
MODEL TESTED
FORD EXPLORER EXTENDED RANGE PREMIUM RWD
Price £49,975 Power 282bhp Torque 402lb ft 0-60mph 5.8sec 30-70mph 4.8sec Economy 3.4mpkWh CO2 emissions Og/km Max DC charge rate 135kW 70-0mph 46.5m (14deg C, damp/drying)
W elcome to the first real harbinger of modern Ford. The re-imagining of the company as it jerks towards widespread electrification has been swift and, at least in Europe, fairly brutal. The Fiesta, a perennial favourite in the UK, is no longer being built at all, and the final Focus is set to leave the Saarlouis plant in November 2025.
These high-volume, low-margin cars will be replaced by crossovers such as the Puma and the subject of this road test: the new Explorer.
So the mainstream, mass-market family Ford now takes the form of a £40,000-plus electric crossover, and one whose core attributes have been defined not in Dunton or Cologne but in Wolfsburg. Underneath, the Explorer sits on Volkswagen's MEB platform-the tangible result of a technology-sharing deal finalised in 2020 and one that, Ford says, shaved two years off the development time of this latest model. Handy, when you're scrambling to compete in a crowded, growing segment but have been notably slow off the mark in developing a suitable product.
It's perhaps unsurprising that the MEB is therefore a transitional tool for Ford. It makes possible the Explorer and its slope-roofed Capri sibling, but will make way for proprietary Blue Oval hardware thereafter. To us this seems a bold strategy, even if in economic terms Ford has little choice but to go down such a path. The appeal of Ford cars has always been in their balance of affordability and likeability, much of the latter deriving from carefully honed dynamics and a quietly satisfying driving experience, no matter the spec or engine size.
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