Ford F-150 Raptor

Overall Rating:  

The Raptor is unlike any production pickup on the road. Ford fit the regular F-150 with advanced off-road equipment and widened its aluminum body for a purposeful appearance. A 450-hp twin-turbocharged V-6 is sheathed beneath its skin. Operate its paddle-shifted 10-speed automatic properly and its sophisticated drivetrain will rocket the Raptor to 60 mph in 5.1 seconds. Its oversize dimensions make tight spaces treacherous, but an astonishing suspension and comfy cabin mean no territory is untamable and no trip is uncomfortable. Compared with conventional pickups, the Raptor is on another level—providing pure, dumb fun like no other. Spare no expense.

What’s New for it?

While the regular F-150 received significant updates for 2018, its alter ego, the Raptor, is mostly the same. The short list of changes includes a revised tailgate design (depending on package, “F-150” or “FORD” is stamped into the surface) and restyled taillights. There are also three new colors: Lead Foot, Guard, and Race Red. These replace Ruby Red and Avalanche for 2018. A new 10-speaker Bang & Olufsen stereo is now optional instead of the Sony audio system that was available on 2017 models.

All new in 2017, the Raptor is based on the current Ford F-150, but the dedicated off-roader is 6.4 inches wider and flaunts unique styling and exclusive equipment. The first-gen Raptor was last sold in 2014—and with a V-8. Along with an aluminum bed and body, the new Raptor has a twin-turbo V-6 and a 10-speed automatic. That makes this version more powerful and up to 500 pounds lighter compared with its predecessor. Its Fox dampers are now larger and help add two inches of height. A set of gnarly BFGoodrich knobby tires, adjustable steering settings, and an advanced all-wheel-drive system with individual terrain modes fill out the updated dossier.

HIGHS
Astonishing suspension, bonkers EcoBoost engine, looks like a Transformer.
LOWS
Too much off-road truck for most people, cumbersome 10-speed automatic, as wide as a Freightliner.
VERDICT
Hands down, the best pickup for pulse-pounding desert running and pure, dumb fun.

Trims and Options We’d Choose

The Raptor doesn’t make sense for everyone; there’s the excellent Ford F-150 for those who never leave the tarmac. The Raptor can be too cumbersome in traffic-packed cities and requires patience when parking. The cheapest Raptor costs $51,080, which is $520 more than in 2017. That’s about $7500 more than a comparable 2018 F-150 XLT SuperCab 4×4 with the FX4 Off-Road package. Still, we prefer the more expensive Raptor for the enjoyment value alone. We’d opt for the spacious SuperCrew cab for an extra $2985 and the 801A package ($3280), which adds upgraded infotainment, interior features, and more, including:

• 8.0-inch Sync 3 touchscreen with Apple CarPlay and Android Auto
• Heated 10-way power-adjustable front seats
• Leather-trimmed interior

We’d also choose the spray-in bedliner ($495) and the 4.10 Torsen front differential ($500) for improved trailblazing, and we’d splurge on the awesome panoramic sunroof ($1295). That brings the price to $59,635—money well spent in our book.

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Ferrari LaFerrari

Overall Rating:  

To test the Ferrari LaFerrari, we traveled to Italy to the storied marque’s personal track, Fiorano. Ferrari’s offer was this: We could either test there—or not at all. We chose to test.

The Fiorano circuit is nearly two miles long, a thirteen-turn rollercoaster built on what was once Italian farmland. Our usual testing venues, where we gather our zero-to-60-mph times, quarter-mile acceleration, braking figures, and grip numbers are nothing like racetracks. Putting a car through our battery of tests calls for a long, flat straight, usually one more than a mile in length, as well as a 300-foot skidpad to assess lateral acceleration.

But even when we test at our locations, Ferrari doesn’t just let us jump into its cars and test them. An engineer watches the proceedings and provides an often-valuable briefing on the subsystems of the car, and mechanics are there to swap out tires if necessary. When asked why all the bother, Ferrari says it wants the test to go smoothly and being there ensures that any problems that arise can be hammered out that day. Every modern Ferrari we’ve tested with the factory’s knowledge also had the automaker’s own test equipment inside the car to record what we’re doing and, as they tell us, as a backup should our own test equipment fail. We find this “generosity” completely unnecessary, however, and, aside from a recent McLaren 650S test, no other manufacturer proctors our normal battery of tests, and we test more than 200 cars per year.

The Results: Apply an Asterisk as You Deem Fit

0 to 60 mph: 2.5 sec
0 to 100 mph: 4.8 sec
0 to 150 mph: 9.8 sec
Standing ¼-mile: 9.8 sec @ 150 mph

Full disclosure: The Fiorano track introduces major limitations to our usual testing procedures. The straight has a slight kink in it as you pass under a bridge, and there’s not much space to accelerate beyond the quarter-mile. C/D procedure calls for running in two directions to offset any potential elevation changes and the effects of wind. Fiorano’s straight is ever so slightly downhill, but at least there was little to no wind on our test day. Ordinarily, we’d either reject the testing venue or we’d run in both directions and average the results. Running the straight in two directions is impossible, according to Ferrari, and reversing the FIA-approved racetrack would apparently poke the bureaucratic monster that rules over Italy. Or we might hit the bridge. Either way, that wasn’t happening. So we were unable to average our best runs in each direction and have to use the best in one direction here. The results, we must note, are uncorrected for ambient conditions, meaning they’re representative of what the LaFerrari did on this particular day. It’s the same policy we applied to our 2003 test of the Enzo, and, in any event, the weather correction wouldn’t have affected the LaFerrari numbers much at all.

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Jeep Grand Cherokee

Overall Rating:  

“We are still dealing with physics here. I just want you to remember that.” So says Erich Heuschele, manager of SRT vehicle dynamics, to the 20 or so writers he’s about to turn loose on a racetrack in the Jeep Grand Cherokee Trackhawk. We’re dealing with physics, sure, but also an earnest effort to defy them with equal parts horsepower and lunacy. Say “707-horsepower Jeep” to anyone who hasn’t been paying attention and they just wiggle a finger into an ear and squint at you. “Huh?”

HIGHS
The world champion of indiscriminate throttle application.
LOWS
Above $80K, the “why not get a ?” question becomes harder to answer.

That same phrase, the one with the big number lashed to that old army word, carries the mystical power to convince even the most jaded auto writers to back away from the lobster roll and don a balaclava. We did drive the maximum Jeep on public roads, but it says “track” right there in the name, so we also hit Club Motorsports, a New Hampshire club track so new that crews were still installing Armco barriers the week before we showed up. It’s a 2.5-mile StairMaster that works its way up and down 250 feet of elevation change at a maximum 14 percent grade. Keeping his new Trackhawks from bending that fresh Armco is something about which Heuschele cares deeply.

The topography, on the other hand—nobody’s too worried about that. Few things flatten the hills quite like this much horsepower. Insane as it may be, the 707-hp Hellcat engine should at least be familiar by now. Down 251 cubic centimeters compared with Mopar’s naturally aspirated SRT engine, it’s a 6.2-liter V-8 capped with a 2.4-liter IHI supercharger, which stuffs those eight cylinders with 11.6 psi of boost. In the Trackhawk, it makes its full complement of horsepower but loses five pound-feet of torque—to 645—due to a more restrictive exhaust system.

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