Ford did not need to make the Raptor any better. Since the launch of the first-generation truck way back in 2009, it has competed in a class of one鈥攖he only high-performance off-road pickup. So聽it鈥檚 a testament to the special place this special vehicle occupies in Ford鈥檚 imagination that the company decided to add two key driver-aid technologies to it for 2019.聽
The first is something Ford has dubbed Live Valve Technology,聽which adds continuously adaptive adjustment to the compression-damping valve in the truck鈥檚 shocks. Basically, the Raptor鈥檚 computers monitor parameters like throttle, brake, and steering inputs, as well as the truck鈥檚 degree of yaw, relative wheel speeds, and suspension position, adjusting聽the rate at which the suspension compresses accordingly. This is designed to increase both on-road handling聽and off-road control and comfort.聽

The second technology is Trail Control,聽which Ford is billing as 鈥渃ruise control for low-speed, rugged terrain.鈥 It can be set in half-mile-per-hour increments of up to 20 miles per hour聽and frees聽the driver to focus only on steering聽by totally taking over braking and acceleration through challenging off-road obstacles. If you鈥檝e ever used electronic hill-descent control, it works kind of like that, only聽now it鈥檒l take you uphill, too.聽

Other changes to the truck are minimal. There鈥檚 more prominent Ford聽lettering on the tailgate, a much tackier optional sticker package, and the addition of optional front seats designed by Recaro (a high-end聽orthopedic seat maker), which are pretty comfy. Fitted with the same 450-horsepower, 510-pound-foot, twin-turbocharged V6 and the same incredible 10-speed automatic transmission, as well as the widened track, unique body, and expensive Fox 3.0 internal bypass shocks, this very much remains the same second-generation Raptor that I hammered through the desert in with Robert Young Pelton a couple of years back. Just聽now聽it鈥檚 a little easier to drive.聽

Taking over control of the shocks鈥 rate of compression enables Ford to do some聽neat things. Through on-road corners, the Raptor鈥檚 outside shocks now stiffen, helping it more strongly resist a body roll. In the air, the shocks can detect that you鈥檙e jumping. This prompts them to dial up compression damping to max, preventing聽them from bottoming out during hard landings. These adjustments are taking place constantly and subtly as you drive聽and also respond聽to much more mundane conditions like simple bumps. You won鈥檛 notice that the adjustments are taking place, but you鈥檒l likely聽note聽that you may be cornering a little bit flatter than before聽or that a section of pesky washboard feels a little bit smoother.聽
Live Valve also adds another parameter that the Raptor鈥檚 Terrain Management System can control. With the TMS, drivers are able to tell the truck the聽kind of driving they鈥檙e doing, and it then takes control of the four-wheel-drive system, locking rear differential, throttle response, transmission shift programming, and the traction and stability-control systems to suit. All that helps give the truck an impressively diverse array of capabilities聽and makes controlling the wide array of systems incredibly simple for the driver. The Raptor remains as impressively luxurious on the highway聽as it does phenomenally fast off-road.聽

That the truck is so good everywhere is also possibly its biggest flaw. Car journalists attending the launch event in Utah complained that they couldn鈥檛 feel a difference in the revised truck鈥檚聽suspension, but I also watched those same journalists repeatedly stick the landings on their first-ever vehicle jumps without effort or drama. And they were able to complete a full day of driving through technical off-road terrain without feeling jostled, uncomfortable, or wary.聽
The聽unflappable confidence that the Raptor grants even inexperienced off-roaders combines problematically with its immense turn of speed. Off-road, conditions change rapidly聽and are the product of nature鈥檚 chaos聽rather than the intentional safety of a road or track. Learning to identify the types of obstacles a vehicle can handle, and the correct way to address all of them, will only ever be the product of considerable experience, but compared to other vehicles, the Raptor asks its drivers to identify and address those obstacles at 100 mph聽rather than ten, with predictably severe results. Ford includes the cost of its high-performance off-road driving school in Utah with聽the purchase of all new Raptors鈥攁nd buyers should consider attendance to be mandatory.聽
That dilemma also leads us to Trail Control. Jumps and slides and whatnot look good in photos, but off-road driving聽is primarily an exercise in managing traction. To climb over a large rock, for instance, you need to accelerate over it from a dead stop with enough force to drive your wheels up and over the rock聽but with enough control that you don鈥檛 just spin those wheels. Four-wheel drive and locking diffs help there, but managing traction in truly challenging circumstances can still be a case for聽using the brake and throttle pedals simultaneously, all while trying to see stuff that鈥檚 going on where your vision is blocked by the vehicle, and steering accordingly. If that sounds like rubbing your tummy while patting your head鈥攁nd wearing a blindfold鈥攜ou鈥檙e not wrong. And that鈥檚 what Trail Control helps handle. You simply dial in a safe speed, then you鈥檙e free to focus on steering聽while throttling聽and braking are handled for you. Trail Control will maintain that speed up or downhill (or even on level聽terrain),聽and it鈥檚 able to find more traction than you ever could,聽by individually applying the brakes across all four wheels to limit wheelspin.聽

In action,聽Trail Control can feel alien. As with all autonomous driver aids, decision-making is handled by an entity other than yourself, and can leave聽you feeling a bit like a back-seat driver, second-guessing someone else鈥檚 choices. In particular I found the Trail Control鈥檚 stop-start approach to be divergent from my own preference of聽simply throttling over whatever鈥檚 in the way, but I can鈥檛 argue that the vehicle鈥檚 choices are safer than my own聽and probably also more effective. This feature will likely be much more useful for聽people tackling difficult trails for the first time, and it should provide a measurable increase in both safety聽and ability in those conditions. It can also take the guesswork out of getting unstuck, which should be another major confidence booster for people venturing way out there for the first time.聽
Together, Live Valve and Trail Control probably don鈥檛 add any extra speed to the super truck鈥攁nd that speed sells the Raptor. But聽by offering drivers聽a solid dose of control and confidence, Ford has actually done a really good job at making the Raptor a friendlier vehicle that will be more accessible聽to a wider range of drivers.聽