Prøve GULL - Gratis
Ford Ranger Platinum
Farmer's Weekly
|August 25, 2023
Give the Ford Ranger chrome treatment, a silky smooth V6 engine and a comprehensive offroading package and you get the Ranger Platinum, the most premium offering within the Ranger family, bar the Raptor. While the Platinum option remains unavailable in South Africa, Oliver Keohane of CAR magazine got behind the wheel to drive it in the icy mountains of Queenstown, New Zealand.
We are driving arguably the most intentional luxury offering within the Ford Ranger family. Yes, the Ranger Raptor still sits in a league of its own, and while it may possess similar elements to the Platinum, with equally high-grade materials, the Raptor is still a very sporty, niche off-roading vehicle in terms of look and feel. The Platinum, on the other hand, caters specifically to the luxury bakkie market. I mean, when have you seen this sort of chrome treatment on a Ranger before?
WHY IS THE RANGER PLATINUM SIGNIFICANT?
The Ranger Platinum cements itself as Ford’s ultimate luxury bakkie, and in doing so, firmly establishes another category and market for the manufacturer within its already extensive Ranger line-up.
The pecking order traditionally has been the 3.0L twin-turbo V6 Ranger Raptor, just below that the Ranger Wildtrak (with either a 3.0-litre V6 or 2.0-litre Bi-Turbo engine option) and then the Ranger XLT 4X4 – the highest spec of the double-cab Ranger options.
Then Ford confirmed the release of the Wildtrak X, which comes to South Africa in the next few months. Priced at over R1 million and retaining the 2.0-litre Bi-Turbo engine, but kitted with a host of specific factory-standard off-roading modifications and technology, the Wildtrak X marked the introduction of a double-cab for the bakkie buyer looking for premium off-roading-and-overlanding capability, straight off the showroom floor. My impression is that the Ranger Platinum is the luxury sibling to the Wildrak X. The Platinum sacrifices very little in terms of off-road prowess, but what it does is to offer buyers the option of SUV-type luxury without all the Raptor and Wildtrak extras that make those bakkies unique to off-roading.
Denne historien er fra August 25, 2023-utgaven av Farmer's Weekly.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA Farmer's Weekly
Farmer's Weekly
Farmers 'unilateral victims' of climate
Gyeongbuk Provincial Council member Choi Taerim has demanded immediate and substantial support for apple farmers in the South Korean province, urging immediate measures for apple farmers affected by heat damage be implemented, The Asia Business Daily recently reported.
1 min
November 21-28, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
Top agri workers celebrated in the Western Cape
Shannon Robertson, assistant livestock manager at Boschendal near Franschhoek, was crowned the overall winner of the 2025 Western Cape Prestige Agri Awards, held in Durbanville.
1 min
November 21-28, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
Smart dairying: running Jerseys on pasture
The dairy farming sector has seen innovation in milk parlour and cow comfort technology that have allowed farmers to not only yield higher volumes, but extend the productive lifespan of their cows. Albrecht de Jager told Henning Naudé about his approach to maintaining a pasture-raised Jersey herd while utilising precise data measuring technology to ensure quality milk output and optimal cow comfort.
6 mins
November 21-28, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
High-performance dairy farming in the Eastern Cape: the Rufus Dreyer approach
Dairy farming is often described as one of the most technically demanding and strategically complex branches of agriculture.
6 mins
November 21-28, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
Design your stables and camps to assist in AHS control
Keep horses away from areas where disease-carrying midges multiply, like natural pools, lakes, streams and dams, advises Dr Mac.
2 mins
November 21-28, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
The rolling chant that has echoed through SA over the past 30 years
Johan van der Nest is renowned in auction circles and was the first freelance stud-stock auctioneer to begin operating in South Africa.
10 mins
November 21-28, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
Flight from the Red Army
The fall of the Third Reich in 1945 was defined by the Red Army's brutal invasion of Germany. Mike Burgess tells how the Hoppe family trekked from Finowfurt near Berlin to Preetz in Schleswig-Holstein to escape the brutality.
6 mins
November 21-28, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
How to plan a pre-sale feeding programme
Proper feeding of animals before a sale can help producers catch the eye of buyers and increase profits, but it is important to choose the right ration.
8 mins
November 21-28, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
How women are transforming coffee production in Kenya
A group of Kenyan smallholder women farmers are transforming the country's high-value coffee sector by pooling their resources.
5 mins
November 21-28, 2025
Farmer's Weekly
Tough times ahead for SA's grain farmers
Grain farmers face a difficult year ahead with lower grain prices and high production costs
3 mins
November 21-28, 2025
Translate
Change font size

