2010 Ford Figo

    The Figo may not have the design flair of other B-segment hatchbacks and neither is it as modern as the competition

    Published on Sep 24, 2010 07:00:00 AM

    1,43,303 Views

    The Figo comes with two engine options – a 1.2 petrol and a 1.4 diesel. The diesel is the same Duratorq unit that powers the Ikon and Fiesta while the petrol is a scaled-down version of the 1.4/1.6 Duratec engine from the Fiesta and belongs to the same Sigma engine family. 

    In fact, Ford used the European Fiesta’s 1.25-litre Sigma engine as a base and merely reduced the bore (the stroke is the same). Along with this reduced capacity comes a lower compression ratio of 9.75:1 and a new design for the head, both done to allow the engine to adapt better to our lower octane fuel. Ford has also constructed a special water jacket to cool the head more effectively. A digital throttle also helps improve control over the engine and this motor is Euro IV-compliant from the word go. The power output of the motor is an unimpressive 70bhp – the Honda 1.2 produces 89bhp in comparison. 

    Throttle response is pretty decent and on part-throttle the Figo is quite sprightly for its power-to-weight ratio. However, floor the throttle pedal to overtake in a hurry and you will be disappointed. The mid-range is quite weak and you need to drop down a gear, sometimes two, to get a serious move on. Ford has also curtailed the top end of the motor. Unlike the 1.6 or even the 1.4, it no longer pulls to 7000rpm, the limiter cuts in at 6500rpm, and the last 1000rpm feels strained. As a result, flat-out acceleration to 100kph takes a leisurely 16.3 seconds with 120kph only coming up in 24.8sec. This is clearly slower than competition like the Swift, which is 3.2sec faster. In-gear acceleration, though slower than the Swift, isn’t too far removed from cars like the i20, which also have a weak bottom end.  However, Ford’s iB5 transmission which is light, precise and an absolute jewel, makes it easy to keep the motor in the perky part of the powerband.

    The smooth and very responsive Duratorq diesel is by far the more driveable motor. There’s little turbo-lag and this is easily the most tractable small diesel in the market. The Duratorq has only two valves per cylinder which reduces high-speed flow to the cylinders. This gives a 

    very strong bottom end and good mid-range too but there is a lack of ◊ ∆ top-end grunt. Still, the diesel does the 0-100kph in a petrol-matching 16.3sec and can stay with the petrol as speeds build up as well. This common-rail diesel is also exceptionally smooth and vibration-free. You can hear some amount of diesel clatter but it’s one of the quieter diesels around. The Figo diesel is clearly the better of the two engine options. 

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