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Car Review

Ford Puma review

Prices from
£25,535 - £33,785
810
Published: 06 Sep 2024
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Driving

What is it like to drive?

The Puma isn't too heavy, so the little 1.0-litre engine does a decent job, especially as it's torquey and quick-witted. The mild hybrid system actually adds less weight than substituting a bigger engine would have. It's worth revving high as the power keeps swelling toward 6,400rpm, but unfortunately so does the noise.

The mild hybrid works entirely as advertised, making the engine drive like a bigger one, while still showing impressive economy when you're going gently. In our experience, economy betters 50mpg whichever of the engines you choose. Also it does a great job of quick idle-stop in town, turning off the engine before you've stopped, and restarts instantly and magically at the very last moment before you need it to pull away.

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Should I go 123bhp or 153bhp?

It's worth noting that post-facelift you can only spec the six-speed manual gearbox with the 123bhp engine. We're yet to try that combo, but from past experience we'd say that it's worth changing gear yourself in the Puma. Yes, the auto claims to be 0.2 seconds quicker from 0-62mph (when comparing the two 123bhp versions), and yet it feels sluggish and produces more emissions, and at the same time costs £1,800 more than the equivalent manual. A manual that just happens to be a great gearbox with sweet changes.

If you really need the seven-speed auto 'box or if you’re looking for entirely fuss-free commuting, it works fine when you’re just mooching, but we'd advise upgrading to the 153bhp engine to drop the 0-62mph time from 9.6 to 8.7 seconds. 

Does it handle as well as a Ford ought to?

The steering is very Ford-like if a bit more rubbery than in a Fiesta or Focus. It's intuitive and clean, with a bit of feel. The Puma contains cornering roll decently, and balances the grip at the front and back. You can bowl along through a set of tricky bends and it won't shirk the challenge. Body control is genuinely good.

To be clear a Fiesta - certainly one with the ST-Line set-up - is simply more fun. So's a Focus. But for a crossover, this is good, and the ST-Line spec Pumas get a sport suspension setup that's not too firm but ties things down nicely. What isn't so good is the road noise, with some gritty hubbub coming through the tyres.

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The ride is a little bobbly, but the suspension accepts big hits well enough. You sit 3cm higher off the floor than in a Fiesta, and the floor is 3cm higher off the road. That 6cm total lift is noticeable, but it's not exactly SUV altitude, and the driving position isn't too upright.

Does it have drive modes?

The driving modes affect the powertrain and skid control, but not the suspension because that's passive. Also they change the instrument colours and fonts, but not in a distracting way. They're normal, eco (softens the throttle, emphasises regeneration), sport (quite a bit perkier on the open road but a bit sharp in town), slippery and trail.

Highlights from the range

the fastest

1.0 EcoBoost Hybrid mHEV ST [Handling Pk] 5dr DCT
  • 0-627.4s
  • CO2
  • BHP167.6
  • MPG
  • Price£33,785

the cheapest

1.0 EcoBoost Hybrid mHEV Titanium 5dr
  • 0-629.8s
  • CO2
  • BHP123.4
  • MPG
  • Price£25,535

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