Street Trucks

F-150 LIGHTNING PROVES ITS TOWING POWER

Truck Tackles Icy Ike Gauntlet in Winter, Sizzling Davis Dam in Summer

- BY MIKE SELF

WHETHER hauling snowmobile­s to the cabin in the dead of winter or the pontoon to the lake in the dogdays of summer, the 2022 F-150 Lightning is tested to have customers covered. To help prove it, Ford engineers took the first all-electric F-series to two of America’s toughest real-world towing routes during developmen­t: the—tfltruck’s Ike Gauntlet in the winter and the Davis Dam in the summer.

Ford engineers took preproduct­ion F-150 Lightnings to what some call the world’s toughest towing test— Tfltruck’s Ike Gauntlet towing test—with windchills registerin­g below 0 degrees Fahrenheit. The Ike Gauntlet is an 8-mile stretch of I-70 in Colorado that ascends at a 7% incline to a maximum elevation of 11,158 feet above sea level around the Eisenhower Memorial Tunnel. The Lightning towed 10,000 pounds up the grade on the coldest day in nearby Boulder in 123 years!

Towing in wintery conditions, however, is only one part of the equation. To prove the truck’s muster towing in extreme heat, Ford took the F-150 Lightning to the extreme grades of Davis Dam. It’s located on State Route 68 between Las Vegas and the Hoover Dam, and it ascends from 550 feet elevation to 3,500 feet in 11.4-grueling miles. With ground temperatur­es reaching a high of 118 degrees Fahrenheit during testing, F-150 Lightning preproduct­ion units towed the same 10,000-pound trailers for multiple loops across the dam.

Between the two locations, their steep continuous inclines, expressway speeds, and trailers in tow—in this case the truck’s targeted maximum 10,000-pound trailers—make them extremely grueling for EV and gas trucks alike. The two testing trips are examples of the hundreds of hours of rigorous towing testing the

F-150 Lightning has endured during developmen­t.

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