Doug Scott of Ford Talks about Ford Trucks

As Ford Truck Group Marketing Manager, Doug Scott is always ready to talk trucks. Below are some snips from his live chat from today.

Ben: I was just wondering why you guys were the first to put a fully boxed frame in a 8500.

Doug Scott: We were the first to use a fully boxed frame in the U8500, light duty segment, in our F-150, the 2004 model because it made sense for the light duty pickup customers needs. As you know, heavy duty pickup customers are even more diverse, including pickups, chassis cabs with service bodies, and numerous other considerations that must be factored into the decision. At the end of the day, heavy duty truck customers are most interested in capability (maximum payload and towing), durability, and performance, not as much in how it is delivered.

Kyle: thought Dodge was bold to switch to coil springs for their 1500. Your thoughts on that?

Doug Scott: Bold, but not meeting the needs of the capability oriented buyer who compromises the majority of today’s full size pickup customer. It shows up in their declining market share performance.

Bobby: How do you feel about the new Chevy truck coming out?

Doug Scott: Since they are upgrading the front suspension and the Duramaz diesel, I expect that it will be a formidable competitor than the 2010 Silverado HD has been. We’re anxious to get our hands on one and really see what it can deliver.

Craig: Truck quality/performance is always the major consideration – how is Ford continuing to stay ahead of the pack in this area especially with the larger truck class 450+

Doug Scott: Our watchword is continous improvement in all aspects. As such we spend an incredible amount of time and effort analyzing customer survey feedback, focus groups discussion, and face to face meetings learning for opportunities to give our customers a better product. Additionally, at the manufacturing level, better design, CAD, CAE, and a dedication to being the best has helped us achieve our current position of having the best quality in the industry. Obviously, you don’t get to be the Best Selling Truck in America for 33 consecutive years if you aren’t delivering a durable, reliable, high quality product.

Mike: Some news I read about the new F250 ford diesel was claiming 28 avg mpg. Is that possible?

Doug Scott: The fuel economy on the 2011 Super Duty (all models) is 18% better than the previous model. Some versions such as the F-450 boast up to a 40% improvement. Every day, we are hearing that customers are getting in the 20′s. When we did our media drive out in Arizona a few months ago, we had an 80 mile fuel economy challenge and one journalist actually got over 34 mpg.

2011 Ford F-Series Super Duty Rated to Tow 24,400 lbs

On Thursday Ford release the complete stats on the new 2011 Ford F-Series Super Duty. AutoGuide.com went through some of the great things Ford is doing!!

"2011 F-Series Super Duty, powered by an all-new 6.7-liter Powerstroke V8. The engine makes 390-hp at 2800 rpm and a tremendous 735 ft-lbs of torque at just 1600 rpm. A standard 6.2-liter gasoline, which replaces the old 5.4-liter V8, makes 385-hp and 405 ft-lbs of torque, an improvement of 85-hp and 40 ft-lbs of torque. Both engines are mated to an all-new 6R140 heavy-duty TorqShift six-speed automatic transmission .

Ford rates this new engine in the F350 to tow a max of 21,600 lbs and a payload rating of 6,520 lbs. As for the F450 model, it is rated to tow 24,400 lbs.

Chevy has yet to release engine output figures for its Silverado HD model, but at this point that’s pretty much irrelevant as the F350 outshines it in towing and payload by 1,600 lbs and almost 200 lbs respectively."

Ford asked us to Work this Truck HARD; We’re Working this Truck HARD

The 2011 Ford F-Series Super Duty has best-in-class maximum towing and payload capabilities, best-in-class torque and horsepower from both the all-new diesel and gasoline engines, and does it all with best-in-class fuel economy.In an unprecedented customer field work evaluation program, Ford gave pre-production models of the all-new 2011 Ford Super Duty to commercial businesses around the country, months before the truck goes on sale. The trucks are currently being proven, out in the swamps of Florida, the mesas of Wyoming and the construction sites and ranches of Texas.

To test the trucks in extreme real-world conditions, select customers put the new 2011 Super Duty F-250, F-350, F-450 and F-550 to work immediately in the humid swamps of Florida, in the subzero wintry conditions of Wyoming and in the dusty, dry areas of Texas construction sites and ranches.

“As soon as we got this truck, we slapped a 22,000-pound trailer on it and headed for the field,” says a Wyoming-based Well Cementing supervisor. “Ford asked us to work this truck hard, and we’re working this truck hard.

Here’s a sample of what the customers had to say:

“The truck sat in negative weather for several hours, then started right up with no issues.”

“A group of us were standing around the truck, maybe 10 feet away. A guy told me I left my lights on, and I said the truck is still running. He couldn’t believe how quiet it was.”

“I was towing a trailer 311 miles and had to keep checking in the mirror to see if the trailer was still there.”

Chris Brewer, chief engineer of the 2011 Super Duty, said early feedback from these extreme customers confirms the importance of the testing regimen his team has been conducting.

2011 Ford Super Duty

“We’ve tested this truck in every situation imaginable throughout the development process, but nothing can replace these real-world scenarios,” said Brewer. “The initial feedback we’re getting is very encouraging – especially on fuel economy.”

“We’ve never undertaken something this ambitious in the testing of one of our trucks. Sharing preproduction units with customers that do the toughest jobs and showing their unfiltered results underscores the confidence we have in this truck,” said Doug Scott, Ford Truck marketing manager. “We want everyone to see what goes into the development of the 2011 Ford Super Duty.”

The 2011 Super Duty goes on sale this spring. Meanwhile, the 2010 Super Duty – the segment leader in towing with over 24,000-pound capability – continues to dominate the heavy-duty pickup market with 45 percent of the segment in 2009.

Learn more at fordvehicles.com/2011superduty

Mike Rowe and 2009 Durability Test

Watch the Toyota Tundra at 2:20, that box is flying!!

The bed of the Tundra flexed so much that it dug into the back of the cab.