Dispatches Do Brasil: Global Ranger Arrives In Brazil

Marcelo de Vasconcellos
by Marcelo de Vasconcellos

Serendipity is what I believe it’s called. On the day TTAC was aflutter with news and comments on the new Chevy Colorado and an out-of-the-box thinking proposal to get the Chevy Montana into the North American market, I got some news in my e-mail inbox. The new Ford Ranger has arrived in Brazil – but in regular cab form.

At about US$29,500, it is about 500 dollars more expensive than the priciest Fiat Strada. In Brazil, cars pay much higher taxes than in the US, but those prices mean very healthy margins. For that kind of dough, equipment on the Ranger is quite nice, but the ambience is the same in cars almost 10,000 dollars less. In other words, plastics, hard plastics and more plastics is what you find inside.

Besides plastic, the new truck offers power everything, a roll bar, graphics package, leather-wrapped steering wheel and a plethora of other niceties (or worthless add-ons depending on your perspective). Mechanically speaking, there’s an auto locking differential, ABS, EBD and the engine is an all-aluminum 2.5L I4 that has 168 or 173 hp if running on Brazilian gasoline (E+/-22) or pure Brazilian ethanol. Though that sounds relatively good, Brazilian enthusiast site bestcars.com.br says that at just 120km/h the engine is revving hard at 3,200 rpm.

Always an important thing in pickups, the bed is 7.5 feet long and has 1.800 L of volume up to the edges of said bed. This would be enough to carry two motorcycles in the bed without breaking too much of a sweat. It carries loads of up to 1400 kg, roughly double of the mini car-based trucklets and a far cry over the 900 kilos or so the Rangers that made it here in the mid 90s were good for.

The new single cab Ford Ranger takes indirect aim at the smaller Fiat Strada and Volkswagen Saveiro in Brazil, but it really competes against the Chevy S10 (known as Colorado in the US) and Toyota Hilux, both of which look rather unfortunate in the single cab configuration. The last single cab Ranger managed to sell about 10,000 units from 2007 until 2012, which compared to the roughly 10,000 sales a month the Fiat Strada manages is but a drop in the ocean. Would it suffer the same fate in North America or does the new single cab, long bed, global Ford Ranger have what it takes to become a player in America?

Note: All figures in this article taken from this article on bestcars.com.br.

Marcelo de Vasconcellos
Marcelo de Vasconcellos

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  • Seabrjim Seabrjim on Mar 25, 2014

    "Only a regular cab?"Remember what got us here in the first place? 4 doors, bigger this, bigger that, heavier everything! Now we come full circle and want a small, regular cab, 4 banger stick shift. Nuff said. Some of us dont need a compact that is a 7/8 F150.

  • Jim brewer Jim brewer on Mar 25, 2014

    Seems to me you ought to be able to sell cheapest small pickup truck for about the same price as cheapest sedan, but evidently not, or someone without a full-size truck to cannibalize would do it.

    • See 11 previous
    • U mad scientist U mad scientist on Mar 26, 2014

      @u mad scientist > He won't answer because trolls just scamper off when cornered. Hanlon's razor would tend to reject that explanation because it implies knowing better.

  • 3-On-The-Tree I have a 2009 C6 Corvette LS3 and the only major repair that I have done on it was replace the radiator. Besides usual plugs, wires oil etc. And yes those tires are expensive as well.
  • 28-Cars-Later We had a red 2003 with less than 100 miles in late 2004/5ish and kept it till the end AFAIK. I do recall being told we had about $28,000 in at the time (about $43,6 in 2023 Clown World Bux). I don't ever recall anyone retail even looking at it, and it lived in the showroom/garage."It's an automatic that just had the linkage repaired and upgraded"This really doesn't bode well. Maybe there's a upgrade I'm simply not aware of so one could tune the 3rd Gen LM4 for higher power but messing with it isn't making me smile because now I know its no longer factory or somehow it broke and with such low miles I'm equally concerned.
  • Analoggrotto With Kia Hyundai you are guaranteed to have the best Maintenance and Service experience in the industry. Complementary diagnostics, open book fees schedules and adherence to published rates with no attempts to tack extra work on are part of the HMC Gold Standard of Service. Recalls are the lowest in the industry but when you bring your Hyundai Genesis Kia vehicle in for Feature Improvement, rest assured that it will be taken care of to the highest pentagon standards, fully free of charge with no pressure for paid work or service unless requested. Hyundai Kia have the highest levels of customer ATP loyalty in the industry and Service is key to the best after sales experience.
  • MaintenanceCosts In Toyota's hands, these hybrid powertrains with a single motor and a conventional automatic transmission have not been achieving the same kind of fuel economy benefits as the planetary-gear setups in the smaller cars. It's too bad. Many years ago GM did a group of full-size pickups and SUVs with a 6.0L V8 and a two-motor planetary gear system, and those got the fuel economy boost you'd expect while maintaining big-time towing capacity. Toyota should have done the same with its turbo four and six in the new trucks.
  • JMII My C7 isn't too bad maintain wise but it requires 10 quarts of expensive 0W-40 once a year (per GM) and tires are pricey due size and grip requirements. I average about $600 a year in maintenance but a majority of that is due to track usage. Brake fluid, brake pads and tires add up quickly. Wiper blades, coolant flush, transmission fluid, rear diff fluid and a new battery were the other costs. I bought the car in 2018 with 18k in mileage and now it has 42k. Many of the items mentioned are needed between 20k and 40k per GM's service schedule so my ownership period just happens to align with various intervals.I really need to go thru my service spreadsheet and put track related items on a separate tab to get a better picture of what "normal" cost would be. Its likely 75% of my spend is track related.Repairs to date are only $350. I needed a new XM antenna (aftermarket), a cargo net clip, a backup lamp switch and new LED side markers (aftermarket). The LEDs were the most expensive at $220.
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