- First Name
- Scott
- Joined
- Oct 4, 2021
- Threads
- 79
- Messages
- 2,335
- Reaction score
- 5,504
- Location
- Asheville, NC
- Vehicle(s)
- 2022 AWD XLT ECO LUX CP360 HPR
- Engine
- 2.0L EcoBoost
- Thread starter
- #1
Disclosture: I'm not a Maverick fanboy. I don't even like my Maverick all that much (I do, however, respect it). And shocker of shockers, I like the Santa Cruz a lot. That said...
I realized today that you couldn't pay me to go back to my 2010 Ranger after almost two years in my Ecoboost Maverick. I miss a few things about my old Ranger: manual shift, bigger bed, two doors, and a foot shorter. But I don't miss axle hop over bumps. I don't miss the incredibly crude ride (my wife hated that truck). I don't miss the horribly underpowered 4 cylinder (but it did get 28 mpg). I don't miss all the systems that failed expensively over the decade and 100,000 miles I owned it. I don't miss the cacophony of rattles and shakes as I bounced my way down a typical country dirt road.
My Maverick rides like a car (that's a good thing), but delivers 75% of the utility of my old Ranger. My Maverick goes like a "bat out of hell" when I want it to, which is rarely. It's really overpowered for most people. The styling doesn't offend anyone. The bed is just usable enough for a gardener, though it sometimes requires ingenuity to fit big things in a small bed, or possibly two trips.
In the software engineering world I used to inhabit, we would said that the Maverick covers the 80% of use cases that constitutes core functionality, and that's where we should stop adding new features (and the associated costs). So kudos to Ford for exercising "feature creep" discipline.
So there it is. You couldn't pay me money to go back to my 2010 Ranger. Even if you offered me a brand new 2010 free, I wouldn't make the swap. I still don't like my Maverick, but I do appreciate and respect it for what it is. A better ride for your average utilitarian "trucklet" person.
I realized today that you couldn't pay me to go back to my 2010 Ranger after almost two years in my Ecoboost Maverick. I miss a few things about my old Ranger: manual shift, bigger bed, two doors, and a foot shorter. But I don't miss axle hop over bumps. I don't miss the incredibly crude ride (my wife hated that truck). I don't miss the horribly underpowered 4 cylinder (but it did get 28 mpg). I don't miss all the systems that failed expensively over the decade and 100,000 miles I owned it. I don't miss the cacophony of rattles and shakes as I bounced my way down a typical country dirt road.
My Maverick rides like a car (that's a good thing), but delivers 75% of the utility of my old Ranger. My Maverick goes like a "bat out of hell" when I want it to, which is rarely. It's really overpowered for most people. The styling doesn't offend anyone. The bed is just usable enough for a gardener, though it sometimes requires ingenuity to fit big things in a small bed, or possibly two trips.
In the software engineering world I used to inhabit, we would said that the Maverick covers the 80% of use cases that constitutes core functionality, and that's where we should stop adding new features (and the associated costs). So kudos to Ford for exercising "feature creep" discipline.
So there it is. You couldn't pay me money to go back to my 2010 Ranger. Even if you offered me a brand new 2010 free, I wouldn't make the swap. I still don't like my Maverick, but I do appreciate and respect it for what it is. A better ride for your average utilitarian "trucklet" person.
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Winter only duty now. Never left me completely stranded, and I have it since new. Only 98k miles. Rough ride, but pretty quiet, and doesn't rattle. Terrible fuel mileage from new. Could break 20mpg if dropped from a cliff, just barely double digit mpg in the depths of winter. The Maverick is my first dip into the hybrid world. Way better mileage, as fast or faster than the old 4.0 but of course only fwd. Summer only, as it splits time with the Ranger. The Mav isn't perfect, and it is light years beyond the simple old Ranger, but I like them both.