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The 2024 Ford Ranger Raptor Is Exactly What You Want It To Be

Photo: Ford
Photo: Ford

Two, maybe three times in the lead up to driving the new Ford Ranger Raptor, I heard it compared to a rally car. This something that car companies have been increasingly eager to say about their cars in the last few years, and it’s also something that trips the old switch in my brain marked “skepticism.” As I approached the end of my day driving the Ranger Raptor, my I was feeling pretty good about my skepticism and kind of weirdly bummed, or at least undecided about the truck which, as I was about to discover, rips. Or at least can rip, and is not at all a bummer.

Full disclosure: Ford wanted me to drive the Raptor Ranger, so I got to go to Utah. Utah is so beautiful.

When we first saw the F-150 Raptor in 2010, the high speed off-roader was a miracle of automaker exuberance, a truck that for a million reasons should and could not exist. You, or someone like you could walk into a Ford store and walk out with a machine capable of traveling at highway speeds in the open desert. Obviously, it sold like crazy and hasn’t been off the F-150 menu since.

Photo: Ford
Photo: Ford

With the American reintroduction of the Ranger nameplate in 2019, there were a lot of people kind of eyeballing the F-150 Raptor, then looking back to the Ranger and saying “EHHHH?, EHHHHH?” like a Ranger Raptor was the most obvious thing in the world. As it turned out, it was obvious in the world, but not in North America. We didn’t get one. But, we got one now.

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The Ranger Raptor shares Ford’s T6 platform with the Bronco Raptor and its twin-turbo V6, making 405 horsepower and 430 pound-feet of torque here. The frame has been reinforced, lightened upper and lower control arms mounted, and Fox’s live-valve suspension installed. But, really, all the stuff is there: Two lockers, decent angles (approach 33 degrees, breakover 24.2 degrees, departure 26.4 degrees), manageable dimensions, 10.7 inches of ground clearance, two-speed transfer case, BFG KO3 tires. It looks cool too, though I’d have to pull the stickers off mine.

Photo: Ford
Photo: Ford

We started our day at the Raptor Assault School, a driving school that will be available for free to Ranger Raptor owners. I have to pause here and say, that’s not the name I would have picked for it. I am being one-hundred percent serious when I say that when I saw “Assault School” on the itinerary, I wondered if there’d be shooting involved and if I was going to to be asked to practice clearing a room. The word “assault” describes a felony, it does not make off-roading seem fun or approachable. Ford is generally very good about welcoming all kinds of people into their cars, into off-roading. It take pains to emphasize that off-roaders have a responsibility to the land they adventure on. The name just feels a little out of step with all that. Not a huge deal, but I feel compelled to meddle. Someone suggested you could call it the Ranger Raptor Flight school, as you get to do a fun little jump. Bingo bango.

Photo: Ford
Photo: Ford

Anyway, you wouldn’t know it from the name, but Raptor Assault School is a fun place. After a short on-road drive were I learned that the Raptor Ranger can drive on the road and has better steering than the standard Ranger, we got set up to do a little rock crawl into the mountains. We activated and deactivated the rear locker, tried the hill descent system, used the camera to place the tires, and generally kind of became aware that the Raptor Ranger was not exactly being challenged by any part of the course. In fact, we probably could have fully removed any two of the trucks wheels and still made it around. The program we were on hosted a lot of different people and they all had different levels of off-roading experience. I wasn’t expecting the Rubicon Trail, and the point, that the Ranger Raptor can handle crawling, was made.

We also learned about the many modes that are available to the driver of a Ranger Raptor. It’s not that the modes aren’t useful, or effective, they do what they say they do. It’s just that there are so many of them. In order, the modes are: Normal, Tow/Haul, Sport, Slippery, Off-Road, Rock Crawl, and Baja. I kept thinking of my CJ2A, GX470 and F-150, which have zero modes, or I guess one mode.

Photo: Ford
Photo: Ford

After the rock crawl, we did some familiarization exercises to get us used to how the Ranger Raptor performed at higher speeds on loose surfaces. This is why you buy a Raptor instead of say, a Wrangler Rubicon. Raptors don’t just trundle over rocks or through the woods, they go fast.