Best Start/Stop - Ever - 2015 Ford F-150 Long-Term Road Test


The Auto Start/Stop system in the 2015 Ford F-150 Lariat SuperCrew is the best I've ever used, to the point where I don't even need to turn it off.
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The Auto Start/Stop system in the 2015 Ford F-150 Lariat SuperCrew is the best I've ever used, to the point where I don't even need to turn it off.
Comments
A car that is specifically designed to recuperate energy during stop-start traffic (like every highway in LA every day). The Prius is the perfect car (notwithstanding a pure electric) for heavy traffic commutes.. Now go tow something, which is what this truck was designed to do.
The Ford 2.7EB with start/stop might well be the best system out there, but it still needs something to make it do what we want, when we want other than reaching across to the center of the dash and pushing a button, which is an extra step and another event one's brain has to switch to while driving and is an added distraction. I was thinking the other day, if there were a way to control whether or not this event occurs at a stop via the amount of brake pressure applied while stopped, that might work better, since, as drivers, we're already using and maintaining the brake. We can learn this more naturally, would be more seamless and less of a distraction. As one eases up to a stop sign or stop light, keep applying light brake pressure to keep the motor running or apply more pressure to shut it off. But what if you're on a steep grade and must maintain alot of pressure to keep from rolling? Well, Ford's already got that covered, as the system doesn't shut off anyway while on a steep grade. Just add the brake switch, and it's fixed.
I'm a one vehicle at a time kind of person, and I've gone back to a pickup truck, because there are just too many situations where I need one. I had a 1989 F150 that was much less capable than my 2015 F150 with the 2.7EB. One-hundred, forty five horsepower/ 260 foot pounds of torque @ 2500 RPM, versus 325/375 @ 3000 RPM, respectively for the 2015. Doing my very best, I could get 17.5 mpg year around in that '89 commuting and other situations where I wasn't working the truck, which was 85% of the time. In this new truck, I'm going to be able to achieve at least 21 mpg on the same type of routes, driving the same way; only with more refinement. That's a 20% improvement in unloaded fuel economy with at least 100% more usable power and capability when I do need it. It's a good thing the industry didn't have the attitude about how saving fuel doesn't matter in pickup trucks.
There is a law of diminishing returns. As a society, it makes more sense for all of us who need and want a pickup truck to have one that makes more use of the fuel that goes in the tank than it does to save maybe 5 mpg in elaborate systems for compact cars that are already fuel efficient. I think there is still alot left on the table for fuel savings in pickup trucks where 2-3 mpg can make a big difference. Trucks could be more tear-drop shaped, trade exterior mirrors for cameras, self-dampening suspension while highway cruising; removable undercarriage shields to allow more air to flow under and around the platforms instead of getting trapped, and retracting wheel well covers. All of this type drag reduction could go a long way at making trucks slide through the air more easily if we could remove some of the redneck styling preferences ingrained in our culture. And then, once trucks are made more slick, we can engineer ways to help diesels pass emissions more economically and put small diesel power trains in them for mpg @ 30 or so. At that point, we're really going to save alot of fuel in this country and help consumers at the pump simultaneously.
You can defeat the system with the push of a button, but you have to push that button every time the engine is started with the key.
I could live with the feature if it would make up its freaking mind, but the constant on-off-on-off-on-off is beyond annoying. I'm going to see if the dealer can shut the thing off permanently. If not, the remaining option is an expensive chip tune. I tried a lighted hitch receiver step that plugs into the trailer wiring, because the START/STOP feature is defeated when the computer detects a trailer, but that just threw constant error codes because the truck senses that the "trailer's" turn signal bulbs are burned out.
If this is the best START/STOP system out then then God help us.
Other than that, I could not love a human baby as much as I love this truck. The 2.7 turbo is BRILLIANT. Amazing. Astounding. Unbelievable. I could go on and on.
Hybrids are a waste of money if most of your driving is on the freeway, especially on flat terrain. You never brake, and therefore never recoup any energy. The batteries are just ballast. The perfect vehicle for the freeway is a DIESEL. Especially one of the "cheater" Volkswagens, because the "cheating" means your freeway fuel economy can easily beat the EPA estimate by 10 mpg. 55-60 on the freeway is standard in a Passat TDI. No hybrid on the planet can touch that.