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Puppy recovering from a Deep Neck Wound Bitten by big dog part 2

admin79 by admin79
May 3, 2025
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Puppy recovering from a Deep Neck Wound Bitten by big dog part 2

Ford Puma Gen-E review

Ford’s best-selling compact crossover finally gets an all-electric powertrain

Vicky Parrott

Vicky Parrott

Published:

11 April 2025

How we test cars

  • Introduction
  • Design & styling
  • Interior
  • Engines & performance
  • Ride & handling
  • MPG & running costs
  • Verdict
  • Introduction
  • Design & styling
  • Interior
  • Engines & performance
  • Ride & handling
  • MPG & running costs
  • Verdict
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front corner 028
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review rear static 003
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front detail 121
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review headlight 120
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review wheel 126
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review sill detail 123
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review rear light 125
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review sillplate 115
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review badge 124
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review dash 093
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front seats 094
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review rear seats 095
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review boot 097
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review frunk 112
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review drive selector 135
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review B & O speaker grille 137
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review infotainment 163
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review stitching detail 138
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review dials 151
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review sunroof 131
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front head on tracking 019
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front action 058
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review rear tracking 023
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front corner 046
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review rear corner 067
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review interior driving 024
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review pan 072
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front static 001
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front corner 028
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review rear static 003
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front detail 121
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review headlight 120
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review wheel 126
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review sill detail 123
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review rear light 125
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review sillplate 115
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review badge 124
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review dash 093
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front seats 094
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review rear seats 095
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review boot 097
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review frunk 112
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review drive selector 135
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review B & O speaker grille 137
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review infotainment 163
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review stitching detail 138
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review dials 151
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review sunroof 131
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front head on tracking 019
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front action 058
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review rear tracking 023
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front corner 046
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review rear corner 067
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review interior driving 024
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review pan 072
  • Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front static 001

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It feels like the Ford Puma Gen-E was needed a couple of years ago, really.

With the likes of the Renault 5 now in showrooms and the Jeep Avenger, Volkswagen ID 3, Skoda Elroq, MG S5 EV, Volvo EX30, Smart #1 and more all going well in the UK, never mind the ever-pressing ZEV mandate regulations, Ford desperately needs an affordable electric car.

Ford states that – for now, at least – it has no intention of adding a longer-range battery to the Puma Gen-E.

Vicky Parrott

The good news is that the Puma Gen-E is precisely the sort of lower-cost proposition that should get customers through the doors. Starting from under £30,000, it gets a 43kWh lithium-ion NMC battery (53kWh total capacity) that powers it to a WLTP range of up to 233 miles. That makes it one of the most efficient electric cars in the class, which is especially great news for a car that also manages 0-62mph in a healthy 8.0sec.

Is it remotely that efficient in the real world, though? We will get to that a bit further down…

https://www.drivenbuy.co.uk/autocar?car_make=ford&car_model=puma-gen-e&review=new&source=https://www.autocar.co.uk/car-review/ford/puma-gen-e

Verdict

Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front corner 028

Model tested:

Rating: 

Ford Puma Gen-E

Huge boot, compact dimensions, brilliant real-world efficiency and fun dynamics make the Puma Gen-E a great choice, even if other EVs offer longer ranges at similar prices.

Good

Fun to drive

Great real-world efficiency

Huge boot in a compact body

Bad

Other EVs have longer ranges

Some cheap interior finishes

One-pedal mode is grabby

DESIGN & STYLING

Pros

Familiar looks

Compact size

Bright colours to choose from

Cons

Familiar looks

White badging looks a bit tacky

Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review rear static 003

You will have noticed that the electric Puma Gen-E looks much the same as the petrol Puma that will continue to be sold alongside it. It’s pretty easy to tell the difference, though, thanks to the blanked-off front grille that hints at the Mustang Mach-E and Capri for a touch of styling consistency among Ford’s electric cars. The white font on the boot is also a telltale sign that the Gen-E is the electric one.

But of course we’re still dealing with a 4.2m-long compact crossover that’s usefully shorter than the ID 3, MG 4 EV and co.

