New Ford Ranger Raptor: dino-might

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Built for almost twelve years, the P375 series Ranger will finally be fossilised after (US) production ends later this quarter. The successor is already cleaving competitors in Asia-Pac, Africa, South America and Europe, making this menacing mid-sizer a key new global model.

Hamlet harrumphing

Living in a small village, the sight and sound of a tall, wide, burbling pick-up painted ‘Code Orange’ had my WhatsApp buzzing: “Glenn, is that giant truck yours?”.

Yes, my neighbours know what I do for a living and are used to all manner of novel automotive arrivals. Aside from a VW Grand Cali, Audi e-tron GT or the more recent X7, the Ranger Raptor is about the widest monster to have squeezed its way down my lane. And surprise, surprise, everybody loved it.

OK, maybe most of the appreciation came from kids. And that’s the thing about a truck that knows it’s been Tango’d: one glance and your inner infant is activated.

Relishing the roll-top

My four-year old godson thought the Raptor was about the coolest thing he’d ever seen. With the button in the tray’s sidewall which activates an electric tonneau being just one of multiple fun things to press. Who says the next generation will only want touch-screens?

If the size of James’ grin during the hours he spent playing with and riding in the new Ranger is a factor for success, this is going to be a Very Big Thing. As well it should be, given how large an investment Ford Motor Company made in this, project P703.

TMC i.n.a.

The old model and now already the new one was and is, the best selling vehicle with a blue oval on its rump in some countries. One of which is my homeland, where utes rule and Toyota is not amused to have seen the HiLux dethroned. How important a market for medium-sized pick-ups is that country? Well, the importer of the 'lux truck ignores the lower case l mandated for all other markets by HQ in Japan.

Medium-sized pick-ups are not only big business in Australia and certain other regional markets; they are developed there. So it was with the Ranger. Perhaps because the preference of locals (and soon, Americans) wanting a Raptor wouldn't be the old-shape model's four-cylinder bi-turbo diesel. That's been ditched, supplanted by a petrol V6 with the same number of forced aspirators.

Dragoooning into drinking

The thirst of the thing is the sole bad news about this new-to-Britain pick-up. In every other way, it is gloriously mental, from the height (you need to remove the bee-sting aerial for some multi-storey carparks), to the girth, to the four giant letters spelling out the brand name across an equally vast grille. Yet it really does make people grin.