Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ford’s Heavy-Duty Trucks Get Huge Upgrade for New Generation

- By Derek Price cargazing.com

In more than 15 years of writing about the auto industry, this is the most dramatic turnaround I’ve ever seen.

It’s the new 2017 Ford Super Duty, and it’s such a monumental leap over the outgoing generation 2016 truck that they hardly seem like they could have come from the same firm.

Granted, I’ve never seen any company let an important vehicle get as crusty as Ford did with the old Super Duty, either. It’s been 18 years since an all-new, heavy-duty Ford truck came out. Most truck makers move faster than that. Heck, continenta­l plates move faster than that.

But for the constructi­on workers, plumbers, contractor­s, oilfield workers and countless small businesses that rely on Ford trucks to do their jobs, the wait was worth it. This new generation truck is phenomenal.

For starters, it wins the all-important numbers war with a diesel engine that makes 440 horsepower and 925 poundfeet of torque, enough for 21,000 pounds of convention­al towing or 32,500 pounds with a gooseneck trailer.

Yes, that means you’d need a commercial driver’s license to tow at its full capacity. Personally, I had no trouble towing up and down steep mountain grades northwest of Denver, including pulling a trailer with an F-150 pickup inside it. The Super Duty made it effortless. But with a 30,000-pound load, more similar in weight to what an 18wheeler might pull, I had to ride along as a passenger while a CDL-carrying driver showed off what it could do.

So yes, it can do its job unbelievab­ly well.

Much of the performanc­e increase boils down to the materials used. Like the new F-150, it uses far more aluminum to reduce weight. But unlike the light-duty truck, Ford used much of that weight savings from the body to add additional weight to the frame, making it bigger, stronger and beefier than before — thus dramatical­ly better for pulling heavy trailers or payloads.

What makes it remarkable, though, is how easy the Super Duty makes all that work seem. It’s the first heavy-duty truck available with adaptive cruise control, for example, with the ability to automatica­lly speed up and slow down with traffic, even when pulling a loaded trailer up and down hills.

In fact, this truck is packed with impressive technology, most of which is centered around making towing easier, safer and more intuitive.

For example, Ford’s optional Trailer Reverse Guidance system uses a graphical icon to show you which way to turn the steering wheel if you want to back straight up — something surprising­ly tricky that can make an inexperien­ced truck driver quickly look like a doofus.

The new Super Duty is available with up to seven cameras, including ones that help you line up a trailer hitch or see remotely behind a trailer when backing up. A bird’seye-view mode lets you see 360 degrees around the truck, another feature more helpful on giant trucks than on the luxury cars where they’re more common.

How much does all this cost? Well, the base model starts around $33,000, just $150 more than the previous generation truck. The more luxurious F-250 Platinum costs around $62,000, while an F-450 Platinum with every option box checked will set you back a mind-blowing $87,000, according to Ford’s online configurat­or.

 ??  ?? A Super Makeover Like the Ford F-150, the new Super Duty makes extensive use of aluminum panels to save weight in the body. It used that weight savings, though, to dramatical­ly beef up its frame for more capability and better performanc­e than before.
A Super Makeover Like the Ford F-150, the new Super Duty makes extensive use of aluminum panels to save weight in the body. It used that weight savings, though, to dramatical­ly beef up its frame for more capability and better performanc­e than before.
 ??  ?? The Super Duty’s cabin mirrors the refinement of Ford’s latest-generation F-150 now. It offers an impressive array of high-tech features, many of which are centered around towing trailers — the job this truck was born to do.
The Super Duty’s cabin mirrors the refinement of Ford’s latest-generation F-150 now. It offers an impressive array of high-tech features, many of which are centered around towing trailers — the job this truck was born to do.
 ??  ?? Detail Trailer Reverse CLOSER LOOK
Detail Trailer Reverse CLOSER LOOK
 ??  ?? Detail Cupholder
Detail Cupholder

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