Road Test Review: 2010 Ford F-150 SVT Raptor

Road Test Review: 2010 Ford F-150 SVT Raptor

Staring at a Molten Orange Ford F-150 SVT Raptor, it doesn’t take long for the truck to sear itself onto your retinas, creating an afterimage once you close your eyes. Afterimages disappear after a few seconds, but that’s not the case with the visceral impression of the Raptor, which has been permanently fused with our pickup-truck-driving neurons.

After all of the technical, first-drive and comparison coverage we've given the Raptor, you’d think we'd be bored with it. But every time we get in the factory prerunner, it's a new experience that leaves us wanting more.

As we enthusiastically prepare for the powerful, new 411-horsepower, 6.2-liter V-8 Raptor to arrive any day now, we thought we'd spend one last week hitting the trails in the 310-hp, 5.4-liter V-8 version.

We were fortunate to receive the Raptor at PUTC's headquarters in Southern California. The truck was developed only 150 miles away — in the unforgiving terrain of the Anza-Borrego desert wilderness — and much of the undeveloped land in SoCal is just about perfectly matched to the Raptor's strengths. But before we could make a run across California's badlands, we first had to escape from Los Angeles.

Driving a clean Raptor on city streets feels about as natural as brake torquing a hybrid before leaving a stoplight; it borders on embarrassing. The last thing we wanted to be mistaken for was being a commuter in a Raptor. We'd rather be caught with pec and calf implants. There was a perceptible difference in the reaction of drivers, too. We got more thumbs up when the Raptor was dirty than when it was shiny.

Raptor at Trona Pinnacles State Park

The Raptor was impossible to hide in Los Angeles. Its color, width (6.6-inches more than a standard F-150) and height were immediately noticeable. That helped in traffic because most drivers gave it a respectable cushion of space, but parking it could be almost as challenging as running the Raptor over a technical trail. Both required some recon and planning before executing, but we weren't going to tear the roof off the Raptor in the desert like we might maneuvering it in a garage. If we thought driving a clean Raptor was embarrassing, we imagined it would be infinitely more humiliating to air down the tires to squeeze out from under a support beam.

This might sound trivial, but if there was ever a truck that could beat Southern California's notorious freeway expansion joints, it's the Raptor and its Baja racing-inspired suspension. The joints are regularly spaced breaks between concrete sections of highway surface, giving roads room to flex and breathe.

Extended cab pickups, like the Raptor, are notoriously prone to up-and-down “beaming” that frequently occurs while driving over these joints. You can go for miles where you have to hold onto your coffee to keep it from spilling.

Raptor in the sand

The Raptor’s special Fox Racing-engineered front and rear shocks feature three shock fluid gates inside their barrels that change the dampening rate as the shock responds to every surface condition the truck encounters, from pothole to mudhole. The ride felt a bit stiffer than expected on the freeway, but it virtually muted all beaming in places where we’ve suffered it before in other extended cabs. We consider this a valuable bonus.

During our first drive of the Raptor several months ago, we mentioned how its six-speed automatic transmission constantly hunted or lazily shifted as it tried to optimize fuel economy over performance. That was our experience again with the truck, and it was particularly noticeable climbing steady grades with slight inclines. The Raptor couldn’t seem to decide whether it wanted to be in 5th or 6th gear, even when we held the truck’s speed using cruise control. As before on our first drive, our solution was to keep the truck in tow/haul mode to hold each gear a bit longer before upshifting. Driving became much more satisfying this way, though on downgrades we’d let the gearbox have full control to avoid an unexpected downshift as the truck tried to slow itself with engine braking, thinking a trailer might be attached.

Off the line performance wasn’t bad though for a heavy off-road truck with a 310 hp engine. In an earlier drive, we timed the Raptor with our VBOX taking a reasonable 8.8-seconds to go from 0 to 60 mph.

