I’ve owned my GRC for three months now and put 1500 miles on it. Came from a ‘15 Fiesta ST with Recaros that I owned for five years and put on 40k miles. Sold the FiST on Cars & Bids to make way for the GRC and got a very healthy return. Selling price before tax for the FiST was $15k when it was three years old with 40k miles and I got $11.2k for it. Link to listing that also talks about the modifications the FiST had:
https://carsandbids.com/auctions/3gojk7jo/2015-ford-fiesta-st
Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed the Fiesta ST but never truly fell in love with it. It always was kind of a place holder till I finished college and was able to get an STI or similar. I will say it never skipped a beat, was exceptionally fun, returned great MPG, had all the fearures and had some of my favorite seats I’ve sat in.
Why I wanted to sell it:
So how does the GRC compare? Does it check all the boxes? Some yes, some no.
The good:
Also, these are not worth a dime over MSRP. They do excellent for their price point, but I cannot fathom spending $45k on my trim.
Happy to answer any questions about it!
https://carsandbids.com/auctions/3gojk7jo/2015-ford-fiesta-st
Overall, I thoroughly enjoyed the Fiesta ST but never truly fell in love with it. It always was kind of a place holder till I finished college and was able to get an STI or similar. I will say it never skipped a beat, was exceptionally fun, returned great MPG, had all the fearures and had some of my favorite seats I’ve sat in.
Why I wanted to sell it:
- Wanted something a little bit bigger (considered something like a Chevy SS but that was too much of a jump) with a larger trunk floor. I’m frequently lugging around golf bags and ski boot bags. The FiST required two seats to be folded for golf bags and two ski boot bags was the max.
- Wanted something AWD. I had a WRX before this with all seasons and had winter tires on the FiST. The FiST did much better with braking and turning but the WRX got me out of deep snow spots and up icy hills better. Was constantly thinking “what if we married both these great things.”
- Wanted something a bit faster with no wheel slip. The FiST was so dang fun in the aspect of being able to hammer down and not worry, but I was always itching for just a bit more power. I’m not the type to yearn for 500 horsepower cause it’s not that useable, but 300 would be nice. I could’ve gotten the FiST to this level but then I’d be looking at LSDs and trying to mitigate wheel spin, which I’d rather just do away with.
So how does the GRC compare? Does it check all the boxes? Some yes, some no.
The good:
- It has all the power I could want, pulls really well (although it does run out of steam up top) and no more wheel spin to worry about. Definitely have to be more mindful of my speed now.
- Super tight chassis. The ride is similarly stiff to the FiST but the whole car moves more as a unit, rather than feeling separate things happening at different times in the FiST. The FiST would allow you to explore the edge of grip and not be too heinous, I’m not sure if I’ll be finding that outside of a track setting with the GRC.
- More spacious trunk (kinda). The floor of the trunk is much larger which is what I wanted. There is a steep cut in from the trunk shape that takes away volume (like an Audi Q8) but I just wanted the overall larger floor.
- Great noises. The valved exhaust makes a good noise on startup in this. Plus you get lots of turbo noises. Not looking to change that any time soon but I’m so glad there’s no speaker sounds or anything like that.
- Decent tech. I kept yearning for a car that had CarPlay, proximity entry, heated seats, and AWD. One other huge benefit this has is adaptive cruise. My Bronco doesn’t have it and its definitely something I’d like in all future vehicles.
- Toyota cheapened the Corolla for ‘23 and it shows. I actually sat in a ‘22 XSE and was quite pleased with the interior. However, for the Core model of the GRC they took away a lot of the soft touch plastics. There’s also no more dual climate. I’d understand if the price point was lower but the Elantra N, Golf R, CTR, Focus RS and last gen STI managed to have better materials and ergonomics than this.
- The seats. These are definitely not as good as the Recaros, CTR, or Elantra N seats. The fabric on the Core model looks cheap and isn’t that grippy. The Circuit has nicer materials but you don’t get better bolstering till the Morizo trim.
- The Core doesn’t look that exciting aside from the fender flares. Admittedly they are quite large and do make a statement, but the Circuit package really completes the look.
- The shifter doesn’t like to be rushed. You have to be purposeful in your shifts otherwise you might get grinding. It definitely is more notchy than the FiST but it and the clutch take some adapting.
Also, these are not worth a dime over MSRP. They do excellent for their price point, but I cannot fathom spending $45k on my trim.
Happy to answer any questions about it!
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