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Ranger vs Tacoma - Ike Gauntlet

FishOnOne
Nomad
Nomad
Enjoy...

Link
'12 Ford Super Duty FX4 ELD CC 6.7 PSD 400HP 800ft/lbs "270k Miles"
'16 Sprinter 319MKS "Wide Body"
40 REPLIES 40

colliehauler
Explorer III
Explorer III
The oil filter looks like poor engineering to me, Why couldn't they put a remote oil filter at a easy to service location? My old 97 S-10 Blazer had a remote oil filter towards the front bumper.

I agree with Bionic Man the truck is not for heavy duty towing. The majority of people that buy them probably will never tow a thing.

Bionic_Man
Explorer
Explorer
rjstractor wrote:
It seems like both trucks easily handled 5000 lb trailers up and down the hill with no drama. But the 1000 lb payload makes the Tacoma pretty useless as a tow vehicle or a pickup. My VW Golf wagon has more payload. (although I would never tow with it) And Ford, you really need not pipe fake engine noise through the speakers in any of your vehicles. Just stop it. It's dumb. Really dumb.


Useless as a tow vehicle or pickup?

FLT had two large men, and a 5000 pound trailer, and stated they were within the payload specifications.

Not sure why these threads always go this way. These trucks aren't aimed at the HD market. They are after the urban buyer, who likely doesn't even own a trailer. If they do, it is a small boat or motorcycle/atv. Or they use it to run to Home Depot a couple times a year.

These trucks are perfect for those uses.

The Ford styling isn't my cup of tea, but that is subjective. I don't like the Taco either. The Ford interior looked decent, and the powertrain performed well. I am sure that with it and the new Jeep truck coming to market, they will expand the mid size market.

Not sure if the Ranger will be able to knock off the Taco as the marketshare leader, but it will likely outsell both Jeep and GM, making Ford a nice profit.
2012 RAM 3500 Laramie Longhorn DRW CC 4x4 Max Tow, Cummins HO, 60 gallon RDS aux fuel tank, Reese 18k Elite hitch
2003 Dodge Ram 3500 QC SB 4x4 Cummins HO NV5600 with Smarty JR, Jacobs EB (sold)
2002 Gulf Stream Sea Hawk 29FRB with Honda EV6010

TurnThePage
Explorer
Explorer
Home Skillet wrote:
Yawn.
Takes like 5 min to pull the wheel off!
Maybe in a shop with all the right tools. The Ranger is nice, but that is a terrible feature. Maybe Ford is in bed with Jiffy Lube.
2015 Ram 1500
2022 Grand Design Imagine XLS 22RBE

Home_Skillet
Explorer II
Explorer II
Yawn.
Takes like 5 min to pull the wheel off!
2005 Gulf Stream Conquest 31ft
BigFoot Levelers,TST in tire TPMS,Bilstein Shocks,Trans temp guage,Lowrace iWAY

rjstractor
Nomad
Nomad
It seems like both trucks easily handled 5000 lb trailers up and down the hill with no drama. But the 1000 lb payload makes the Tacoma pretty useless as a tow vehicle or a pickup. My VW Golf wagon has more payload. (although I would never tow with it) And Ford, you really need not pipe fake engine noise through the speakers in any of your vehicles. Just stop it. It's dumb. Really dumb.
2017 VW Golf Alltrack
2000 Ford F250 7.3

RicJones
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks for the information. I am a loyal Ford man and have a 2000 Ranger that I'm looking to replace. I really liked what I saw in the Ranger at the auto shows.
I plan on getting a new truck when the Ranger is available, it may be the Ranger or the Taco, it depends on how much I like how the Ranger drives. I don't like the 5' bed and now the problem with changing the oil. The Taco is starting to look a little better.

blofgren
Explorer
Explorer
That oil change business is very odd for Ford; my 2003 6.0L was very easy to service as is my 2012 F150 work truck.
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FishOnOne
Nomad
Nomad
Travlingman wrote:
ksss wrote:
FishOnOne wrote:
ksss wrote:
I am not sure what the turbo in the Ranger really bought. The time up the hill was about even. I agreed with the Russian, I would have expected more from the 10 speed and more from the turbocharged engine at that elevation. Maybe there is some programing enhancements that need to be made, but with that kind output it is not going to hold up well at all to the GM twins. While I don't find the Taco masculine I just find it ugly, but the looks of the Ranger is "weak". Call it refined if it makes you feel better, but its weak. Especially when the 150 and SD trucks look so good, someone punted on the exterior design of Ranger. I was looking for this truck to honestly set the bar higher in the segment. It clearly doesn't do that. These guys give the win to the Ranger by the narrowest of margins, but the Taco is what about 7-8 model years old? I would say Ford aimed a little low with the Ranger. Ford guys will buy it, but anyone cross-shopping the others in the segment are not likely to be blown away by the new Ranger in comparison.


