Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Easy towing with the Ford Wildtrak X double cab

- WILLEM VAN DE PUTTE willem.vdputte@inl.co.za

WE’VE been having a lot of fun in our long-term Ford Ranger Wildtrak X, and our most recent excursion involved hitching up my off-road trailer and heading to the Drakensber­g.

We’ve completed almost 10 000 kilometres since its delivery, much of it on gravel roads including three weeks that included the Tankwa Karoo, Cederberg and into Die Hel in the Gamtoos Valley.

To recap, the Ranger Wildtrak X has all the upmarket goodies of the “normal” Wildtrak except the V6 power plant which is replaced by Ford’s 2.0litre bi-turbo diesel engine producing 154kW and 500Nm with Ford’s 10-speed automatic transmissi­on.

Add Bilstein Position-Sensitive Dampers, 265/70 R17 General Grabber AT3 all-terrain tyres, 261mm of ground clearance, 2H rear wheel drive, 4A that allows the electronic­s to decide where traction is needed, 4H, 4L and Eco, Normal, Tow/Haul, Slippery, Mud/ Ruts, Sand and Rock Crawl Modes and you have a very capable off-road double cab.

It’s an unbraked trailer with a 750kg GVM which isn’t particular­ly heavy considerin­g the Wildtrak X is rated to tow 3.5 tons.

We were only going to be away for four nights so it wasn’t loaded to the brim as we would normally do for a three-week off-grid into the gramadoela­s trek.

The trailer stands high on 15-inch rims and the standard tow hitch and drop plate is too low, which sees the trailer lean forward significan­tly on the ball. I took it to an engineerin­g company which confirmed that the drop plate was strong enough to handle a good few tons so we measured the ideal height and they drilled two holes for me. Problem solved.

Hitching the trailer, the car picks up that there’s something behind you and uses the trailer assist, giving you options to name the trailer or use the default, takes you through the steps of checking that everything is done correctly and does a light check for you as well, which is handy when you’re on your own. You can also check the lights standing behind the trailer using the FordPass App.

On pull away, it warns you that Cross Traffic Alert is disabled. Not once, not twice, but a whole host of times just in case you didn’t get it the first three times.

For some reason

every time

I

braked, it warned me that my lights weren’t working when braking and I should pull off. That’s okay if you’re on a gravel road with no traffic but it’s a bit disconcert­ing on a busy highway.

When we did get an opportunit­y we checked and everything was working fine. I pulled out the trailer plug and socket and sprayed them with contact cleaner and for a while it seemed okay until it wasn’t.

It would then occasional­ly warn me on the digital instrument screen and ping when I braked. I was in radio contact with my friend behind me who confirmed every time the warning flashed and pinged that everything was fine. Anyway, such are the joys sometimes with modern vehicles and electronic­s.

I had the bakkie in 4A Normal Mode and then remembered its Tow/

Haul option and decided to give that a spin despite the relatively light trailer behind me. It allows the engine to upshift at higher engine speeds and also provides engine braking on descents and downshifts based on the amount you press the brake pedal.

It didn’t make a significan­t difference but you could feel that gearchange­s took place a little higher on the rev-range, and going down the Oliviersho­ek Pass it stayed between third and fourth depending on the gradient.

With a light weight, I don’t think it absolutely necessary as the normal engine braking on the Rangers is more than sufficient but I do think it’s a valuable feature when towing heavy double-axle caravans and trailers with the load bay also fully loaded. As an aside, there are two stop-and-go controls

on the pass where heavy rains have washed away the road. They were there in December 2022 and are still there, with zero repairs having been done in almost 18 months. There are many big concrete pipes stacked next to the road, though, which led one person to spray “we pay taxes. Fix it” in bright orange on one of them.

The Wildtrak X towed like a dream, and I know many people say they don’t feel whatever is behind them when towing which generally gets said after a few drinks around the campfire by guys with big capacity engines and even bigger towing rigs or boats.

I’ve towed a myriad things including big double-axle trailers with ski boats, horses and heavy off-road caravans in a variety of cars including potent V8s, and I don’t care what they say, you know it’s there.

The reality is that towing completely changes the dynamics and the handling of the car and, taking that into considerat­ion, the Wildtrak X passes with flying colours.

It passes slower traffic effortless­ly when you push the throttle. I thought there would be some hunting from the gearbox but there was none of that, even with the Adaptive Cruise Control set at a safe towing speed of 110km/h.

After 867 kilometres, our fuel consumptio­n stood at 12.2l/100km which is only an increase of about one litre over the average consumptio­n we’re getting with everyday driving.

Our long-termer hasn’t got the Pro Trailer Backup Assist with trailer reverse Guidance that’s now standard on the Tremor, Wildtrak X, Platinum and Raptor but it’s something that I’m looking forward to trying out in future.

 ?? ?? THE Ranger Wildtrak X has all the upmarket goodies of the “normal” Wildtrak except the V6 power plant.
THE Ranger Wildtrak X has all the upmarket goodies of the “normal” Wildtrak except the V6 power plant.

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