Raptor interior

One of the marvelous things about the Raptor that doesn’t get talked about enough is its excellent cockpit. The seats are well bolstered and hug your back and hips. Hopping in, you immediately feel supported by the truck and confident driving it. When you close the door, all the controls wrap around you and are easily reachable. The console-mounted shifter, off-road mode and hill-descent control buttons and auxiliary power switches fall on your right side at waist height, so you can adjust the truck’s performance quickly as driving conditions change. And just so you don’t forget it’s Molten Orange on the outside, the seats and instrument panel feature the same colored inserts and highlights.

We’re huge fans of Ford’s Sync system, which easily detected our Blackberry and provided traffic conditions at a glance so we could steel ourselves for gridlock or try to plot alternative routes around LA’s crowded freeways and major streets. But as we prepared to set course for one off-road destination, we noticed one major shortcoming with Sync that really stood out in the Raptor. We couldn’t input latitude and longitude coordinates into the navigation system like we could on other trucks, such as the Ram Power Wagon. Geographic coordinates are important in reaching points off-road where the trails aren’t mapped or you need to carve your own path. Ford spokesman Alan Hall says the next version of Sync, called MyFord Touch, will allow us to enter latitude and longitude.

Our Raptor also came equipped with Ford’s optional Sony audio system. Sound quality was quite good, particularly playing satellite radio, but we weren’t so happy with the aluminum mesh speaker grates in the doors. They scraped the back of our hands like a cheese grater when we reached for stuff in the door pockets.

City driving behind us, we turned our attention to wheeling in the Raptor. Much of the year, desert temperatures are a furnace that can quickly turn you into beef jerky if you get into a jam before help arrives. But in the wintertime, it's much more hospitable to off-road exploration.

Raptor in a wash that makes the truck dirty, not clean

We took the Raptor to three off-road spots: the Trona Pinnacles, Red Rock Canyon and Hungry Valley. Each offered its own unique trails to challenge the Raptor. At Trona, we headed for a wide riverbed that runs between the park’s stunning rock formations. The sandy wash was bone dry on the surface but wet underneath with the moisture left over from last week’s big storms.

Aside from running flat out on a dirt road, there’s probably no better way to get familiar with the Raptor’s high-speed off-road capability than a dry wash. You can run flat out for hundreds of yards or more with little risk of hitting anything larger than worn river rock or a hardy bush. If you need to slow down, letting off the accelerator is usually all that’s needed because the Raptor’s 6,000-pound mass ensures it will start to sink into the sand as it sheds speed, slowing it even further.

We ran the Raptor in four-wheel drive with Off-Road Mode engaged. Off-Road Mode gives the Raptor a linear throttle response, like a race truck, instead of high power at the beginning and tapered at the end, like a street truck. We noticed that characteristic right away, as it took a few moments for the engine and mass of the truck to spool up to Baja-worthy speeds in the silt. Once in the zone and flying through the wash, the Raptor’s transmission found its sweet spot in the power range and held onto its RPMs instead of upshifting, similar to tow/haul mode. Even when we let our foot off the accelerator, using the sand’s friction and depth to scrub speed as we picked different channels to run through, the power was readily available when we needed to call on it again once we knew the way was clear.

Raptor in the wash

Some of the most fun we had was trying to get the Raptor sideways. As much as we gripe about wanting more power from the 5.4-liter V-8 in the F-150, in the Raptor it lets you tail-slide with precision instead of overpowering the truck if you’re accidentally too strong with the throttle. You simply angle the wheel, hit the throttle and enjoy the tail-slide. In flat stretches, you can really let the Raptor rip and drift through the bends. The grippy 315/70R17 BF Goodrich tires and wide stance (about 6.5-inches wider than a standard F-150) add to the stability. Body control is excellent.

After Trona, we headed to Red Rock Canyon’s sandy and rocky trails. Here, we played with the Raptor’s agility on tight paths and followed trails that were little more than single tracks in places. Instead of high-speed stunts, we picked our way around sharp rocks and large bushes with little more than adding a few more desert pinstripes to the sides of the Raptor’s wide fenders.

