. These steels are used particularly in safety critical areas, such as the A-pillar and B-pillar, part of the ultra-rigid ‘door ring’ structure of the Fiesta bodyside.

Extending Fiesta’s traditional excellence in driving dynamics was also a priority. The new Fiesta will have a dynamic character to match its poised, ‘kinetic design’ style hinting at energy in motion. Ford’s acclaimed dynamics engineers also worked hard to enhance Fiesta’s ride comfort and isolate road, wind and powertrain noise from the cabin, and to give the new model an impressively quiet driving quality for a small car.

New Fiesta retains the MacPherson strut front suspension and twist-beam rear suspension layout that has been one of its traditional strengths, but the new suspension and steering system has undergone an array of enhancements.

Electric-Power Assist Steering (E-PAS) is introduced in the Fiesta for the first time.
E-PAS provides the right balance of low-speed assistance and excellent feel and responsiveness. E-PAS has another key benefit. It is another key facet of new Fiesta’s initiatives to reduce fuel consumption. The electric power steering pump only operates when steering-effort assistance is required, unlike traditional hydraulic PAS pumps that operate constantly when the engine is running. This brings a fuel consumption reduction.

Efficient Powertrain Choices

* Total of five powertrain choices at launch from efficient 68 PS Duratorq TDCi diesel to new Duratec 1.6-litre Ti-VCT petrol engine which delivers 115 PS
* Fiesta ECOnetic ultra-low CO2 model will deliver less than 100g/km emissions

With a broad array of powertrain choices, the new Fiesta is a responsive, yet efficient, performer.

New to the Fiesta range for European markets is the popular Ford Duratec 1.6-litre
Ti-VCT engine. The 115 PS engine with variable intake cam timing, provides a well-balanced blend of performance and economy. It brings a 15 PS performance improvement over the outgoing Fiesta without a fuel consumption penalty.
The Fiesta range also retains:

* 1.25-litre (60 and 80 PS) and 1.4-litre (91 PS) Duratec petrol engines
* Both Duratorq TDCi common-rail diesel engines, the 1.4-litre (68 PS) and the
1.6-litre (90 PS – available with Diesel Particulate Filter) which have been enhanced with revised injection technology and electronic control sophistication.

Fiesta will be offered with Ford Durashift 5-speed manual transmission or the Durashift
4-speed automatic transmission (available with 1.4-litre (91 PS) Duratec engine).

Concept becomes Reality

* Production Fiesta is clearly related to Verve Concept
* Futuristic interior from Concept makes production with integrated HMI centre stack
* New technology highlights include keyless vehicle technology, ‘Ford Power’ engine start button, Ford Easyfuel capless refuelling, USB connectivity and ambient interior lighting

The new Ford Fiesta brings the radical Verve Concept exterior and interior styling to production reality and incorporates features and technologies normally found in larger, more expensive vehicles. It rejects the notion that an affordable small car has to be basic or boring.

The highlight of the Verve Concept interior – the futuristic, mobile phone-inspired, human-machine interface technology of the instrument panel centre stack – will be a core feature of the new Ford Fiesta when it hits the road.

Gone is the flat, upright centre stack of the instrument panel, a feature typical of many small cars driven by the need to package a large radio head unit behind the fascia panel. New technology allows Fiesta to separate the key elements of audio system – the control buttons, display and underlying electronics – in a distributed architecture that gives designers more freedom to create aesthetically pleasing, functional shapes.

Many customers of the new-generation Ford Fiesta were raised with mobile phones and they will be instantly comfortable with the design of the car’s Ford HMI (Human Machine Interface) system, which follows the centre stack contours to frame a
large-screen display and control panel with key buttons for audio, in-car phone and vehicle settings.
Convenient toggle switches incorporated into the steering wheel allow the driver to control the system’s key functions easily and intuitively.

The latest Ford HMI system – already available on the Ford Mondeo, S-MAX and Galaxy models – represents a major step forward for the small car buyer. It is just one of several new features and technologies in the new Fiesta, including keyless vehicle technology symbolised by the distinctive ‘Ford Power’ button on the instrument panel.

The advanced technology will not be offered solely on high-spec vehicles. Ford expects more than 85 per cent of Fiesta orders to feature one of two available multi-function displays.

