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Here's How Long We Torture Test Our Trucks Before We Hand You the Keys

by Ford (Sharyn Ghacham, communications manager for quality and safety at Ford Motor Company)

May 29, 2026

“I don’t think people understand what we put our vehicles through,” said Susan Regalia, who leads durability testing for some of Ford’s most iconic trucks as operations supervisor at Michigan Proving Grounds (MPG) in Romeo, Michigan.

“Most people in the general public would be really surprised to see everything we do to test them.”

Built Ford Tough is a well-known tagline, in use since 1979. But it’s not just catchy advertising.

It’s an inspiration for the teams running Ford’s durability testing: a marathon of severe trials designed to condense the wear and tear of ten years or 150,000 miles into just four months.

Ford Maverick Ford: Here's How Long We Torture Test Our Trucks Before We Hand You the Keys {filename}



“You’re taking out all the easy stuff,” Regalia said. “We are trying to use these vehicles as our most demanding customers would.”

During those four months, a test vehicle is in almost constant use.

Dyno tests measure engine performance by power, torque, and RPMs. Road surfaces are riddled with potholes and rumble strips. Trucks take on challenges from stair steps to rock crawls to water pits.

Previous generations of field testers used to take vehicles out west and drive them down actual creek beds, and MPG has built its own version in Silver Creek. It offers the same challenges — with a bit more predictability than a living stream — for more consistent test results.

And on Power Hop Hill, vehicles grind up an incline loaded with severe bumps all the way up.

Ford Maverick Ford: Here's How Long We Torture Test Our Trucks Before We Hand You the Keys {filename}



Vehicles aren’t just tested on multiple surfaces. They do it under extreme loads, tested at curb weight (what you'd expect with just a driver and passenger) and at gross vehicle weight.

They are also tested at top safe load, which can be placed in the rear or the front of the truck to simulate activities like snow plowing.

Drivers run the vehicles 24 hours a day, through vibration and shocks, the clanking of weights chained to the vehicles, and the noise of the road.

Along the way, they observe everything from the feel of the steering wheel to unusual noises to the way the vehicle handles.

Ford Maverick Ford: Here's How Long We Torture Test Our Trucks Before We Hand You the Keys {filename}



“There really is no substitute for putting a vehicle through its paces.” - Andrew Kernahan, vehicle programs director for heavy duty truck and platforms
All this can be demanding for humans to drive repeatedly, so robots have now been recruited to run some of the toughest surfaces. And the robots have recently graduated to the racetrack: 20 of them at a time can sometimes be seen driving paths around the high speed track.

Robots bring precision to the test track. Unlike humans, they can run the same test at exactly the same speed, time after time.

But humans introduce the variability of real life into the tests, and each test driver brings a different valuable perspective to the mix. That's why the testing process includes a blend of robotic consistency and human perception.

Throughout Ford’s durability testing, data loggers in the vehicle send information back to operators on everything from shock temperatures to wheel speeds.

“Whenever a new issue comes up, we celebrate it, because it means that we found the issue before a customer did," said Andrew Kernahan, vehicle programs director for heavy duty truck and platforms.

"Then we work the issue through a set of rigorous and standardized problem-solving techniques to identify root causes, take robust corrective actions, and implement them as quickly as possible.”

“There really is no substitute for putting a vehicle through its paces.” - Andrew Kernahan, vehicle programs director for heavy duty truck and platforms
Teams also stay in touch with customer-facing teams, gathering data to constantly update standards so current durability testing reflects the way customers are actually using their vehicles.

And the process isn’t one-and-done. Built Ford Tough vehicles undergo durability testing not just at the prototype stage, but also as production begins, when improvements to the design based on earlier durability testing are validated.

“There really is no substitute for putting a vehicle through its paces,” Kernahan said. “Real-world testing designed to validate Ford truck quality for our customers.
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Cherokee

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I’m sorry but a quick glance at the above videos showed me an F-150 operating well within its design parameters.

Going up the big steps, cake walk with a skilled driver.
Torture would have been doing that step climb with a half ton of cargo in the bed, at least.
Any 4x4 vehicle with enough ground clearance and chunky rubber could have done that with ease.

The mud puddle, really ?
How about pulling a 30 ft travel trailer through the mud puddle repeatedly, like a thousand times.

The last one, the hill climb. I do that almost daily with my Maverick on loose gravel and pot holes,
The F-150, the hill, lots of dust flying means nothing.
My climb is steeper, I crawl up in low at 1900-2,000 rpm and that is just in the turbo. It comes into play at 1800 rpm.

Put 10,000 pounds behind it and do 500 laps on the Cumberland Gap at WOT
 
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Pointyears

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I’m sorry but a quick glance at the above videos showed me an F-150 operating well within its design parameters.