Aerodynamics and weight play a big part in the Puma Gen-E’s efficiency, and it manages a drag coefficient of 0.29 – not bad.

Vicky Parrott

INTERIOR

Pros

Huge boot space

All the media stuff you want is included

Easy control of the driver assistance systems

Cons

Other touchscreens are more intuitive

Some cheap-feeling materials

Air-con controls are on the touchscreen

Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review dash 093

That compact body makes it even more impressive that Ford has squeezed a vast 523-litres of luggage space – 145-litres of which is in the waterproof ‘Gigabox’ beneath the boot floor, complete with a plug, just in case you need to use it as an ice bath for your beers, or hose out the mud that’s gathered from mucky welly storage. It really is a serious selling point to have this much space in such a compact car. Easy to park and easy to get a chunky buggy in the boot? Family motorists rejoice. 

There’s plenty of space in the rear seats, too. You will find a bit more rear head and leg room in the S5 EV, ID 3 and Kia EV3, but a couple of kids or lanky teens will be just fine in the back of the Puma Gen-E.  

Every Puma Gen-E gets manual lumbar adjustment, which is a nice addition. Shame that heated seats are optional.

Vicky Parrott

Things have changed up front, too, with plusher materials, a raised centre console with double-decker storage, and a new Sync4 infotainment touchscreen complete with wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. It’s a big improvement on Ford infotainment systems of old, and the chief functions – sat-nav, air-con and the like – are all easy enough to access and control, if a little fiddly when you’re on the move.

There’s also a physical shortcut button to bring up the drive modes (as well as the one-pedal mode and drive noise activation) on the screen, but you can’t actually switch modes simply by pressing the button again; you have to prod the infotainment system. Which is irritating.

More importantly, you can easily turn off the speed limit warning and lane keeping assistance systems by holding down a button on the steering wheel, for blissfully beep-free progress.

ENGINES & PERFORMANCE

Pros

Good performance for UK roads

Nice accelerator response

Synthesised ‘engine’ noise is unintrusive

Cons

One-pedal mode is grabby

There are faster alternatives

Drive modes have to be selected on the touchscreen

Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front head on tracking 019

The Puma Gen-E isn’t going to light up the online forums with talk of its sheer pace. But the 165bhp, 214lb ft electric motor (a modified version of that fitted to the Mustang Mach-E) gives hearty response even from higher speeds, and you will even get a bit of torque steer squirming its way through the peculiarly huge, oblong-shaped steering wheel when you accelerate hard out of a corner.

We don’t mind that; there’s something quite engaging about the gentle scrappiness of a bit of torque steer, and it makes the Puma Gen-E feel more engaging than the generally rather poker-faced ranks of electric crossovers.

The synthesised ‘engine’ noise is unobtrusive enough yet can add a bit of fun when you want it. But it’s still a good thing that it can be switched off easily.

Vicky Parrott

Plus, because it doesn’t have got face-distorting accelerative potential, you can use all of the car’s potential on a good road without fearing for your life or your licence. And we all know that this is a good thing for anyone who really enjoys an unintimidating romp down a fine country road, even when it’s in something as unassuming as an electric Puma.

The regenerative braking is mild as standard, but you can up it by hitting the ‘L’ button on the gear stalk or by activating the one-pedal mode on the touchscreen. That’s okay, but it’s not an adaptive set-up and other EVs – particularly from Kia and Hyundai – have far more variable regen. The one-pedal mode in the Puma is also tricky, as it’s too grabby and reactive over a very short pedal travel for easy modulation around town.

RIDE & HANDLING

Pros

Taut but well-judged damping

Fun by class standards

Cons

Steering could give more feedback

Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front corner 046

It’s worth taking the longer route home in the Puma Gen-E, because it has a rather impressive balance of taut yet well-damped confidence.

Yes, there’s a fair bit of weight to be managed here (although the 1563kg kerb weight isn’t at all bad by the standards of this class), but the Puma Gen-E proves that Ford of Europe is still a little bit magical when it comes to making everyday cars that are fizzy yet friendly.