Another Verve Concept feature – the lozenge shaped array of large twist dials for the heating and ventilation systems at the midpoint of the centre stack – is retained in the production Fiesta design. This feature was inspired by the design of contemporary power showers.

Connectivity is another new Fiesta strength. The new centre console features a convenient tray for MP3 players complete with built-in jack sockets for an auxiliary (AUX) audio cable and a USB, along with the traditional 12 Volt outlet. This allows the car’s audio system to control and charge the MP3 player. Bluetooth® connectivity with Voice Control is also offered in the new Fiesta, along with more big-car technologies, including:

* Ford Easyfuel, the convenient capless refuelling system recently introduced with the Ford Mondeo designed to prevent accidental misfuelling
* Reach and rake steering wheel adjustment
* New ambient lighting features that provide a softly elegant red glow to discreetly highlight the interior of the vehicle
* ‘One shot’ up and down driver window with anti-trap technology

Bold, Dynamic, Sculpted
The bold colours, dynamic shapes and sculpted surfaces of the new Ford Fiesta indicate how deeply the spirit of the Verve Concept has been carried into production as the latest model of Ford’s ‘kinetic design’ family.

Exciting and vibrant new production colours include ‘Squeeze’ and ‘Hot Magenta’, which is a production version of the unique colour developed for the three-door Verve Concept car.

“We were so pleased with the positive reaction to the body colour of the first Verve Concept, that we decided to adopt this colour for inclusion in the range soon after launch,” said Burela.

The dynamic, coupé-like profile and sporty stance of the new Fiesta demonstrates that none of the emotional appeal of the concept cars has been lost.

“All the vital elements of ‘kinetic design’ combine to create a visually rich, dynamic exterior shape that is very close indeed to the original concept car,” said Martin Smith, Ford of Europe’s Executive Director for Design. “Full surfaces, bold graphics and dynamic lines combine coherently and harmoniously to create a dynamic spirit of fun and energy in motion.”

With a feeling of toned muscularity, the new Fiesta asserts an air of confidence, stylishness and individuality. Its aggressively contoured bonnet and front wings convey a broad-shouldered stance, and its face features a distinctive signature element – a bold lower trapezoidal grille that draws attention and reinforces the key Ford attribute of sporty driving dynamics. Chrome and brightwork are used selectively, like jewellery accents, to convey elegance and sophistication.

Large and full of character directly from the Verve concepts, Fiesta’s bold headlamps become part of the shoulder shape and extend aggressively rearward almost as far as the stylishly raked A-pillars. The headlamp units incorporate all primary front lighting and signal functions – complemented on the lower bumper flanks by round, chrome-ringed fog lamps.

New Fiesta’s profile emphasises its new, cab-forward shape and an attitude of poised, sporty style. The sweeping roofline extends appealingly from the forward-stretching A-pillar rearward, framing the bold graphic of the Fiesta side window profile to create the sporty feeling of a coupé for both three- and five-door bodystyles.

“The Design team put as much importance on the shape of the five-door as the three-door,” said Stefan Lamm, Chief Designer Exterior, Ford of Europe. “Both cars are based on the same body, which makes them sporty and dynamic, almost coupé-like.” The Fiesta side windows combine to create a unified profile window graphic – a key ‘kinetic design’ element that communicates dynamism. An elegant accent of chrome frames the lower edge of the side glass and accentuates the signature Ford “kick-up” at its rear.

The new Fiesta also features the signature bold wheel arches that communicate the vehicle’s stance and dynamic capabilities, giving visual emphasis to new 17-inch alloy wheels.

Dynamic, ‘kinetic design’ lines arc from side to side, uniting the upper corners of the tail lamps with the distinctive spoiler, which incorporates a slim LED stop lamp array. The sculpture of the body shapes is accented by elements like the new tail lamp – another Verve element that feels like it is an integral part of the body – and the V-shaped tailgate’s chamfered rear glass.

“I’ve been saying just wait for the new Fiesta to see how kinetic design can be translated into a small car,” said Martin Smith, Executive Director of Design for Ford of Europe. “But now the wait is over. New Fiesta evokes an instant emotional response that says ‘I want one’ which extends the traditionally practical values of the Fiesta brand to appeal to a new, style-conscious generation of small car buyers.”

