Chicago Sun-Times

Ford F-150 RAPTOR

One Menacing Machine

- —Frank A. Aukofer, Motor Matters

You could describe the 2018 Ford F-150 Raptor as the sports car of full-size pickup trucks if your idea of sports is leaping and slamming around a trackless desert. This is a unique vehicle, purpose-built for off-road challenges like the Baja 1000, an 855-mile off-road race in Mexico’s Baja California peninsula.

But unless you’re the sort who can spend most of your waking hours burning fuel and popping tires while traversing the outback, the Raptor is still a pickup truck to haul stuff and be driven on boulevards and freeways.

No question, the Raptor is one menacing machine. Pull up behind a nervous driver and they’ll get bug-eyed looking at the massive black grille in the rearview mirror. This truck is more than 7 feet wide and the hood is taller than most sedans.

Two versions are available: the SuperCab, which is 18 feet 4 inches long, and the SuperCrew, a foot longer. Both have four doors and room for five, but the tested SuperCab has rear doors hinged at the back so it looks something like a coupe. The SuperCrew has four convention­al doors.

As expected, the SuperCab’s rear-seat accommodat­ions are less friendly, with plenty of head room but limited knee room in the outboard seating positions and nearly impossible kneecap space in the middle because of intrusion by the center console.

Up front, the seats are coved, supportive, and comfortabl­e with decent bolstering. Even with the generous headroom, the question is how one keeps the torso hobbled in serious off-roading. The standard three-point seatbelts don’t look as if they could cut it; figure on using racing harnesses.

Because of its size and weight -- 5,696 pounds -- the Raptor is not an off-roader in the sense of a Jeep Wrangler or Land Rover Defender. It is too big. Its forte is traveling at high speeds over potholed desert.

It is powered by one of Ford’s EcoBoost engines, which is the manufactur­er’s way of saying it is turbocharg­ed. In this high-output installati­on, it is a 450-horsepower, 3.5-liter V6 turbo that delivers a massive 510 lb.-ft. of torque (twisting force). The Raptor’s engine and dual exhausts emit sounds that have sex appeal to an enthusiast’s ears.

The power gets its way to the massive all-terrain tires via a 10-speed automatic transmissi­on with a manual-shift mode. Four drive setups -- two-wheel high, four-wheel automatic, four-wheel drive, and four-wheel drive low -- are augmented by six selectable modes: Normal, Sport, Weather, Mud/Sand, Baja, and Rock/Crawl. Normal and Sport use two-wheel drive, Weather switches to all-wheel drive, and Mud/Sand, Baja, and Rock/Crawl use four-wheel drive in high and low ranges.

In any setting, a determined punch on the accelerato­r pedal unleashes all that horsepower and torque. Even with a slight bit of turbo lag, the big Raptor can nail 60 mph in about 5 seconds.

The tested SuperCab had a starting price of $50,980 and, with a long list of options, topped out at $63,145.

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