In my opinion Ford knocked it out of the park and is the best looking mid size bar none.

As for the 4 cylinder turbo. It's gas powered torque is second to none and it's gas fuel economy is better than the Taco.

Having said this the Taco is a great performing truck and it has a relatively new engine so Ford did a good job edging out on performance and fuel economy.

I will say anyone who's shopping for a midsize; excluding brand loyal buyers, will give the Ranger a serious look.


It won the mpg by a tenth and that is assuming the DIC is correct, and a couple seconds on the tow up the hill, which could have been due to traffic. I wouldn't brag about that. It may have power on paper, but it clearly cant put it to the ground, assuming it really makes what it claims. There is no reason a turbo charged engine shouldn't own a race up to 11K feet against a lesser powered NA engine that makes its max hp at 6 grand, and it doesn't appear it ever got to 6 grand. Looks are subjective so we will see what the masses say when they vote with their checkbooks. Clearly though the performance is not there.


It couldn't have went up any faster as the test limits them to the 60 MPH speed limit which it held up the mountain.


LOL... Performance is there as it made basically a perfect pull at 8:02.
'12 Ford Super Duty FX4 ELD CC 6.7 PSD 400HP 800ft/lbs "270k Miles"
'16 Sprinter 319MKS "Wide Body"

FishOnOne
Nomad
Nomad
twodownzero wrote:
I'd much rather remove the inner fender than deal with what I had to do to change the filter on my 3.0L Vulcan in my Ranger. You'd either burn your hands from the top or spill oil all over everything from the bottom. Either way it was a mess. And the oil filter was sideways so you had to dry start the engine every time.


It sounds like the filter on the new Ranger will be sideways so you won't be able to pre fill it either.
'12 Ford Super Duty FX4 ELD CC 6.7 PSD 400HP 800ft/lbs "270k Miles"
'16 Sprinter 319MKS "Wide Body"

twodownzero
Explorer
Explorer
I'd much rather remove the inner fender than deal with what I had to do to change the filter on my 3.0L Vulcan in my Ranger. You'd either burn your hands from the top or spill oil all over everything from the bottom. Either way it was a mess. And the oil filter was sideways so you had to dry start the engine every time.

Travlingman
Explorer II
Explorer II
ksss wrote:
FishOnOne wrote:
ksss wrote:
I am not sure what the turbo in the Ranger really bought. The time up the hill was about even. I agreed with the Russian, I would have expected more from the 10 speed and more from the turbocharged engine at that elevation. Maybe there is some programing enhancements that need to be made, but with that kind output it is not going to hold up well at all to the GM twins. While I don't find the Taco masculine I just find it ugly, but the looks of the Ranger is "weak". Call it refined if it makes you feel better, but its weak. Especially when the 150 and SD trucks look so good, someone punted on the exterior design of Ranger. I was looking for this truck to honestly set the bar higher in the segment. It clearly doesn't do that. These guys give the win to the Ranger by the narrowest of margins, but the Taco is what about 7-8 model years old? I would say Ford aimed a little low with the Ranger. Ford guys will buy it, but anyone cross-shopping the others in the segment are not likely to be blown away by the new Ranger in comparison.


In my opinion Ford knocked it out of the park and is the best looking mid size bar none.

As for the 4 cylinder turbo. It's gas powered torque is second to none and it's gas fuel economy is better than the Taco.

Having said this the Taco is a great performing truck and it has a relatively new engine so Ford did a good job edging out on performance and fuel economy.

I will say anyone who's shopping for a midsize; excluding brand loyal buyers, will give the Ranger a serious look.


It won the mpg by a tenth and that is assuming the DIC is correct, and a couple seconds on the tow up the hill, which could have been due to traffic. I wouldn't brag about that. It may have power on paper, but it clearly cant put it to the ground, assuming it really makes what it claims. There is no reason a turbo charged engine shouldn't own a race up to 11K feet against a lesser powered NA engine that makes its max hp at 6 grand, and it doesn't appear it ever got to 6 grand. Looks are subjective so we will see what the masses say when they vote with their checkbooks. Clearly though the performance is not there.


