Sunday, Jun 25, 2017 at 13:54
Graeme,
The
Ranger and its Mazda stablemate, the BT50 are highly rated 4WD utes. Owners are enthusiastic about them (though not always about dealerships and service departments) and the
Ranger is chasing the Hilux in sales with a good chance of knocking it off the top of the pedestal. So I guess if you can resolve this electrical issue to your satisfaction the
Ranger would be a worthy contender for your dollars.
Ford has developed the
Ranger more than Mazda has the BT. When I bought
mine, Mazda had a significant pricing edge and I think still does, but I like where Ford has gone with the
Ranger. If price was not an issue, then out of the two I'd now go for the
Ranger.
The 3.2 litre engine matched to the 6R80 6 speed auto transmission is a proven workhorse, particularly for towing. Manual is available if you prefer. There are rumours of a V6 diesel and an 8 speed transmission for the
Ranger - might pay to investigate that because it's mouthwatering to say the least. Even if that doesn't eventuate, I like the idea of a less stressed larger engine in a
Ranger than a highly tuned smaller one that you might find elsewhere. Putting aside Toyota's V8 79s, of course. I'd have one of those in a flash, but Mrs P outvoted me one to one :-(
If it turns out you can no longer have dual battery mode enabled or Smart Charge turned off, whatever the terminology, then a low voltage variant of a dc-dc charger will address charging the second battery. Yes, more complexity, but that's the way it is. I have done it by choice in my BT and it's fabulous.
That leaves the often short-lived OEM crank battery. My BT doesn't have the smart charge system, but as I said in another post in this thread, it has other power management quirks (which are the ssame as in the
Ranger) that do the crank battery no favours. I nursed my cranker to last 2 years. It was really ready to go at 18 months, mayber earlier. I replaced it with a stop-start battery which is designed to cope with frequent re-starting of the engine in vehicles with auto engine stop-start in traffic, etc. Absolutely no problems in 12 months, but my BT will give the battery a conventional charging algorithm, not the starvation diet that the
Ranger's Smart Charge delivers.
A bit off topic, but you did mention changing vehicles in your opening post :-)
Cheers
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