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Ford Ranger Photos & Pictures

The Ford Ranger is the compact pickup Ford sold in North America from the 1983 model year through 2011, then revived for 2019 as a midsize truck on the global T6 platform. The original Ranger replaced the Mazda-built Ford Courier as Ford's small pickup and ran across three generations: the 1983-1992 first generation that introduced the Twin-I-Beam front suspension and the Lima four-cylinder and Cologne V6 engines, the 1993-1997 second generation that restyled the body and added the Splash trim, and the long-running 1998-2011 third generation that abandoned the Twin-Traction-Beam four-wheel-drive front end for a short-and-long-arm independent setup and adopted the Duratec 2.3 four and the SOHC 4.0 Cologne V6. Production of the original Ranger ended at the Twin Cities Assembly Plant in Saint Paul, Minnesota on December 16, 2011, and Ford sold no new Ranger in the United States for the 2012 through 2018 model years. The Ranger returned for 2019 with a single turbocharged 2.3 EcoBoost four and a 10-speed automatic, and the redesigned 2024 Ranger added a 2.7 EcoBoost V6 and the first Ranger Raptor with a 3.0 EcoBoost V6.

5,312 photos 273 registered 4 generations

Pick your generation

Each generation page covers what changed year by year, what owners call them, and the wall of registered vehicles.

By model year

The wall

The most-documented Ford Rangers in the registry, every photo by the owner.

1983 Ranger1983 Ranger · T Money0 photos 2002 Ranger2002 Ranger · Andrew J.0 photos “The Purple People Eater”1995 Ranger · James Lynch0 photos “Fordzilla”1987 Ranger · curtis Theriault0 photos “The Edge or Edge”2001 Ranger · Josh Ball0 photos 1994 Ranger1994 Ranger · Bruce Diggs0 photos “ProRunner Extreme”1997 Ranger · Spydur0 photos 1999 Ranger1999 Ranger · Jonathan Browning0 photos “The Edge”2001 Ranger · Josh Ball0 photos 1987 Ranger1987 Ranger · Chris Neher0 photos “beater”1987 Ranger · j s0 photos 1985 Ranger1985 Ranger · adan afsmm0 photos “'92 4x4 XLT”1992 Ranger · Frank Saburit0 photos 2002 Ranger2002 Ranger · Chris Killion0 photos “TELLURIDE”1997 Ranger · Brandon McNally0 photos “The Ranger”1994 Ranger · David Lambert0 photos 1994 Ranger1994 Ranger · Ed K Krentz0 photos “Chuck”2000 Ranger · redneckbrat0 photos “loneranger”2000 Ranger · James Patterson0 photos 1988 Ranger1988 Ranger · tavis roberge0 photos “Turbo red”1988 Ranger · Mike pierro0 photos “Hog”1994 Ranger · Jason Bucy0 photos “KD5NTU”2001 Ranger · Jimmy Shipman0 photos “The little truck that could”1993 Ranger · Josh Wadzinski0 photos “TxSqueeze”2003 Ranger · Brian Watt0 photos 1985 Ranger1985 Ranger · james weber0 photos “Lone Ranger”1993 Ranger · David Carpenter0 photos “Country Boy”1994 Ranger · Dan Roberts0 photos “Ranger”1999 Ranger · Roger Boozel0 photos 1990 Ranger1990 Ranger · Gary Dix0 photos “RAN302”1983 Ranger · JON THOMPSON0 photos 1992 Ranger1992 Ranger · Jason Crenshaw0 photos 1998 Ranger1998 Ranger · John Rotella0 photos

At a glance

  • What it is: Ford's compact pickup in North America from 1983 to 2011, revived as a midsize pickup for 2019
  • Generations: three for the original run (1983-1992, 1993-1997, 1998-2011), then the T6-based return from 2019
  • US hiatus: no new Ranger sold in the United States for the 2012 through 2018 model years
  • Signature engines: 2.0 and 2.3 Lima fours; 2.8, 2.9, and 4.0 Cologne V6s; 3.0 Vulcan V6; the SOHC 4.0 Cologne (from 2001); the 2.3 Duratec four; the 2.3 EcoBoost turbo four (from 2019); the 2.7 and 3.0 EcoBoost V6s (from 2024)
  • Front suspension: Twin-I-Beam (2WD) and Twin-Traction-Beam (4WD) from 1983 through 1997, then a short-and-long-arm independent front from 1998
  • Performance variant: the Ranger Raptor, the first Raptor version of the North American Ranger, arrived for 2024 with the 3.0 EcoBoost V6
  • Final original Ranger: built December 16, 2011 at the Twin Cities Assembly Plant in Saint Paul, Minnesota

