USA TODAY US Edition

IN AUTOS Tremor is Ford’s new rocks star

New F-Series Super Duty is a heavyweigh­t.

- Mark Phelan Detroit Free Press USA TODAY NETWORK

PHOENIX – Ford should have an extra-large hit on its hands in the 2020 FSeries Super Duty Tremor, a massive pickup kitted out for off-road adventures but graced with easy steering and a comfortabl­e ride for easy everyday use.

The Tremor also gets a number of upgrades Ford added across the line of Fseries Super Duty pickups.

Built in Louisville, Kentucky, the Super Duties are the true workhorses of the F-series line. They offer bigger engines, a drasticall­y re-engineered frame and towing capacities that beggar the imaginatio­n: up to 37,000 pounds for the F-450, 32,500 with an F-350 and 24,200 for the F-250. An F-350 can also carry up to 7,850 pounds of payload in its cab and bed.

For work and play

With capability like that, it’s no surprise the pickups like the Super Duty – and Chevrolet, GMC and Ram HDs – are vehicles of choice for people who tow heavy and expensive loads like horses, house trailers, farm and constructi­on supplies. Super Duty pickup MSRPs start at $33,705 and top out at $90,530. A little quality time with the option list can probably push the pickup into six figures.

The pickups are on sale now. The Super Duty’s towing and payload capacities lead the segment, making Ford the current leader in one of the Truck War’s fierce arms races.

Increasing­ly, though, business people use vehicles like the F-250 and F-350 for play as well as work.

That’s where the Tremor comes in.

Driving impression­s

The Tremor option package raises the truck and adds a number of features for serious off-roading.

It’s available on XLT, Lariat, King Ranch and Platinum models of the F-250 and F-350.

All Tremors have:

❚ Four-wheel drive

❚ A low range of gears

❚ Electronic­ally controlled rock crawling mode

❚ Trail control, an electronic system introduced on the F-150 Raptor

❚ Hill descent control

❚ The ability to ford 33 inches of water

❚ 35-inch tires on 18-inch wheels

❚ 10.4 inches of ground clearance A harrowing drive through a rock quarry in the Arizona desert proved the Tremor’s off-road credential­s. Looking up what was at least a 30-degree slope of thick red clay, I asked my co-pilot, a

Ford off-road and suspension engineer, “Do I engage four-wheel drive low?”

“Nah. That’d be too easy,” he grinned. “Just keep the wheels turning.”

And up we went. The quarry also included an axle-breaker of a rock crawl, dirt moguls, gluey mud, can’t-see-thebottom hill descents and a couple of trenches that alternatel­y left a rear of front wheel hanging in midair.

Piece of cake. The Super Duties are far too long for twisting recreation­al trails like the famous Rubicon, but it’s unlikely there are many work sites they won’t master.

Amazingly, given its off-road capability, the Tremor was smooth and reasonably quiet at highway speeds on road and in suburban driving. The shocks that absorbed off-road abuse and towing heavy loads delivered a surprising­ly comfortabl­e ride when the truck was unladen.

Towing made easy

The Super Duty cabs are identical to F-series cabs. The four-door crew cab I drove on my day in the desert had limolike passenger space and all the mod cons: wireless charging, navigation, heated and ventilated seats, Apple CarPlay and so on.

The Tremor I drove stickered at $77,430, excluding the $1,595 destinatio­n charge. The big-ticket items were the $3,975 Tremor package, $10,495 for the powerful and quiet 6.7L diesel and $2,730 for high-capacity towing.

New features

The Super Duty adds a number of features, including Pro Trailer Backup Assist, which makes backing up with a long trailer easy. The system uses a dial on the dash to steer the truck.

Unlike the steering wheel, which you must turn in the opposite direction from normal reversing when you’re hauling a trailer, the trailer turns in the same direction as the dial. That makes backing up more intuitive for novices who dread looking like an idiot while backing a boat to the ramp. The system works with gooseneck and fifth-wheel trailers, as you’d expect with the Super Duties’ extravagan­t towing capacities.

The combinatio­n of the dial and a camera on the back of the trailer made it easy to back a 32-foot trailer around a corner and into a standard bay.

Pulling 9,400 pounds up a 3,000-foot grade was equally easy, thanks largely to the diesel V8 engine’s 475 hp and class-leading 1,050 pound-feet of torque. The Tremor is also available with Ford’s massive new 7.3L gasoline V8 that generates 430 hp and 475 pound-feet of torque.

Other new features include:

❚ Integrated Warn winch

❚ 4G LE modem and Wi-Fi

❚ Lane-keeping alert

❚ Blind-spot alert with trailer coverage

❚ Automatic front braking

❚ Pedestrian detection

❚ USB-C ports

❚ LED quad headlights

 ??  ?? USA TODAY NETWORK
USA TODAY NETWORK
 ?? PHOTOS BY MARK PHELAN/USA TODAY NETWORK ?? The 2020 F-250 Tremor has extra equipment for off-roading.
PHOTOS BY MARK PHELAN/USA TODAY NETWORK The 2020 F-250 Tremor has extra equipment for off-roading.
 ??  ?? Backup trailer assist uses a dial on the dash to direct the truck.
Backup trailer assist uses a dial on the dash to direct the truck.
 ??  ?? Backup trailer assist uses a dial on the dash to direct the truck.
Backup trailer assist uses a dial on the dash to direct the truck.

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