18-05-2010
Ford Focus RS500 -
klik hier voor het filmpje!
Matt black paint, 345bhp and a limited run of 500 units - the most
hardcore hot-hatch on the market just got even meaner and we're first to
drive it.
Ford’s most iconic badge is back with a vengeance! First seen on the
Sierra Cosworth that dominated saloon car racing back in the Eighties,
the RS500 name has been resurrected – and this time it marks out the
meanest-looking and most powerful Focus RS to date.
Made to mark the end of the standard RS’s production run, power from the
already savage 2.5-litre turbocharged engine been cranked up from 300bhp
to a colossal 345bhp. As the badge suggests only 500 examples will be
sold, split between 20 countries, with just 101 cars allocated to the
UK.

If the standard car’s swollen arches and feast of slashes and vents were
a slap in the face, the RS500’s matt black bodywork and matching 19-inch
alloys are a knockout punch. All 500 cars are painted in metallic
Panther Black, before being wrapped in a stealth-like coating – which
doubles up as protection against stone chips and scratches.
On the inside unique trim on the centre console, embossed with the RS
logo, and a plaque registering your car’s place in the production run
give a sense of occasion to what’s essentially a standard Focus interior.
But as any Fast Ford fan will tell you, it’s what lies underneath that
counts.

A larger intercooler, wider air filter and a freer flowing exhaust pipe,
as well as an uprated fuel pump and an ECU tweak are all that’s required
to liberate an extra 15 per cent horsepower, and trim the 0-62mph sprint
from 5.9 to 5.6 seconds.

At low revs it feels just as smooth and flexible as the standard RS, but
once the counter sweeps past 2.5000rpm the engine really hits its stride.
The induction and exhaust noise engulf the cabin, while it pops and
bangs like a firework when you lift off the throttle.

Straight line acceleration is noticeably more frantic, but the punchy
power delivery is entirely familiar from the standard car. The good news
is that the extra shove hasn’t corrupted the handling. Despite all that
power being sent to the front wheels, there’s remarkably little torque
steer on smooth roads, while the front differential help the car claw
its way out of bends and find more grip than you ever thought possible
in a front-wheel drive hatch.

That’s the good news, now for the bad. Every RS500 has already been sold,
even before a single customer has had a chance to drive one – a fact
that speaks volumes about the RS500’s status as a future classic. But
don’t despair, if you already own a Focus RS, Ford’s official tuning
partner Mountune is offering the full suite of RS500 engine upgrades for
£2,195 including fitting. All that’s left then is to apply a matt finish
and a DIY RS500 is yours.
Bron | AutoExpress.co.uk
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