Ford Ranger generations at a glance

YearsGenerationKey enginesWhat defines it
1983-1992First generation2.0 and 2.3 Lima I4; 2.8 then 2.9 Cologne V6; 3.0 Vulcan V6; 4.0 Cologne V6 (from 1990); Mazda and Mitsubishi diesels earlyReplaces the Ford Courier; introduces the Twin-I-Beam front end and spawns the Bronco II
1993-1997Second generation2.3 OHC I4; 3.0 Vulcan V6; 4.0 OHV Cologne V6Aerodynamic restyle on a carryover chassis; adds the Splash trim; keeps the Twin-Traction-Beam 4x4 front end
1998-2011Third generation2.5 I4 (through 2001); 2.3 Duratec I4 (from 2001); 3.0 Vulcan V6; 4.0 OHV then 4.0 SOHC Cologne V6 (SOHC from 2001)New frame; replaces the Twin-Traction-Beam 4x4 front with a short-and-long-arm independent setup; runs 14 model years; final unit built December 16, 2011
2012-2018US hiatusnone sold new in the USFord sold the global T6 Ranger overseas but offered no new Ranger in the United States
2019-2026T6-based return2.3 EcoBoost turbo I4 (from 2019); 2.7 EcoBoost V6 and 3.0 EcoBoost V6 (from 2024)Returns to the US as a midsize truck with a 10-speed automatic; the 2024 redesign adds V6 power and the first Ranger Raptor

The Ranger story: compact pickup, US hiatus, and return

The Ford Ranger nameplate began as a trim level on full-size Ford trucks, but as a standalone model the Ranger launched for 1983 as Ford's compact pickup, replacing the Mazda-built Ford Courier. The original Ranger was engineered and built in North America and ran for three generations through 2011. It also provided the platform for the Bronco II compact SUV and later the Ford Explorer. After the 1998-2011 third generation, Ford ended Ranger production in North America when the Twin Cities Assembly Plant in Saint Paul, Minnesota closed on December 16, 2011. For the 2012 through 2018 model years Ford sold no new Ranger in the United States, even as a larger global Ranger, internally the T6, was sold in other markets. Ford brought the Ranger back to the United States for 2019 using a North American adaptation of that global T6 truck, now classed as a midsize pickup rather than a compact.

Engine eras of the Ford Ranger

For its first two decades the Ford Ranger ran Ford's pushrod and overhead-cam compact-truck engines. The four-cylinders came from the Lima family in 2.0 and 2.3 displacements, and the V6s spanned the German-designed Cologne family (2.8, then 2.9, and the 4.0) and the domestic 3.0 Vulcan. The 4.0 Cologne V6 arrived for 1990 in pushrod (OHV) form and was the Ranger's top engine for years. The 1998-2011 third generation modernized the lineup: a 2.3 Duratec four replaced the older 2.5 four during 2001, and the same year the pushrod 4.0 gave way to the SOHC 4.0 Cologne V6 shared with the Ford Explorer, rated up to 207 horsepower. When the Ranger returned for 2019 it dropped V6 and naturally aspirated engines entirely and used only the turbocharged 2.3 EcoBoost four, rated 270 horsepower and 310 lb-ft of torque, paired with a 10-speed automatic. The 2024 redesign brought boosted V6 power back with the 2.7 EcoBoost V6 (315 horsepower) on non-Raptor trucks and the 3.0 EcoBoost V6 (405 horsepower) in the Ranger Raptor.

How the front suspension changed

The Ford Ranger used Ford's Twin-I-Beam independent front suspension on two-wheel-drive models and the related Twin-Traction-Beam (TTB) layout on four-wheel-drive models from 1983 through 1997. Four-wheel-drive Rangers used a Dana 28 TTB front axle early, then a larger Dana 35 TTB after the 4.0 V6 arrived for 1990, and a Dana 35 and 28 hybrid from 1993 to 1997. For the 1998 third-generation redesign Ford abandoned the Twin-Traction-Beam arrangement and switched to a short-and-long-arm (SLA) independent front suspension, with coil springs on conventional two-wheel-drive models and torsion bars on four-wheel-drive models plus some raised two-wheel-drive configurations. The returned 2019 and later Ranger uses a coil-over double-wishbone independent front suspension as part of the global T6 chassis.

