Heavy Duty Trucking Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

Test Drive: Ford's New F-650 Looks, Feels Familiar

If you found Ford’s previous F-650 and F-750 useful, comfortable and easy to drive, you’ll feel the same way about the new generation.

Tom Berg
Tom BergFormer Senior Contributing Editor
Read Tom's Posts
May 20, 2016
Test Drive: Ford's New F-650 Looks, Feels Familiar

The front-end styling is fresh, but Supe rDuty steel cabs, including this five-man crew type, carry over from previous model. The tight front-wheel cut makes the truck highly maneuverable. Photos: Tom Berg

4 min to read


The front-end styling is fresh, but Supe rDuty steel cabs, including this five-man crew type, carry over from previous model. The tight front-wheel cut makes the truck highly maneuverable. Photos: Tom Berg

If you found Ford’s previous F-650 and F-750 useful, comfortable and easy to drive, you’ll feel the same way about the new generation.

Ad Loading...

The new series of medium-duty trucks looks and drives a lot like the older ones, even if the 2016s sit on new frames and are assembled in the U.S. instead of Mexico. The production change was the result of the expiration of the Blue Diamond deal with Navistar, which had assembled the midrange F-series using Ford cabs and many other components on Navistar-designed frames.

I can make comparisons because two years ago, Ford sent me a bright-white F-650 dump with the Triton V-10 engine outfitted to burn compressed natural gas. In the following week I found that, except for the large cabinet that housed the CNG cylinders, it ran like a gasoline-engine truck. My only concern was where to refuel it (I went online and quickly found a filling station).

Ad Loading...

Two months ago, from Ford headquarters in Dearborn, Mich., came a bright-orange F-650 dump, also with the Triton V-10. It burned gasoline and ran like that CNG-powered engine, but it didn’t have the tank cabinet and the other expensive equipment needed for CNG. There’s a lot to be said for traditional gasoline and diesel fuel. They contain a lot of energy for a comparatively small amount of storage space, and they’re available almost everywhere. A gasoline-powered V-10 F-650 lists at about $15,000 less than one with Ford’s Power Stroke V-8 diesel. (The Cummins ISB6.7 diesel and Allison automatic have been dropped.)

The new-series F-650/750 features fresh styling with attractive creases in its hood and a sleeker look to its grille. Headlamps are projector-beam halogens that light the way quite well. The hood-and-fender assembly opens fairly easily, revealing the shrouded engine and all the plumbing and wiring associated with it. (This kind of tilting hood would be a nice feature on lighter-weight F-series trucks that have top-opening alligator hoods, but they sell very well as they are.)

Cabs and interiors are carried over from the previous midrange models, and from behind the wheel things look similar. The gauges, controls and overall dash design were very much like those from the older series. That’s mostly a good thing, though for HVAC operation I’d have preferred three rotary knobs instead of the consumer-style push buttons Ford uses. They’re there because Ford’s medium-duty trucks borrow their cabs from the mass-market Super Duty pickups. This affords economies of scale that are reflected in pricing.

Front seats are comfortable and supportive cloth-covered buckets; the driver’s is air-ride via electric pump. Instruments and switches are also from the previous generation.

The midrange trucks can be had with three cab styles — 2-door Regular, and 4-door Super and Crew. This truck had the Crew Cab. With the orange paint, it almost shouted, “I’m a municipal truck!” Except you won’t find many muni vehicles with a chromed nose, or the XLT cloth-trimmed seats and plastic paneling over walls and doors inside. Front seats were buckets contoured for good support, while the rear seat was more bench-like. There was decent head and legroom front and rear, and power windows and door locks. So whoever ends up owning this truck will send out a crew in comfort and modest style.

The driving experience is much like the older series: an easy climb up, good visibility all around, and good ride. Springs are said to be longer, so the ride may be smoother, though I couldn’t say unless I had driven the two trucks in quick succession instead of two years apart. A very tight front-wheel cut made up for the longish wheelbase, and maneuverability was outstanding. Several times I was surprised and pleased at how easily I could jockey the truck through a right-angle turn in my driveway. 

Ad Loading...

The engine’s behavior was somewhat more leisurely, operating several hundred rpm lower than the previous truck’s. Instead of regularly spinning to 3,300 and 3,500 rpm, this one upshifted at about 3,000 unless I put my foot into it, which I seldom did. The engine’s cruising speed was also a bit slower at given road speeds. The big V-10 ran well through the smooth TorqShift 6-speed automatic transmission, which is the only one you can get from Ford. Manual transmissions haven’t been available for years because there’s no call from them, product planners say.