Going up the big steps, cake walk with a skilled driver.
Torture would have been doing that step climb with a half ton of cargo in the bed, at least.
Any 4x4 vehicle with enough ground clearance and chunky rubber could have done that with ease.

The mud puddle, really ?
How about pulling a 30 ft travel trailer through the mud puddle repeatedly, like a thousand times.

The last one, the hill climb. I do that almost daily with my Maverick on loose gravel and pot holes,
The F-150, the hill, lots of dust flying means nothing.
My climb is steeper, I crawl up in low at 1900-2,000 rpm and that is just in the turbo. It comes into play at 1800 rpm.

Put 10,000 pounds behind it and do 500 laps on the Cumberland Gap at WOT
Obviously, they didn't test the Mav's AWD well enough that a YouTuber had to identify and shame them into fixing the problem.

That being said, my Mav is the tightest vehicle I've ever had (all Fords since 1996). Every door seam perfectly spaced and nary a squeak or a rattle.
 

Betsch

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I give Ford credit, after a YouTube team found a problem with the Maverick on 3 rollers, Ford went back and fixed the problem for the 2026 model year. I have read that us 2025 owners are going to get the same software update for free. That is standing behind your product.
 

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I’m sorry but a quick glance at the above videos showed me an F-150 operating well within its design parameters.

Going up the big steps, cake walk with a skilled driver.
Torture would have been doing that step climb with a half ton of cargo in the bed, at least.
Any 4x4 vehicle with enough ground clearance and chunky rubber could have done that with ease.

The mud puddle, really ?
How about pulling a 30 ft travel trailer through the mud puddle repeatedly, like a thousand times.

The last one, the hill climb. I do that almost daily with my Maverick on loose gravel and pot holes,
The F-150, the hill, lots of dust flying means nothing.
My climb is steeper, I crawl up in low at 1900-2,000 rpm and that is just in the turbo. It comes into play at 1800 rpm.

Put 10,000 pounds behind it and do 500 laps on the Cumberland Gap at WOT
I doubt Ford records the 24/7 4 month testing start to finish. Why would they? These are article created clips. Maybe contact Ford and ask if you can purchased the 4 month test data for the Maverick. The did state the trucks are tested under sever load use.

"Vehicles aren’t just tested on multiple surfaces. They do it under extreme loads, tested at curb weight (what you'd expect with just a driver and passenger) and at gross vehicle weight.

They are also tested at top safe load, which can be placed in the rear or the front of the truck to simulate activities like snow plowing.

Drivers run the vehicles 24 hours a day, through vibration and shocks, the clanking of weights chained to the vehicles, and the noise of the road. "
 

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I’m sorry but a quick glance at the above videos showed me an F-150 operating well within its design parameters.
Design parameters are what a design must meet. Testing if it can do impossible things would merely be a stunt. The torture is in repetition and constant heat cycling. Engineers don't do clickbait.
 

ChargerRon

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I give Ford credit, after a YouTube team found a problem with the Maverick on 3 rollers, Ford went back and fixed the problem for the 2026 model year. I have read that us 2025 owners are going to get the same software update for free. That is standing behind your product.
Do you have the article or other information about the 2025 Maverick AWD Software Update and could you post it !!
Thank You !!
 

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Everything is on this site. I read it last week. I think the title included the term "YouTube". I will try to find it for you.
 

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2026 Maverick Hybrid AWD Improvements (Slip Test)
This is the start of the thread about the software update for the AWD improvements.
 
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I give Ford credit, after a YouTube team found a problem with the Maverick on 3 rollers, Ford went back and fixed the problem for the 2026 model year. I have read that us 2025 owners are going to get the same software update for free. That is standing behind your product.
Thanks for the reminder... I resent a link to the video to the local dealer's service department.
Hopefully I'll hear something back this time.
 

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That being said, my Mav is the tightest vehicle I've ever had (all Fords since 1996). Every door seam perfectly spaced and nary a squeak or a rattle.
[/QUOTE]


WHUT!!!!! ?
 

Pointyears

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That being said, my Mav is the tightest vehicle I've ever had (all Fords since 1996). Every door seam perfectly spaced and nary a squeak or a rattle.

WHUT!!!!! ?
[/QUOTE]
Yep, and when it's on battery it's almost eerie. Just a little bit of tire noise and a little bit of wind noise over the mirrors.
 

TNFurb

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WHUT!!!!! ?
Yep, and when it's on battery it's almost eerie. Just a little bit of tire noise and a little bit of wind noise over the mirrors.
[/QUOTE]
My experience is the same in my 2024 Lariat Hybrid
 
 







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