Ford reveals its extreme four-month torture test for trucks, simulating a decade of use
4 months
10 years or 150,000 miles
What Happened
At Ford's Michigan Proving Grounds, trucks undergo a grueling four-month testing regimen that simulates a decade or 150,000 miles of use. Vehicles are driven 24/7 over punishing surfaces like potholes, rumble strips, rock crawls, and water pits, often under extreme loads. The goal is to break components before customers can, allowing engineers to improve durability.
4 months
Simulates 10 years or 150,000 miles of wear
Robots have been added to the testing team for precision, running the same routes at the same speed repeatedly. Humans still participate to introduce real-world variability and provide subjective feedback on driving feel. Data loggers constantly stream information on shock temperatures and wheel speeds to engineers.
“There really is no substitute for putting a vehicle through its paces. Real-world testing designed to validate Ford truck quality for our customers.”
Why this matters
The testing helps Ford identify and fix potential problems before trucks reach customers, ensuring reliability and meeting the 'Built Ford Tough' standard.
Terms in This Story
- Durability testing
- A process of subjecting vehicles to extreme conditions to identify weaknesses before they reach customers.
- Curb weight
- The weight of a vehicle with standard equipment, including a full tank of fuel, but without passengers or cargo.
- Gross vehicle weight
- The maximum operating weight of a vehicle including its own weight plus payload.
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