Robot test driver pushes
Ranger Super Duty to the limit

Robot test driver pushes Ranger Super Duty to the limit

Robot test driver pushes Ranger Super Duty to the limit Robot test driver pushes Ranger Super Duty to the limit

The toughest test? The dreaded Silver Creek durability track at Ford Australia’s You Yangs Proving Ground in Victoria. Imagine a dry creek bed, but instead of smooth pebbles, it’s packed with 300 randomly placed, bone-rattling bumps of different shapes and sizes.

The toughest test? The dreaded Silver Creek durability track at Ford Australia’s You Yangs Proving Ground in Victoria. Imagine a dry creek bed, but instead of smooth pebbles, it’s packed with 300 randomly placed, bone-rattling bumps of different shapes and sizes.

“Silver Creek is our toughest man-made durability track,”

Justin Capicchiano, program manager, Ranger Super Duty.

“Silver Creek is our toughest man-made durability track,”

Justin Capicchiano, program manager, Ranger Super Duty.

“It stressed the Ranger Super Duty from the wheels to the roof; simulating the wear and tear you’d typically experience across a decade of driving on the world’s harshest road conditions.”

Although a single run on Silver Creek generates over 2000 suspension movements, the test primarily assesses the durability of engine and body mounts, joints, and connectors.

“It stressed the Ranger Super Duty from the wheels to the roof; simulating the wear and tear you’d typically experience across a decade of driving on the world’s harshest road conditions.”

Although a single run on Silver Creek generates over 2000 suspension movements, the test primarily assesses the durability of engine and body mounts, joints, and connectors.

To ensure consistent and relentless testing, an autonomous robotic test driver took the wheel, running the Ranger Super Duty 24/7, rain, hail and shine.

And because the Ranger Super Duty is built to carry more, the team didn’t hold back. They tested it on Silver Creek at its maximum gross vehicle mass (GVM) of 4,500 kilograms1.

“The forces punching through the truck when its unladen are immense, but when it’s loaded to maximum GVM and tested on Silver Creek they become even more brutal. This is an incredibly important test for a truck that must do the toughest jobs or most extreme adventures in the harshest conditions,” Capicchiano concluded.

To ensure consistent and relentless testing, an autonomous robotic test driver took the wheel, running the Ranger Super Duty 24/7, rain, hail and shine.

And because the Ranger Super Duty is built to carry more, the team didn’t hold back. They tested it on Silver Creek at its maximum gross vehicle mass (GVM) of 4,500 kilograms1.

“The forces punching through the truck when its unladen are immense, but when it’s loaded to maximum GVM and tested on Silver Creek they become even more brutal. This is an incredibly important test for a truck that must do the toughest jobs or most extreme adventures in the harshest conditions,” Capicchiano concluded.

Disclosures

  1. Gross Vehicle Mass is the maximum allowable weight of a vehicle including any load transported by the vehicle, including towball down weight of a trailer but excluding the weight of a trailer itself. GCM is the maximum allowable weight of the vehicle and its trailer. Subject to State and Territory regulations. Stated vehicle weights are approximate and subject to individual variances. Vehicles should be weighed before and after adding any load to ensure the maximum GVM, GCM and Gross Axle Weight Ratings (to be released closer to on-sale date) are not exceeded.

  1. Gross Vehicle Mass is the maximum allowable weight of a vehicle including any load transported by the vehicle, including towball down weight of a trailer but excluding the weight of a trailer itself. GCM is the maximum allowable weight of the vehicle and its trailer. Subject to State and Territory regulations. Stated vehicle weights are approximate and subject to individual variances. Vehicles should be weighed before and after adding any load to ensure the maximum GVM, GCM and Gross Axle Weight Ratings (to be released closer to on-sale date) are not exceeded.

  • Disclosures
  1. Gross Vehicle Mass is the maximum allowable weight of a vehicle including any load transported by the vehicle, including towball down weight of a trailer but excluding the weight of a trailer itself. GCM is the maximum allowable weight of the vehicle and its trailer. Subject to State and Territory regulations. Stated vehicle weights are approximate and subject to individual variances. Vehicles should be weighed before and after adding any load to ensure the maximum GVM, GCM and Gross Axle Weight Ratings (to be released closer to on-sale date) are not exceeded.

  1. Gross Vehicle Mass is the maximum allowable weight of a vehicle including any load transported by the vehicle, including towball down weight of a trailer but excluding the weight of a trailer itself. GCM is the maximum allowable weight of the vehicle and its trailer. Subject to State and Territory regulations. Stated vehicle weights are approximate and subject to individual variances. Vehicles should be weighed before and after adding any load to ensure the maximum GVM, GCM and Gross Axle Weight Ratings (to be released closer to on-sale date) are not exceeded.