GCW of this truck and trailer was 39,000 pounds, but the V-8 diesel pulled it well.

GCW of this truck and trailer was 39,000 pounds, but the V-8 diesel pulled it well.

Ford feels it has bragging rights and showed why at a ride-and-drive event for trade-press reporters this week in West Virginia. The bragging is over numbers – 440 horsepower and 860 pounds-feet – the rating of the second-generation Power Stroke 6.7-liter V-8 diesel that will propel many 2015-model SuperDuty pickups.

That power and torque are now tops in the Class 2 through 4 segment, and so are the resulting towing capacities, said Doug Scott, Ford’s truck marketing manager. The highest rating is 31,200 pounds for a diesel-powered F-450 pickup with dual rear wheels, a 4.30 axle ratio and bed-mounted fifth wheel hitch pulling a gooseneck trailer.

Heaviest Ford pickup, the F-450, can tow up to 31,200 pounds.

Heaviest Ford pickup, the F-450, can tow up to 31,200 pounds.

Gross combination weight rating for such a vehicle is 40,000 pounds, and “that’s half an 18-wheeler,” he said. 2014 is the 38th consecutive year of truck-sales leadership for Ford, he said.

At the press event, reporters drove F-250, F-350 and F-450 pickups, most hitched to sizeable two-axle camper, box and flatbed trailers weighing about 9,000, 12,000 and 29,000 pounds, in that order.

The heaviest combinations were reserved for a handful of writers who held commercial driver’s licenses, including me. We came away impressed with the Fords’ pulling ability, along with their comfort and quietness.

The towing exercises with the two heavier trailers were on a stretch of Interstate 64 that included a 5-mile, 7% grade that most heavy semis struggled with. In several cases the Fords were matched against Chevrolet and Ram pickups in comparable weight classes, and bested them, as one would expect in this type of event. But all performed well.

Power Stroke hides under pipes, wires and shrouding.

Power Stroke hides under pipes, wires and shrouding.

On the 5-mile downgrade with the camper trailers, the Power Strokes’ engine brake helped keep the vehicles at safe speeds, usually within or close to the posted 45-mph limit for trucks.

When prompted by stabs at the brake pedals, their Ford 6-speed TorqShift transmissions automatically downshifted to as low as 3rd gear to boost retarding power. This sent engines spinning from 3,500 to the no-load maximum of 3,900 rpm to control road speed with very little use of service brakes.

Chevrolets with Duramax V-8 and Ram pickups with Cummins I-6 diesels, respectively, behaved similarly in downshifting and retarding, though they seemed to have slightly less hold-back power. And the Cummins revved more slowly, with a maximum speed several hundred rpm less, as one expects from an inline six-cylinder design.

The Fords rode smoothly during these runs, but the Chevy and Dodge pickups subjected us to back slap that was uncomfortable and puzzling. Like the Fords, the other trucks’ fifth wheel hitches were directly over the rear axles, so did suspensions differ enough to cause this misbehavior? We didn’t know.

The heavy pulling saw GCWs from 36,000 to as high as 39,000 pounds, with much of that on each pickup’s axles. Heavy loading and stiff suspensions meant more use of the service brakes on the downgrade and a choppy ride in all cases.

Neither General Motors nor Ram has a 4500 pickup, but Ford chose to pit a pair of F-450 pickups against a Ram 3500 HD pickup because it has a similar trailer-tow rating (30,000 pounds). Each pulled a LoadMax steel flatbed gooseneck trailer loaded with nine 2,200-pound pallets of concrete block.

Long story short: The more powerful Fords (by 55 horsepower and 40 pound-feet) outpulled and passed the Ram on the upgrade by several miles per hour.

The Ford diesels were always the quietest, with the GM Duramax diesels a close second. The Cummins Turbo Diesels emitted a low growl that some might consider loud but that my driving partner and I found pleasing.

In all cases the diesels were smokeless and odor-free, thanks to their builders’ monumental engineering efforts to meet federal emissions standards.

Before we started out in the morning, Ford Truck spokesman Mike Levine asked us reporters to observe the comfort of SuperDuty pickups, and sure enough, they were superior. Ford seats were a little wider and more supportive, with plush leather coverings.

Especially nice was the King Ranch trim, which for 2015 gets a finer grade of leather and a deeper shade of brown compared to the thick baseball glove-like hide used previously.

Depending on trim level, seats front and rear can be heated and cooled, as in luxury cars. I thought of the utter plainness of the late-1940s F-series Ford pickups and remarked to an engineer riding in the back seat, “This sure ain’t no F-1!” He laughed.

Comfort and capability abound in these newest F-series pickups, but yes, there’ll be more basic work trucks with XL trim, and I think I might feel more at home in those.

About the author
Tom Berg

Tom Berg

Former Senior Contributing Editor

Journalist since 1965, truck writer and editor since 1978.

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