The 2020 Ford Ranger Supercrew 4X4 Lariat. |
We reviewed the 2019 Ranger XLT Supercab a year ago, That was a fairly basic model---one trim level above base, two wheel-drive, with two doors. This time around, we're in a very different Ranger---The Supercrew 4X4 Lariat---which means four doors, four wheel drive and the top of the line.
Under the hood, this Ranger is packing the same powertrain as the one we drove last year---the 2.3-liter Ecoboost four-cylinder with 270 horsepower and 310 pounds-per-foot of torque and a ten-speed automatic transmission. It's plenty powerful and the EPA fuel economy estimate is 20 miles per gallon city/24 highway---believable numbers by our experience.
While it's fast, it's also one of the roughest rides in our memory. We didn't have the chance to take the Ranger off-roading, but on what are usually smooth city streets and freeways, there's a bouncing, bucking motion that won't settle down at seemingly any speed. Given that there doesn't seem to be any dedicated off-road suspension bits and that the two-wheel drive Ranger was a smooth ride, this may have been something specific to our tester. Keep it in mind if you go for a test drive.
The 2020 Ford Ranger Supercrew 4X4 Lariat's base price is $38.675, and for that money, you get a very well-equipped truck, including an 18-gallon fuel tank, LED fog lamps, leather-trimmed heated eight-way power front bucket seats, a 4G wi-fi hotspot, remote keyless entry, auto stop and start, blind spot information with rear cross-traffic alert, lane-keeping and pre-collision assist, reverse sensing and rear view camera, tire pressure monitoring and an anti-theft alarm.
Our tester came with $7,435 worth of extra-cost options, including an upgraded Bang & Olufsen 10-speaker audio system, navigation, and remote start, adaptive cruise control, a hard folding tonneau cover, a keyless keypad on the doors, a trailer towing package, an off-road package and the black appearance package. In fact, the Rapid Red Metallic tinted clearcoat paint was also an extra-cost option.
Add it all up, fold in $1,195 destination and delivery charge and the bottom line on the window sticker reads $47,305, which is right in line with a similarly loaded Tacoma.
My only misgiving about the Ranger is the ride. If that was a peculiarity of our specific tester, you'll see raves about this stylish, well-equipped and very quick truck the next time we review one.