Resetting The Bar
Truck Trend|September - October 2018

Ford rewrote the pickup playbook three years ago by transforming its F-150 bodies from steel to aluminum—a bit more costly and more challenging to build and repair, but the resulting weight savings increased payload and tow ratings.

Gary Witzenburg
Resetting The Bar

Ford rewrote the pickup playbook three years ago by transforming its F-150 bodies from steel to aluminum—a bit more costly and more challenging to build and repair, but the resulting weight savings increased payload and tow ratings. Continued strong F-150 sales show that it was a risk worth taking, even though no competitor has yet followed suit.

These lighter, more load-capable trucks were freshened and updated with new features and improvements for ’18, and now Ford adds a new twist with its first-ever light-truck diesel engine, a 250hp, 440–lb-ft 3.0L V-6 that is EPA rated at a class-bashing 22 city/30 highway/25 combined mpg in a Lariat SuperCab 4x2, numbers dropping to 20/25/22 with four-wheel drive.

While this new Power Stroke V-6 is a derivative of one built at Ford’s Dagenham engine plant in the United Kingdom, it shares “commercial-grade” technology with the F-Series Super Duty 6.7L Power Stroke diesel. Its engine block is compacted graphite iron, which is lighter and stronger than conventional gray iron. The crankshaft is forged steel, its 29,000-psi high-pressure fuel injection delivers optimum output and efficiency with reduced noise, and variable geometry turbocharger provides better power and response. It also boasts dual fuel filters, a two-stage oil pump, and a cast-aluminum oil pan. The engine’s 250 peak ponies arrive at 3,250 rpm, while its muscular 440 lb-ft of torque begins at a low 1,750 rpm.

By comparison, the ’18 Ram 3.0L EcoDiesel V-6, coupled to an eight-speed automatic, delivers 10 fewer horses and 20 fewer lb-ft, with 21 mpg city and 29 highway with two wheel drive and 19/27 with four-wheel drive. And since the truck business is all about one upping the competition, we’re guessing that GM might find a way to top Ford’s ratings by at least a bit when its ’19 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 diesel is revealed.

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