It couldn't have went up any faster as the test limits them to the 60 MPH speed limit which it held up the mountain.
2017 F-350 King Ranch DRW
2014 Landmark Savannah(sold)
2022 DRV Mobile Suite 40KSSB4

ksss
Explorer
Explorer
FishOnOne wrote:
ksss wrote:
I am not sure what the turbo in the Ranger really bought. The time up the hill was about even. I agreed with the Russian, I would have expected more from the 10 speed and more from the turbocharged engine at that elevation. Maybe there is some programing enhancements that need to be made, but with that kind output it is not going to hold up well at all to the GM twins. While I don't find the Taco masculine I just find it ugly, but the looks of the Ranger is "weak". Call it refined if it makes you feel better, but its weak. Especially when the 150 and SD trucks look so good, someone punted on the exterior design of Ranger. I was looking for this truck to honestly set the bar higher in the segment. It clearly doesn't do that. These guys give the win to the Ranger by the narrowest of margins, but the Taco is what about 7-8 model years old? I would say Ford aimed a little low with the Ranger. Ford guys will buy it, but anyone cross-shopping the others in the segment are not likely to be blown away by the new Ranger in comparison.


In my opinion Ford knocked it out of the park and is the best looking mid size bar none.

As for the 4 cylinder turbo. It's gas powered torque is second to none and it's gas fuel economy is better than the Taco.

Having said this the Taco is a great performing truck and it has a relatively new engine so Ford did a good job edging out on performance and fuel economy.

I will say anyone who's shopping for a midsize; excluding brand loyal buyers, will give the Ranger a serious look.


It won the mpg by a tenth and that is assuming the DIC is correct, and a couple seconds on the tow up the hill, which could have been due to traffic. I wouldn't brag about that. It may have power on paper, but it clearly cant put it to the ground, assuming it really makes what it claims. There is no reason a turbo charged engine shouldn't own a race up to 11K feet against a lesser powered NA engine that makes its max hp at 6 grand, and it doesn't appear it ever got to 6 grand. Looks are subjective so we will see what the masses say when they vote with their checkbooks. Clearly though the performance is not there.
2020 Chevy 3500 CC 4X4 DRW D/A
2013 Fuzion 342
2011 RZR Desert Tan
2012 Sea Doo GTX 155
2018 Chevy 3500HD CC LB SRW 4X4 D/A
2015 Chevy Camaro ZL1

p220sigman
Explorer
Explorer
I like the look, but it looks a lot like the Honda Ridgeline to me. I am glad to see Ford get back in the small pickup arena in the US. More choices are always as good thing for autos.

ib516
Explorer II
Explorer II
FishOnOne wrote:
ib516 wrote:
FishOnOne wrote:
ib516 wrote:
I wonder how people will react when they learn the front wheel and inner fender liner needs to be removed just to do an oil change on the Ranger? What a dumb design.

Cool little truck otherwise.


Can you provide a source to your comment?

From the links provided:

"A service procedure obtained by TTAC states that, after removing the left front wheel, a technician or owner must then remove an access panel secured by nine push-pin retainers. From there, one removes the filter with an end cap tool. To actually drain the oil, which of course youโ€™ll accomplish before attacking that filter, youโ€™ll first need to unbolt the power steering control module under body shield. Four bolts hold that on."


The link Chris supplied says to gain access to the drain plug requires removing a protective shield (4 bolts).

Again nothing I would consider a major pain to change the oil every 7,500-10,000 miles. I would say to change this oil would be easier than just about any car new car especially ones with the oil filter access from the bottom side.

I don't think it will prevent Ford loyalists from buying it, but that doesn't mean it's not a stupid design. That said, Ford isn't alone on dumb designs! They all have their share.
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07 Dodge 3500 4x4 SRW Mega 5.9L CTD 3.73
14 Ram 2500 4x4 Crew 6.4L Hemi 4.10
06 Chevy 1500 4x4 E-Cab 3.73 5.3L
07 Dodge 1500 5.7L Hemi 3.55 / 2010 Jayco 17z
All above are sold, no longer own an RV

FishOnOne
Nomad
Nomad
ib516 wrote:
FishOnOne wrote:
ib516 wrote:
I wonder how people will react when they learn the front wheel and inner fender liner needs to be removed just to do an oil change on the Ranger? What a dumb design.

Cool little truck otherwise.


Can you provide a source to your comment?

From the links provided:

"A service procedure obtained by TTAC states that, after removing the left front wheel, a technician or owner must then remove an access panel secured by nine push-pin retainers. From there, one removes the filter with an end cap tool. To actually drain the oil, which of course youโ€™ll accomplish before attacking that filter, youโ€™ll first need to unbolt the power steering control module under body shield. Four bolts hold that on."


The link Chris supplied says to gain access to the drain plug requires removing a protective shield (4 bolts).

Again nothing I would consider a major pain to change the oil every 7,500-10,000 miles. I would say to change this oil would be easier than just about any car new car especially ones with the oil filter access from the bottom side.
'12 Ford Super Duty FX4 ELD CC 6.7 PSD 400HP 800ft/lbs "270k Miles"
'16 Sprinter 319MKS "Wide Body"