A friend needed some gravel for his driveway, and I gladly obliged. We picked up 2 tons at a quarry, and the chassis settled down a bit and the ride was smoother than when empty. We drove a few miles to his house and I delivered the gravel where he wanted it, in a pile up near the house.

Friend Craig Scott operates push-button controls to finish depositing 2 tons of gravel on his driveway. The electric-over-hydraulic hoist could also tip the body to spread the load.

From a driver’s perspective, the new Ford mediums are very familiar vehicles. Specifications say the Ford-designed frame on my 2016 test truck is 50% stiffer than the one I had two years ago, which should make it tougher and longer-lived, especially if it goes off-road onto rough terrain where twisting occurs. Production at Avon Lake, Ohio, instead of Sautillo, Mexico, is a boon to about 1,000 workers who were added to produce the midrange trucks as well as lighter-duty Super Duty cab-chassis models. I’d call that a win-win.

Tom Berg holds a commercial driver’s license and does Test Drives of all classes of trucks. He also writes about vocational and medium-duty trucks, trailers and bodies, maintenance, and alternative fuels.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

More Equipment

photo of a military truck with "Great American Trucks" wording on top of red-white-and-blue background.
Equipmentby Jack RobertsJune 16, 2026

Great American Trucks: The International MaxxPro MRAP

Built from an International WorkStar chassis and powered by a MaxxForce diesel, the MaxxPro MRAP became one of the most important military trucks of the Iraq War era.

Read More →
2026 Mack Granite interior.
Equipmentby News/Media ReleaseJune 11, 2026

New Mack Granite Cab Puts Driver Comfort Front and Center

Mack’s next-generation vocational truck features a roomier cab, premium seating, advanced steering technology, and a driver-focused interior designed with direct input from professional operators.

Read More →
Mack Trucks Pioneer Nascar Salutes truck.
Equipmentby News/Media ReleaseJune 11, 2026

Mack Unveils Fan-Selected Patriotic NASCAR Pioneer Wraps

Racing fans picked the patriotic design now featured on three Mack Pioneer trucks hauling NASCAR equipment across the country during the 2026 season.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Michelin X Line Grip D tires.
Equipmentby News/Media ReleaseJune 9, 2026

Michelin Expands X Line Grip D Tire Line

Michelin is expanding its X Line Grip D drive tire lineup with a new pre-mold retread and additional sizes, building on what the company says is strong fleet adoption of the tire's traction, mileage, and fuel-efficiency benefits.

Read More →
Illustration of SCR/DEF system on heavy-duty truck
Equipmentby News/Media ReleaseJune 4, 2026

Engine Technology Forum Launches SCR, DEF Resource Center Amid Emissions Debate

The Engine Technology Forum’s new online hub aims to provide fleets, policymakers, and equipment owners with fact-based information about selective catalytic reduction technology, diesel exhaust fluid and emissions compliance.

Read More →
Artist rendering of dealership with trucks and trailers parked outside
Equipmentby News/Media ReleaseJune 2, 2026

Prime Inc. to Open $7.9M Flagship Used-Truck Dealership

A new driver-focused facility to sell Prime Inc's used trucks and trailers will be the first purpose-built location in the company's history.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Red Kenworth truck pulling Paper Transport trailer
Fuel Smartsby Deborah LockridgeJune 2, 2026

Lessons Learned About Alternative Fuels: Start Small, Stay Flexible

Practical advice on adopting alternative fuels and ZEVs from HDT's 2026 Top Green Fleets, from renewable diesel and natural gas to electric trucks.

Read More →
Kenworth T680.
Equipmentby News/Media ReleaseMay 27, 2026

Kenworth Names Peter Ahrens General Manager

Leadership changes at Kenworth take effect July 1 as the OEM promotes two longtime Paccar executives to key management roles.

Read More →
White Hino Le electric tractor on show floor
Equipmentby News/Media ReleaseMay 26, 2026

Hino Adds Electric Class 6/7 Truck

Hino says the Le Series is an important step in the company's efforts to reduce environmental impact and support its customers’ sustainability goals.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Big standing "ACTExpo" sign in convention center lobby
Equipmentby Deborah LockridgeMay 26, 2026

ACT Expo 2026: Highlights in Photos

The 2026 Advanced Clean Transportation Expo featured a broad range of commercial vehicle technologies, from EVs to autonomous trucks to the latest diesel and alternative-fuel engines.

Read More →