The Ranger Raptor and the modern V6 era

When the Ford Ranger returned to the United States for 2019, it was offered only with the 2.3 EcoBoost turbocharged four and a 10-speed automatic, with no manual transmission and no V6. The redesigned 2024 Ranger, built on the updated T6.2 platform, expanded the lineup: buyers could add a 2.7 EcoBoost twin-turbo V6 rated 315 horsepower and 400 lb-ft of torque, and Ford introduced the first Ranger Raptor sold in North America. The 2024 Ranger Raptor uses a 3.0 EcoBoost twin-turbo V6 rated 405 horsepower and 430 lb-ft of torque, with a two-speed transfer case and front and rear locking differentials. This marked the first time a factory high-performance off-road Raptor variant of the Ranger was sold in the United States.

Frequently asked questions

When did the Ford Ranger first appear and when was it discontinued in the US?

The Ford Ranger launched as a compact pickup for the 1983 model year, replacing the Ford Courier. Ford ended North American Ranger production on December 16, 2011 at the Twin Cities Assembly Plant in Saint Paul, Minnesota, and sold no new Ranger in the United States for the 2012 through 2018 model years.

When did the Ford Ranger return to the US?

The Ford Ranger returned to the United States for the 2019 model year as a midsize pickup based on the global T6 platform, after a US absence covering the 2012 through 2018 model years. The 2019 Ranger used a single 2.3 EcoBoost turbocharged four and a 10-speed automatic.

What engines did the original Ford Ranger use?

The original 1983-2011 Ford Ranger used the 2.0 and 2.3 Lima four-cylinders, the 2.8 and later 2.9 Cologne V6, the 3.0 Vulcan V6, and the 4.0 Cologne V6 in pushrod form from 1990 and SOHC form from 2001. Early first-generation trucks also offered Mazda-sourced and Mitsubishi-sourced diesels. The third generation added the 2.3 Duratec four during 2001.

Did the Ford Ranger 4x4 use the Twin-Traction-Beam suspension?

Yes. Four-wheel-drive Ford Rangers used the Twin-Traction-Beam (TTB) independent front suspension from 1983 through 1997, with two-wheel-drive trucks using the related Twin-I-Beam layout. The 1998 third-generation redesign replaced the TTB with a short-and-long-arm independent front suspension.

What is the Ford Ranger Raptor and when did it reach the US?

The Ford Ranger Raptor is the high-performance off-road version of the Ranger. The first Ranger Raptor sold in North America arrived for the 2024 model year with a 3.0 EcoBoost twin-turbo V6 rated 405 horsepower and 430 lb-ft of torque, alongside a redesigned Ranger that also offered a 2.7 EcoBoost V6.

Sources

  • Ford factory specification sheets and shop manuals for the 1983-2011 and 2019-present Ranger
  • Wikipedia, Ford Ranger (Americas)
  • The Ranger Station, engine and front-suspension generation histories
  • Twin Cities Assembly Plant production records (final Ranger, December 16, 2011)
  • Ford press materials for the 2019 Ranger return and the 2024 Ranger and Ranger Raptor

Asked all the time

When did the Ford Ranger first appear and when was it discontinued in the US?

The Ford Ranger launched as a compact pickup for the 1983 model year, replacing the Ford Courier. Ford ended North American Ranger production on December 16, 2011 at the Twin Cities Assembly Plant in Saint Paul, Minnesota, and sold no new Ranger in the United States for the 2012 through 2018 model years.

When did the Ford Ranger return to the US?

The Ford Ranger returned to the United States for the 2019 model year as a midsize pickup based on the global T6 platform, after a US absence covering the 2012 through 2018 model years. The 2019 Ranger used a single 2.3 EcoBoost turbocharged four and a 10-speed automatic.

What engines did the original Ford Ranger use?

The original 1983-2011 Ford Ranger used the 2.0 and 2.3 Lima four-cylinders, the 2.8 and later 2.9 Cologne V6, the 3.0 Vulcan V6, and the 4.0 Cologne V6 in pushrod form from 1990 and SOHC form from 2001. Early first-generation trucks also offered Mazda-sourced and Mitsubishi-sourced diesels. The third generation added the 2.3 Duratec four during 2001.

Did the Ford Ranger 4x4 use the Twin-Traction-Beam suspension?

Yes. Four-wheel-drive Ford Rangers used the Twin-Traction-Beam (TTB) independent front suspension from 1983 through 1997, with two-wheel-drive trucks using the related Twin-I-Beam layout. The 1998 third-generation redesign replaced the TTB with a short-and-long-arm independent front suspension.

What is the Ford Ranger Raptor and when did it reach the US?

The Ford Ranger Raptor is the high-performance off-road version of the Ranger. The first Ranger Raptor sold in North America arrived for the 2024 model year with a 3.0 EcoBoost twin-turbo V6 rated 405 horsepower and 430 lb-ft of torque, alongside a redesigned Ranger that also offered a 2.7 EcoBoost V6.