Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Cars
  3. Photo Galleries
  4. News

Ford’s 2017 F-150 Raptor battles Mother Nature with six driving modes

Add as a preferred source on Google

The 2017 Ford F-150 Raptor is certainly testing truck fans’ patience. It was unveiled at the 2015 Detroit Auto Show a year and a half ago, and still won’t go on sale until later this year. To keep the public interested, Ford has been dribbling out teasers and tidbits about the Raptor over that period. The latest deals with the truck’s six driving modes.

Available on everything from the Hyundai Elantra to the Lamborghini Huracán, driving modes electronically change a car’s character by altering the behavior of things like the steering, throttle, and transmission. Different systems vary in effectiveness, but on off-road vehicles like the Raptor, the multiple modes are often set up to deal with different types of terrain. The Raptor’s six modes include Normal, Sport, Weather, Mud/Sand, Baja, and Rock Crawl.

The first three modes deal primarily with on-road driving. Normal is for, er, normal conditions, while Weather adjusts throttle response, shifting, traction control, and the four-wheel system for slippery roads. Sport mode sharpens up the throttle and steering for “spirited on-road driving,” according to Ford, although you probably won’t ever mistake the Raptor for a Shelby GT350 Mustang.

Read more: 2017 Ford F-150 Raptor SuperCrew revealed

Things get more interesting with Mud/Sand mode. This sets the four-wheel drive system to “4 High” and locks the differential, but also puts the steering in its more relaxed “Comfort” mode. All of this is meant to smooth out power delivery and control inputs, which is important for maintaining traction on loose surfaces. Rock Crawl mode resets everything for rocky surfaces, and even activates a front-mounted camera so drivers can see where they’re going.

Finally, Baja mode is designed for high-speed running. Named after the Baja 1000 desert race that was used to test trucks in the past, it lessens traction control’s interference, engages a different throttle map to increase engine responsiveness, and tells the transmission to hold gears longer to keep the engine in its power band. If you ever find yourself being chased by a horde of post-apocalyptic bandits, this is the mode to use.

When it arrives later this year, the Raptor will offer more than just clever software. Its 3.5-liter twin-turbocharged EcoBoost V6 is tipped to make 450 horsepower, and is mated to a 10-speed automatic transmission. Will all of that add up to a killer off-road performance truck? Stay tuned.

Stephen Edelstein
Stephen is a freelance automotive journalist covering all things cars. He likes anything with four wheels, from classic cars…
Grok Voice Mode finally arrives on CarPlay, in case you enjoy talking to a loud-mouth AI in your car
An unfiltered AI assistant, now in your car.
Grok on Apple CarPlay Official

Grok is officially riding shotgun now. xAI has finally brought Grok Voice Mode to Apple CarPlay, meaning drivers can now chat with Elon Musk’s famously unfiltered AI assistant straight from their dashboard. Which is either exciting… or mildly terrifying, depending on how much chaos you want during traffic.

What does Grok Voice Mode on CarPlay actually do?

Read more
Dreame wants to kit you out with a smartphone, a smart ring, and a rocket-powered sports car
The home appliance brand recently showcased its first phones, three AI smart rings, and a vehicle that hits 60 mph in under a second.
Machine, Spoke, Wheel

Dreame Technology, best known for its robot vacuums and other smart home products, has its sights set on becoming your phone maker, wearable brand, and car company. At its DREAME NEXT event in San Francisco last week, the company unveiled two smartphones, three smart rings, and a rocket-powered sports car, pushing into categories it has never competed in before.

Dreame's first smartphones are built around modular hardware

Read more
Samsung reveals sharp stretchable display that’s ready for your car’s dashboard
The 3D-style dashboard prototype expands and changes with driving conditions, hinting at more adaptive displays in future cars
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

Samsung Display has shown a sharper stretchable display that could make future car dashboards more flexible while keeping key driving information clear.

The company is showing Stretchable Display 2.0 at SID Display Week 2026 in Los Angeles, where the demo takes the form of an automotive instrument cluster. The big change is sharpness. The micro LED-based panel reaches 200 PPI, up from the 120 PPI version Samsung Display showed last year, which puts it around the level of current automotive screens.

Read more