Ford makes a quick run for the border! Building a vehicle that is quiet and comfortable when traveling at 60 mph is hardly an impressive feat. These days, it's pretty much par for the course -- unless the course is a sandy arroyo with a washboard surface peppered by large rocks, and the vehicle is a Ford pickup truck. The Ford F-150 SVT Raptor is the strangest bird to come out of Detroit in a long time. As close as you'll get to a showroom stock desert racing truck, it is the first of its kind from a major manufacturer, and flies in the face of today's fuel efficient, save-the-planet carmaking conventions.

ing is fine, but in the Baja 1000 fantasy camp that surrounds the Raptor wherever it goes you always want more, and you want it now. As it is, there's no manual shifting option, and, like most automatics, the transmission is a little slow to downshift, sometimes achingly so. Leaving it in Tow/Haul mode, which makes it hold gears longer and kick down when you tap the brakes, helps some, but it just seems wrong using it unless you have a trailer full of extreme sports enthusiasts attached to the hitch.
On the other hand, switching it into 4x4 low and heading for the hills can be a lot of fun, too. While rock crawling is far from the Raptor's primary mission, those shocks and tires are as good for getting you over boulders and serious blue sky-steep inclines as they are for tearing it up between the dunes. For the trip down the other side, the Raptor has a unique hill descent control system that uses the brakes to hold it at whatever speed you choose. Just lift your foot off the throttle and it moseys on down while you handle the steering. It can take on a slope that would make a good black diamond run if it was covered in snow, and the Raptor wont flinch. If you think you might wimp out on the way up, the system also works in reverse.