I hope you like it.
My wife and I have talked quite a bit about picking up a new Ranger.
Our two biggest concerns, however, are the size (it's a lot bigger than its older brothers*) and that 10-speed transmission.
*(The Raptor version is just shy of being as big as a 2003 F-150 Supercrew. It's so big that the Aussies classify it as a full-size truck.)
We've had several cars with the new 347-speed automatic transmissions. (Okay, 7, 8, and 9 speeds.) And, well, we find them annoying. The transmission is never actually in gear. It's always between them, because it's
always shifting; and the economy programming in the computers that run them make the whole system hesitant to down-shift ... which, especially around town, means the vehicle hesitates to downshift for so long that it then has to go for a two, three, or even four gear downshift. Our Toyota with a 7-speed auto is so bad that it will actually come to a stop when going up a steep enough hill (at less than ~25 mph), because it rebels against the initial downshift so vehemently that it's too late by the time it actually surrenders. (A common complaint from other owners - it isn't just ours.)
To make matters worse in the Ranger's case, my wife had a Fiesta with the "automatic" transmission that was actually a twin clutch setup with two 3-speed gearboxes side-by-side in the same case, shifted by a computer. (Gears 2, 4, 6 on one side; 1, 3, 5, on the other; reverse ... somewhere.) Yes, that transmission. The one so terrible to drive, after break-in, and so unreliable after a few hundred miles, that there have been at least
three class-action suits against Ford.
We KNOW that the 10-speed in the Ranger is a different beast. But the Fiesta really burned us.
If Ford will rush that pile of garbage to product for the Fiesta, what corners are they willing to cut during re-engineering for the first NA release of the Ranger?...
bdosborn wrote:Th turbo will make a huge difference going over the passes. I just cant get my head wrapped around a 4 banger for a pickup, but the specs look solid so please post your impressions after you get it.

I have a 2015 V6 Tacoma and while it tows fine, you really have to put the spurs to it to get it to pull since peak torque is so high in the RPM range. I kept my Dodge Cummins when I bought the Tacoma just for towing over the passes...
Bruce
I've owned a 3.5L Ecoboost, and driven several vehicles with it and other Ecoboost engines.
I've also talked to many owners of various other Ecoboost engines - from trucks and commercial vehicles, to passenger cars.
You'll get no complaints from me.
That 3.5L Ecoboost Explorer Sport was the best tow vehicle and highway cruiser I've ever owned. Not once, in the two years that I had it, did it ever downshift to pull a hill (and by 'pull a hill', I mean "climb a mountain"); and it made several trips with 4,000+ lb trailers hitched up. 6-8% grade, 60-65 mph, 4,000+ lbs on the back, and it didn't need to downshift. It just spooled the turbos. ...And then went back to 35 mpg on flat ground.
It's only failings led directly to it being sold, but they weren't engine related.
(Electrical problems were an issue. But, most importantly, there was a TON of wasted space in that interior. It wasn't designed well. And when my wife decided to use a buy-one-get-one-free coupon to pop out twins, we found ourselves in a situation where we could not fit all of the kids in one vehicle unless we amputated the legs of the kid(s) in the 3rd row seat(s), or strapped some to the roof.)