RE: Ranger Double Cab now offered as two-seater
RE: Ranger Double Cab now offered as two-seater
Monday 13th April

Ranger Double Cab now offered as two-seater

Need a pickup for hauling stuff and not sprogs? Ford has just the truck for you - and your tax return


While it can often seem that the latest breed of pickups serve more as a lifestyle accessory than anything practical, there are definitely still trucks being put to use as actual commercial vehicles. It’s a section of the market that Ford would like a greater share of, so it has created this: the Ranger Double Cab 2-seat Wildtrak. The UK’s best-selling pickup for the past nine years - Wildtrak is said to be ‘by far the most popular’ version with customers - now with more storage located behind its rear doors. Same look, same choice of diesel or plug-in hybrid petrol power, just with half the seats. 

Beyond the obvious storage benefits (it’s a lot easier to keep tools dry in the covered bit of a truck), there’s another advantage to permanently taking out the rear pew and putting a very permanent bulkhead in: the fiscal one. While Ford is understandably keen to point out that it doesn’t provide tax advice, it does highlight that the modifications employed for the 2-seat mean it’s now a truck explicitly engineered for lugging stuff around, so it ought to mean that ‘eligible customers should be able to claim 100% plant and machinery allowance and apply the flat rate company van benefit-in-kind (BiK).’ Which sounds very close to tax advice to us - and obviously at the kernel of the newcomer's appeal.  

To give it its due - and this being a Ford Pro creation, too - there’s a little more to it than just yanking out the seats and closing the doors with a wink. You’ll note the rear windows are gone in place of aluminum panels, and the storage area that’s been created in the absence of the bench is kitted out with anchor points and a heavy-duty floor. So whatever can be squeezed behind the front seats will be absolutely fine, assuming it weighs less than 225kg. And away from prying eyes, perhaps most importantly. Ford reckons the rear is ‘an ideal storage area for toolboxes, dog cages, or anything that fits through the door aperture.’

But that's kind of it. Ford is proud of the Ranger’s versatility, with everything from a diesel manual double cab up to a Raptor in the lineup to cater for buyer demand, so it makes sense to introduce a variant that avoids the crackdown on rear seats while offering more storage space. It makes sense that it will be popular, too: additional versions of the Double Cab 2-seat are going to follow if a Wildtrak is a little too fancy (or not fancy enough) for requirements, so expect prices for this one soon. Ford suggests this ‘testament to our dedication to provide a Ranger for everyone and every use case, and our commitment to keep evolving the Ranger lineup to provide solutions that work hard for our hard-working customers.’ Hard-working taxpayers, take note. 


Author
Discussion

muchacho

Original Poster:

275 posts

159 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
Amazingly sensible.

5lab

1,857 posts

221 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
225kg doesn't seem like much - surely with a bench seat the potential weight was higher than that anyway?

i guess the key thing will be how wide the doors open - if they only go as far as a normal car it'll be fairly hopeless getting bigger tool boxes etc in

CSR Performance

473 posts

13 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
muchacho said:
Amazingly sensible.
Indeed. Although we are still waiting for fold away rear bulkhead and glass like many US trucks seem to have, this does seem like a good step forward.

vikingaero

12,593 posts

194 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
CSR Performance said:
muchacho said:
Amazingly sensible.
Indeed. Although we are still waiting for fold away rear bulkhead and glass like many US trucks seem to have, this does seem like a good step forward.
Buy one, fit rear seats aftermarket and reap the tax/accounting benefits.

Turbobanana

8,059 posts

226 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
Ford Procreation

:snigger:

paulwirral

3,764 posts

160 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
Cab and a half has always been the most sensible option , 1.8 mtr load bed , 4 doors for easy rear access , not quite as spacious in the rear but the extra load bed makes it much more usable , they use to do them years ago , here’s mine
And as I’ve just said on another thread , our local re cycling centre lets this on without permits or booking as it’s 4 seats and 4 doors

Chubbyross

4,909 posts

110 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
I so don’t need one of these but for some inexplicable reason I’d really like to own one.

steveb8188

30 posts

5 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
Chubbyross said:
I so don t need one of these but for some inexplicable reason I d really like to own one.
You're not the only one!

nismo48

6,484 posts

232 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
steveb8188 said:
Chubbyross said:
I so don t need one of these but for some inexplicable reason I d really like to own one.
You're not the only one!
Im with you too smile

Watchthis

560 posts

87 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
Wonder if a rear seat kit will become available on the aftermarket

samj2014

608 posts

137 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
CSR Performance said:
Indeed. Although we are still waiting for fold away rear bulkhead and glass like many US trucks seem to have, this does seem like a good step forward.
Chevy Avalanche is the ONLY truck that has this, as far as I know. It’s definitely not something that’s widely available

Lefty

20,126 posts

227 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
Honestly I’d prefer a king cab


Motormouth88

714 posts

85 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
For as long as they are still fitting the wet belts I’m not interested, shame really as they look smart

ducnick

2,159 posts

268 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
Since they already make other body styles with more practical longer beds, this screams of having trouble trying to sell the 4 door one now the tax breaks are gone. I wonder what the date of manufacture is on these…..

PRO5T

7,071 posts

50 months

Tuesday 14th April
quotequote all
A distinct lack of snooty "driven by roid rage meat heads" type comments-PH is going down hill!

Very handy, I'd want a three seat front bench though like the Defender Hard Top if going that route however.