All day we had looked for a place to jump the Raptor, and in Trona we found just the right bump to get the truck airborne. The amazing part of the jump was that it only took 20 to 30 mph to do it, and from the driver’s seat we almost couldn’t tell. As the Raptor’s suspension fully extended itself in midair, it was totally quiet in the cabin. On landing, the shocks and jounces soaked up the impact, so we weren’t violently pushed toward the roof. The triple bypass Fox dampeners we spoke of earlier only perform stronger the harder they’re pushed. Shock absorption is almost four times better at the end of the travel than when the shock is first compressed. It was simply an amazing performance in an act that probably would have destroyed 99 percent of the vehicles on the highway. Ford’s SVT engineers and the folks at Fox Racing deserve mad props for their suspension tuning and durability in the Raptor.

Raptor in the snow

Finally, at Hungry Park near Gorman, Calif., we played with the Raptor on muddy trails still wet from the runoff of fresh snow. The Raptor didn’t feel quite as comfortable in this situation. The F-150’s weight played against it a bit as it sunk into sticky mud, but the truck’ never let us down when we needed extra power to scoot out of a slick situation.

Though it wasn’t as dramatic as power sliding in a wash, we played with the Raptor’s Hill Descent Control. Several times we let the truck crawl its way down some very steep hills. The HDC walks the truck by modulating the antilock braking system automatically so you can keep your foot off the brake and simply steer the truck in the proper direction. The Raptor’s HDC is the quietest we’ve experienced. The ABS modulations were smooth and unobtrusive. Once, the Raptor started to slide a bit going downhill because of the slick mud, but it quickly regained its footing as the tires bit into more solid dirt.

Each time we started crawling the truck down the grades, a small group of spectators and passing dirt bikers stopped to watch, and each time we gave what was probably a less dramatic show then they thought they’d see.

After two days of off-roading in the Raptor, we returned to city driving before giving the Raptor back to Ford. But before we cleaned it up, we drove around Los Angeles like we were wearing medals of honor. The Raptor was covered in a layer of dried mud and dust. The Molten Orange color was obscured and didn’t blind us with its brilliance as before. But that was OK. The memories of wheeling in the truck are going to last much longer. The Raptor is a truck that makes us want to play in the dirt every chance we get.

2010 Ford F-150 SVT Raptor ready to attack

Comments

But it doesn't out perform what I drive.

End Game"But it doesn't out perform what I drive."
What do you drive?
What kind of mods?
What's it all cost?
For all we know you could be driving an ATV.

@Tony - EndGame must drive a Toyota.
We all know that Toyotas are so fast that they are unstoppable.

I'm with endgame. Huck and others are just mad cause they realize they bought a weak-ass truck. It doesn't outperform my 2009 dodge 1500 that cost 25,000. I'm usually a ford fan. I love the raptor except for the 5.4. It doesn't belong in that truck. It's like endgame said. like putting a V6 in a viper. It's ridiculous. But there's hope for you if you bought a 5.4.
http://www.autoblog.com/2010/02/10/hennessey-velociraptor-500/

really it just makes me mad that they put a weak engine in an otherwise awesome truck. I'm just waiting for the next time I'm doing some off-roading and I see a raptor pull up and get smoked by some stock dodge or chevy. I don't like to see that. Makes me feel like ford's are just weak girl trucks, cause they usually are when compared to the competition.

@djg416 - what kind of scenario do you think a "Stock" Chev or Dodge could beat a Raptor?
Stock means as it came off the assembly line.
The only place I could see a stock truck win is on perfectly flat, hard ground.
What you are saying is the same as saying a "stock" Harley will smoke a 250cc motocross bike because the Harley has a bigger engine.
Only a poser would lose in a Raptor, and only a poser would be dumb enough to waste a Raptor by engaging in childish traffic light drag races.
@ End game - unless your truck is a desert pre-runner how do you expect your truck to out-perform a Raptor?
The only other way your truck could out perform a Raptor is if your truck is a mud bogger or rock crawler. What are you driving? What off-road scenario are you talking about?

What a bunch of idiots. Everyone is an expert on the Raptor.
Only 2 guys on this tread have driven one - Mike Levine and
Huck BB62. Huck doesn't sound "mad" about owning one. Why don't you Raptor experts drive down to the Tasty Freeze and tell everyone how wonderful you are. Spare me and the rest of us the outright BS. A parking lot or traffic light is the only place your trucks are going to have an advantage.
Lou - perfect analogy :MX bike VS harley. Raptor VS Dodge.