Full technical details of the new Fiesta range will be released closer to the launch of the production model in autumn 2008.

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14 Comments

Garfield134 March 4th, 2008 8:03 AM Link

What do you bet that we in the US do not see these beauties and only get the frumpy sedan? Ford already killed off the 3 and 5 door Focus and the decent / practical wagon :-( because of the US obsession with SUV’s. Too bad, because these look like winners.

JHinton March 4th, 2008 8:48 AM Link

If we get the hatch with a diesel or a tiny turbocharged gas engine then yes. It needs to get better than 50mpg, which is my minimum standard for my next car.

I have no need for an ugly and impractical sedan version.

In Need of MPGs March 4th, 2008 9:29 AM Link

Bring on the hatchbacks with diesels. I agree with JHinton on the high MPGs…show Smart ForTwo how it is done and with style!

victor w March 4th, 2008 9:57 AM Link

I had a pinto hatchback and it was the greatest little car i ever owned. My daughters first car was a 4 door hatchback. You can get so much more in a hatch back then a regular sedan its crazy not to have one. A diesel would be fine but the price of fuel is getting way out of hand–i know i have a diesel F250

06YellowGT March 4th, 2008 10:22 AM Link

Does any other manufacture sell a hatchback in the States in any considerable volume?

The Civic is only sedan and coupe, right? I guess the Dodge Caliber is a hatchback, but that’s far from a sales success.

I think offering a hatchback model would be a good idea, but I can understand how Ford would look at what vehicles are selling in the US, and decide not to offer one.

Waiting for someone to tell me where I’m wrong……

phd_engineer March 4th, 2008 11:10 AM Link

You are not wrong 06YellowGT. I have a friend who is a sales manager for a large multibrand store who told me that the only people who actually buy hatchbacks in sizable numbers are “geeks” and “senior citizens”. Most small car buyers want the practicality and secure covered storage of a sedan. Also, sedans generally enjoy lower insurance premiums for young buyers.

This is one of the biggest misconceptions in the business; That young buyers want hatchbacks.

Maybe we are all geeks and old men here :)

Steve March 4th, 2008 1:58 PM Link

Well then, call me a geek. I’m certainly not an old man, and I drive a 5 speed Focus hatch right now, and love it to death.

Another small Ford hatchback is really an appealing proposition to me… Especially with a torquey diesel and a 5 speed.

06YellowGT March 4th, 2008 3:55 PM Link

Don’t get me wrong… I think hatchbacks are much more pratical, and often look better then a sedan too! (not a senior citizen here….. hmmm, now what does that make me??)

I’m just thinking… as a major corporation, and you have to decide where to spend your tooling money… look at what’s out there, and what is selling the best.

I guess that’s why the Focus is sedan, and the upcoming Verve… I mean Fiesta… will be hatch.

And now we’re all happy, right? ;)

Bob Martel March 4th, 2008 8:18 PM Link

I love my Mazda 3 four door hatch (or station wagon if you please!) The fact that it’s the Mazdaspeed version and kicks butt helps the enjoyment factor as well!

‘08 Geneva: Day-1 Gallery Roundup - Carfansblog March 5th, 2008 4:42 AM Link

[…] 2009 Ford Fiesta […]

Automobile News Update » Blog Archive » ‘08 Geneva: Day-1 Gallery Roundup March 5th, 2008 8:56 AM Link

[…] 2009 Ford Fiesta […]

geneva auto show March 5th, 2008 10:50 AM Link

geneva is great this year so far. already looking forward to next year.

bitterbob March 5th, 2008 12:14 PM Link

I must be a geek because I have always appreciated the hatchback. I started with a CRX and progressed to a Supra and I thought they were both great. My 87 Supra was powerful, comfortable, had huge storage with the back seats down, and could cruise all day at 80mph. Whichever gets here first, the Mazda 2 or the Fiesta, I’ll take one.

Winding Road » Archive » Report: Ford Still Considering Fiesta Hatchback for U.S. March 5th, 2008 3:00 PM Link

[…] Ford debuted its production Fiesta at the Geneva Motor Show, it made a point of talking about the global ramifications of the car. The Blue Oval has stated […]

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