
WORLD BEATER
Ford Mondeo – Long Term Test
Road Test
There’s nothing that’s likely to upset anyone about the Mondeo’s basic shape and that’s crucial for a car that has to sell in the kind of volumes that this one does. It’s chunky and solid looking with the thick door panels that step out from their windows but sporty with the wide, low stance and the tapering roofline that’s drawn out at the rear. The detailing also emphasises the car’s dynamism with the huge frowning intake in the bumper, the bonnet indents and chrome cutaways in front of the side repeaters.
The boot is enormous. Press the release and the tailgate of our hatchback model yawns open to leave you teetering on the precipice of a veritable pit of practicality. Family holidays, house moves or the weekend DIY blitz - the Mondeo will accommodate more stuff than you’d credit in any number of domestic situations. When it is time to load up and run for the sun, there should be little complaint from back seat passengers either, with exemplary head and legroom right across the rear bench.
The downside of all this space on the inside is that the Mondeo is a seriously big car outside, bigger than the old Ford Scorpio executive saloon. It feels substantial and extremely solid on the road but the sheer size becomes a real issue in tight situations and when parking. Get the Mondeo out in the open and all this is forgotten. It shines brighter than any other medium range offering whether you’re attaching a set of sweeping bends or a marathon motorway trip. The suspension is extremely well judged, giving the firmness and control you want for spirited driving but without crossing over into the harshness that makes mundane trips a chore. The car is a pleasure to use on longer journeys where wind and road noise are never intrusive and the engine idles away meekly in the background until called upon to deliver the goods.
When you do prod the 2.5-litre turbocharged powerplant into life, it piles on the speed in dramatic fashion. It’s the same unit used in the Focus ST hot hatchback and as you home in on the redline, the five-cylinder unit breaks into a gruff burble that only adds to the sporty experience. There’s 217bhp on tap but it arrives in a measured fashion making it much more usable in everyday situations than is the case in less advanced turbocharged cars. It’s a performance engine, so there’s always going to be a penalty in terms of fuel economy and we’ve been keeping a close eye on the gauge during our long term test. To date, the costs haven’t been too exorbitant. We’ve averaged a some way below the official combined cycle economy figure of 30mpg but the novelty of the Mondeo’s sparkling chassis and engine combo has yet to wear off. We’re not particularly confident that it ever will.
FACTS AT A GLANCE
CAR: Ford Mondeo 2.5T Titanium X
PRICE: £22,945 – on the road
INSURANCE GROUP: 14
CO2 EMISSIONS: 222g/km
PERFORMANCE: 0-60mph 7.3s / Max Speed 152mph
FUEL CONSUMPTION: (urban) 20.8mpg / (extra urban) 41.5mpg / (combined) 30.4mpg
STANDARD SAFETY FEATURES: Twin front & side airbags, twin airbag curtains, ABS
WILL IT FIT IN YOUR GARAGE?: Length/Width/Heightmm 4778/2078/1500mm
WHO TO SEE:
December 10th 2007
New Review: 478
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