Ok you would probably need bigger tires, so a stock truck MIGHT not beat a raptor in some situations, but with big tires an otherwise stock chevy or dodge would beat the raptor in almost any situation. You really think that suspension is going to make the difference of 90 horsepower? A hill climb, a mud bog, or any kind of normal off-road competition through any terrain, a truck with tires to match the raptor would win. The raptor would only have the edge on some race course where you're getting airborne......often. I doubt many people will actually do that with their raptor, and you'd be stupid to do it in any other normal truck. You can't use the harley vs. motocross analogy. That's more like if you were comparing a raptor to a camaro.

I drive a Ram. I have no doubt my truck would be able to kick the hell out of a Raptor in most every aspect a truck is used for, except pre-running.

Did you all forget the Raptor has diminished Towing and Hauling? I know my truck rides smoother. I know my truck gets better fuel economy. I know my truck can beat a Raptor in every acceleration test. I know my truck has better handling. In off-road situations my truck would perform the same as the Raptor, if I had the same tires.

The only thing that a Raptor can do better then my Ram is pre-running. I say it can do it better because my truck can do pre-running, just not as fast.

Also please read an earlier post I had. I stated that I wasn't disrespecting the Raptor, I was trashing the 5.4. It was you all who made me point out all of the 5.4 Raptor's short comings when compared to other trucks.

The End

@djg416 - Quote"You really think that suspension is going to make the difference of 90 horsepower?".
Yes, suspension can easily compensate for the lack of HP in most scenarios.Any rough ground at any speed gives the Raptor an advantage.
1.You can hit a steep hill faster without loosing momentum from bottoming out. The Raptor's suspension will allow the tires to stick to the ground allowing better grip for the tires as you climb the rough hill.
2. Mud bog - advanced suspension can take hits better therefore you don't loose as much momentum, tires follow irregularities better allowing better traction.
3. Rock crawling - unless you have a PowerWagon the Raptor's suspension gives you an advantage. Raptor has more travel and can soak up hits better than stock truck.
4. Raptor is wider - only disadvantage is on a super tight trail. Width means truck less "tippy" can drift corners better.
5. The Raptor's locker can stay engaged in 2 wheel drive or 4 wheel drive up to top speed. Better traction anywhere. Can't say the same for any other stock truck.
6. Raptor has an offroad mode which changes braking and engine power characteristics. Truck performs better offroad.
7. Raptor has Hill desent mode that works foreward or in reverse. Nothing scarier than not making a hill and having to back down.
8. The Raptor's tires are "35"s. Don't know of a stock 1/2 ton that will fit "35"s.

The only place a Raptor can lose if a squid is driving it or you are racing on smooth, flat ground.
The only other disadvantage to the Raptor is that it has a very low carrying capacity and towing capacity.
The reason for the Raptor's poor carrying capacity is becasue stiff cargo carrying springs inhibit or restrict rapid wheel travel. It's a trade off. You want rapid wheel travel to soak up hits or terrain irregularities. The Fox shock provides the control to that wheel travel.

I'm sure all that stuff helps Lou, but from the off-roading that I've seen, the difference maker is almost always how much power the truck has. If you're climbing a steep hill the most powerful truck is usually going to make it to the top the quickest. In a mud bog it's the same story. Driving through soft sand the raptor would have a hard time next to another truck. You're right about those tires fitting under a stock truck. You'd need a lift and tires. Forget I ever said stock, but a lift and tires is pretty much standard for anyone who does a lot of off-roading, and a truck with lift and tires can be significantly less than a raptor. Do you realize how much weaker the raptor is compared to other trucks? I just don't believe a truck that is so much weaker can compete against another truck in most off-road competitions that you see, no matter how good the suspension is. I've seen plenty of people in their ford's with the same 5.4 engine try and go against dodge and chevys and they get SMOKED EVERY TIME. I just can't believe the truck will outperform in most situations unless it has more power.

