SubaruRaptor
Well-Known Member
The issue is not the shape of the shifter, its the tactile feel of progressing through the gears and everyone agrees its fine 90% of the time, but in situations where you need to act quickly, the notches are not prominent enough to avoid shifting into the wrong gear. This is going to be exaggerated a bit by most reviewers because they are constantly using new/different/unique shifting mechanism per car per week. The majority of folks are going to get to use to it quickly and it wont be an issue.I didn't even make it halfway through the written review, but having watched the ZR2 vs RRaptor review previously I didn't expect much from them. I was used to the shifter within one test drive, it really isn't hard to figure it out. Maybe I'm just used to non-traditional shifters from daily driving a 2014 Grand Cherokee and an Audi A6 over the years. Or maybe its Maybeline
I can't comment on offroad performance since the dealer wouldn't let me hoon on my test drive, but the pothole filled Louisiana roads I was on felt way better in the RRaptor than the ZR2 Colorado that I test drove.
My favorite line in it was that the only "Raptor" part of the Ranger Raptor was how pillowy the ride was on the road. Like, what? Did they hit their heads before they started writing that article?
I would agree with them, that overall there isnt too much that makes the Ranger Raptor a Raptor besides the decals and suspension and its faster. if you look at the F-150 Raptor vs non Raptor, you have various upgrades across the board in the amenities department which distinguish it more. The Ranger shares a lot with its other trims, so the Raptor portion just comes down to the fact its fully loaded and then a few extra on top, is the point they are making with it.
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