Our Premium-grade test car came on the standard 18in alloy wheels and 215/50 R18 Continental EcoSport tyres.

Vicky Parrott

The wheel-at-each corner stance helps it to swivel gamely into corners and the fairly tight body control keeps it from getting ungainly. Yet it’s also damped well enough to take the sting out of sharp-edged speed bumps, recessed manhole covers and the other detritus of UK roads.

The EV3 and Avenger are a bit cushier, but the Ford is never jarring, so the firmish ride comfort isn’t actually a bother. In fact, the well-tied-down body control and shorter spring travel in the Puma Gen-E arguably makes it a more comfortable option than the spongier-feeling family EVs on offer.

Would we like a bit more steering feedback? Yes, but in the scheme of electric family cars, this steering has a nice bite to it, even if it is a bit anodyne no matter which drive mode you’ve selected.

MPG & RUNNING COSTS

Pros

Great real-world efficiency

Five years’ free servicing

Decent pricing

Cons

PCP finance costs could be lower

Rival manufacturers provide longer vehicle warranties

Other EVs have longer WLTP ranges

Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front corner 028

Of course, we can wax lyrical about Ford being a dab hand with damper rates, but the Puma Gen-E will live or die by its costs.

List prices starting from under £30,000 for Select trim are a strong start, although the keyless entry, mnatrix LED lights and Bang & Olufsen sound system will no doubt swing the decision in favour of the Premium trim for a lot of buyers. You will be wanting to add the £350 Winter Pack to get heated seats regardless of which trim you fancy, though – a weird omission from the standard kit for what’s otherwise a very generously equipped car.

Ford deliberately didn’t include a manual ‘battery pre-heat’ button, as it found that customers consistently underestimate how long it takes to pre-heat a battery. 

Vicky Parrott

What’s a bit more underwhelming is that on PCP finance, the Puma Gen-E currently starts from around £350 per month for 48 months after a £5000 deposit. That’s competitive but far from the best in the class. So it’s good that Ford has just introduced its ‘Power Promise’, throwing in a free home charger, 10,000 miles of free charging and five years of free servicing. Sure, you will get a longer vehicle warranty with Kia, Hyundai or MG, but that’s still a persuasive package.

Especially as the Puma Gen-E’s claimed efficiency does seem to play out in the real world. Even on fast, hard-driven mountain roads above Barcelona and with a fair stretch of motorway speeds included, we saw 4.4mpkWh, for a real-world range of 190 miles. Not bad at all for such a modest usable battery capacity – and obviously that means you will save money on electricity to keep the battery fed.

It also means less time at the charger when you want a useful top-up on the go. The 100kW maximum rapid charging rate is on a par with much of the competition, but interestingly the Puma Gen-E’s NMC battery has a sizeable 10kWh dormant buffer, largely to enable a flatter, faster charging curve. Ford’s boffins promise us that it will therefore still be charging at well over 80kW well past the 80% mark, for a 10-80% charge in around 23 minutes. You will have to pre-heat the battery to get that, though, which you have to do by putting your planned charging stop into the car’s native sat-nav system at least 30-45 minutes ahead of time.

VERDICT

Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front static 001

Verdict

Ford Puma Gen E 2025 Review front corner 028

Model tested:

Rating: 

Ford Puma Gen-E

Huge boot, compact dimensions, brilliant real-world efficiency and fun dynamics make the Puma Gen-E a great choice, even if other EVs offer longer ranges at similar prices.

Good

Fun to drive

Great real-world efficiency

Huge boot in a compact body

Bad

Other EVs have longer ranges

Some cheap interior finishes

One-pedal mode is grabby

The Puma Gen-E has a better balance of fun and comfort than most compact EVs of its kind, is one of the most spacious offerings in the class – especially when it comes to boot space – and offers the efficiency, costs and ownership perks to make it a properly compelling overall package.

Those monthly finance deals will probably need to improve if it’s to gather the kind of sales that its petrol equivalent has enjoyed, and some customers may need convincing about the Puma Gen-E’s modest battery capacity and range.

Even so, on this evidence, Ford may well be onto a winner with its new junior EV.

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