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01-08-2010
Het is uiterst ongebruikelijk
dat Ford onderstaande beelden zo maar vrij geeft, zeker omdat ze de auto
al aan het publiek hebben voorgesteld in Geneve. Dit maakt het allemaal
toch een stuk minder spannend. Toch een beetje jammer, de spanning wordt
normaal opgebouwd doordat 'iemand' (in onze ogen een geluksvogel) een
sterk ingepakt prototype ziet tijdens een verblijf in het buitenland.
Maar goed laten we blij zijn met deze beelden en bijbehorende bericht.
Hierin lees je alles wat Ford over de nieuwste Focus kwijt wil.

All-New Ford Focus reaches new heights on test.
The next generation Ford Focus has been tested in some of the most
extreme locations on the planet. It’s been thrashed over frozen arctic
lakes, hammered across the hottest deserts, and driven overloaded up and
down high Alpine passes to ensure impeccable reliability and
dependability wherever it is sold…
Altitude affects cars in the same way it affects humans. The higher you
climb, the less oxygen there is in the air and it becomes harder to
breathe and function. Ford demands its products meet high standards of
performance at all altitudes which is why the company frequently heads
to the Austrian Alps and to the Grossglockner High Alpine Road.
Completed in 1935, this breathtaking and beautiful ribbon of tarmac
weaves its way right into the heart of the Hohe Tauern National Park,
before terminating opposite the tallest mountain in Austria, the
Grossglockner (3,798m) and its glacier, the Pasterze.

At 48km long, with 36 challenging bends and a maximum altitude of 2,504
metres, this masterpiece of road engineering is a mecca for
motorcyclists and driving enthusiasts. It's also the perfect location to
carry out altitude testing on the next generation Ford Focus. Ford
vehicle integration engineer Bernd Herweling is here for two weeks,
driving 200km up and
down the hill every day. “We’re here testing next generation Focus with
a variety of powertrains,
both petrol and diesel," he explains. "We’re evaluating driveability on
steep mountain roads from a customer perspective. The bottom line is
we’re here to find out how the car performs driving up and down
seriously steep hills.
“The Grossglockner is ideal for this. The road surface is very good.
We use the first section for our test which is the biggest climb. It’s
pretty much a constant 12 per cent gradient all the way up to the 2,400
metre mark. Up there the air is a lot thinner so the engine has to work
harder. It’s a long route which allows us to generate a lot of data.”
Today the team is testing a highly camouflaged Focus equipped with the
all-new 1.6-litre Ford EcoBoost direct-injection turbo petrol engine.
Bernd drives while his colleague Markus Polle sits in the passenger seat
monitoring a laptop which displays the ambient temperature, oil
temperature and a myriad other readings. On the back seat there's a
dozen or so plastic fuel cans filled with ballast which weigh the same
as three heavy adults.

It costs 28 Euros for a day's driving on the Grossglockner High Alpine
Road. After exiting the toll booth at the bottom of the valley, the road
shows it character straight away, climbing steeply in a straight line
before launching into a series of hairpin bends. Bernd pushes the Focus
hard. Mostly he's in second or third gear but on some of the tighter
bends he drops down to first. He overtakes one, two, three coaches and
several exotic sports cars, gaining height with dizzying speed. The
scenery is simply stunning but this road demands maximum concentration
as there are huge drops at the side and no barriers. Ears pop as the
Focus climbs ever higher and then, just a few minutes after leaving the
valley floor, Bernd brakes to a halt in a lay-by at the top of the pass,
switches the engine off and erects a wind deflector around the hood to
trap heat inside the engine compartment.
"It's a heat soak," he says. "We want the engine to stay as hot as
possible. Going uphill we’re
carefully motoring the engine cooling system, radiator temperature,
engine oil temperature and in
the case of automatic models, transmission oil temperatures. "We have
more than 100 electronic channels on board which record how the vehicle
is performing. It’s a lot of information. So far everything is working
fine. My job is to drive quite fast but not to the limit. We could go a
lot faster!" As Bernd and Markus analyse their laptop readings a crowd
of people gather round the camouflaged Focus. Some take photographs,
many press against the windows to get a glimpse inside.

"This happens a lot," Bernd explains later. "When the car is stationary
people do try to look inside. If we drive past someone often they will
turn to look twice because it is different. People are curious. If
someone wants to take pictures you can’t avoid it. The camouflage does
help though. We're always aware of what's happening, but we can just get
on and concentrate on our job." After five minutes it's time to head
back down. Going up hill the clutch and engine suffer most but now it's
the turn of the brakes to be punished. At the side of the road numerous
signs warn drivers to select a low gear and use their brakes sparingly.
Bernd, however, brakes very late for each bend.

Thankfully the Focus is as surefooted as a mountain goat. As we near the
bottom another camouflaged Focus towing a hefty four-wheeled trailer
sets off up the mountain. Bernd explains that the driver's brief is to
stay at a steady 30kph all the way to the top. At that speed there's
little air flow through the radiator so the engine cooling system faces
a stern work-out.
"Trailer testing is very important," adds Bernd. "At sea level in this
car you can pull up to 1,500kg with this powertrain. But up here in this
rarefied atmosphere the engine is going to struggle. We are pushing the
limits to see just how much weight it will pull up the hill and how the
clutch copes with hill starts at altitude. "The conditions are extreme",
he concluded, "but that's why we are here. If the car meets our
performance targets in this environment, it'll cope with pretty much
anything our customers will ask of it!"
Bron | Media Ford UK

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