The Raptor is an expensive truck but that has to do more with the fact that the Raptor package is only available with the higher end trim packages offered by Ford. I suspect they "bundled" it this way because most Raptor buyers are going to be posers(what a waste of a truck). Another reason is that a "high end" pickup has a higher profit margin. Ford is more likely to get a faster return on investment that way.
You mentioned comparing lifted trucks to the Raptor. I looked at some lift kits. They ranged from 2,000 to 4,800 dollars depending on the components. This was for for a minimum of 5" of lift. I looked at Fox shocks and ones similar to the Raptor's ranged from 500 - 750 dollars each. An electronic locker was around 800 dollars. 35 inch tires ran around 200 each. That would put a "do it yourself" F150 at 6,000 - 9,000 dollars. If you started out with an XLT Lariet, or Laramie Dodge you'd rapidly excede the price of the Raptor. You'd still be without "offroad mode", hill desent, and best of all - a factory warranty. The 5.4 has less power than other comparable trucks but one would be better served by starting with a Raptor and adding a factory supercharger that comes with factory warranty than going to an aftermarket suspension on a "regular" truck.

There's definitely good reason for some people to buy a raptor considering it's about the most capable pickup you can buy brand new. But you can easily get a more capable truck for cheaper if you don't get a high-end model with extras like navigation, heated steering wheel, adjustable pedals.......etc. Crap I don't think is worth having. I bought my 4x4 dodge 1500 quad cab brand new for 26,000 dollars after rebate. It doesn't have all the extras that a raptor has, but if I put 9,000 dollars in upgrades on it would perform significantly better than a raptor for 3,000 dollars less, or I could spend 5,000 dollars and still outperform a raptor for 7,000 less. I don't think you're going to get much off msrp on a raptor.

@djg416 - Ford should offer the Raptor package with the base model trim packages. It would put the truck more in line with what most guys do in the real world. The Raptor package offered in every trim level would be better. You could go out and buy a truck and lift it yourself or get it direct from the factory with warranty. Ford would definately sell more trucks that way. I'd buy one if I could get it in an XLT crewcab.
I've read an article on this site that once stability control systems become manditory in 2012 lifted trucks would be against the law because the lifts will bugger up the stability control.
http://news.pickuptrucks.com/2009/07/will-mandatory-stability-control-roll-over-the-pickup-truck-aftermarket.html#more

Huck, etc.

I for one *have* driven the 5.4 Raptor and what I can clearly tell you is that although I'm leaning toward ordering the Raptor over a Power Wagon, and have a fairly substantial amount of off-roading (and even some off-road rig design) experience, I for one am not remotely considering the 5.4 version. It took me all of 250 yards of driving out of the dealership before I turned around and parked it. For comparison, my '05 Avalanche on 35" tires with a Hypertech and just a better air filter left me feeling in the Raptor like I was driving a 10-year old truck away from the dealership... It felt very tired and sluggish compared to my Chevy - and don't think for a minute it's because I'm a Chevy fan... in fact it's probably the last one I'll ever own (after 4) for any foreseeable future.

A larger displacement motor won't just provide better acceleration/hp, it should provide better torque throughout the power range, provide it's torque earlier (lower RPMs) and also provide better deceleration in those controlled downhill decents, since part of that descent control is undoubtedly utilizing the engine braking in addition to the ABS.

My personal experience, and just my 2 cents, but it took no time at all to decide I'll be just fine waiting for a 6.2... I'm sure the 5.4 is heartily enjoyed by all those that have it in the Raptor but as was said elsewhere here by another poster, the 5.4 just doesn't compare very favorably to current offerings from other manufacturers... that will change with the 6.2 however. And coming from driving a truck from another manufacturer before the Raptor, the 5.4 just plain felt underpowered to me; significantly so in fact.

What concerns me more though is the fact that there is only 1020 pounds margin between the GVWR and curb weight. Unless I am seriously misunderstanding some of the reviews I've read, that does *not* leave 1020 pounds for a load in the bed because you have to subtract such (rather necessary) factors as well, driver, gasoline, etc. :)

So.... How much longer until we get your review on the 6.2????



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