zzdcar
Home
/
Reviews
/
Buying
/
This Manual Transmission Electric Ford Ranger Has A 30 Mile Range And It's For Sale
This Manual Transmission Electric Ford Ranger Has A 30 Mile Range And It's For Sale-May 2024
2024-02-19 EST 22:09:41

All images: Craigslist unless otherwise stated

Some enterprising individual converted a 1987 manual transmission-equipped into an electric truck, and the resulting golf cart battery-powered Ford mini-truck is for sale right now on Craigslist. Let’s take a look at this lovely creation.

A reader named Austin sent me a to the electric 1987 Ford Ranger you see in these photos. As you might have guessed, Ford did not build an EV Ranger in 1987, so this is a homemade setup, with 16 six-volt lead-acid golf cart batteries wired in series sitting below a custom dump-bed behind the cab, and four more batteries packaged under the hood.

Apparently, whoever converted this truck to electric power was a “very capable older fellow...who did a very professional job both engineering wise and fit and finish,” with the seller describing the quality of the conversion in the listing:

Circuits are labeled on the vehicle and he made a detailed schematic. The bed tilts back in a very ingenious way (hood latches and spring assist) to access 16 of the batteries located under the bed. The other four 6v batteries are in the engine compartment, along with a separate 12v battery which has it’s own on-board 120 dc to 12v dc charger. This battery powers all 12v systems on the vehicle and is thereby charged from the 120v battery system.

Here’s a look at the batteries under the dump bed:

Image for article titled This Manual Transmission Electric Ford Ranger Has A 30 Mile Range And It's For Sale

It looks like a fairly straightforward setup, here. The person simply wired up 20 six-volt batteries using some thick insulated cables, and then used a DC-DC converter to step the resulting 120 volts down to the 12 volts needed to charge the battery that runs the truck’s interior electronics.

Image for article titled This Manual Transmission Electric Ford Ranger Has A 30 Mile Range And It's For Sale

The motor is under the hood where I assume there was once a 2.3-liter four-cylinder engine. Presumably, there there are some custom adapters and brackets holding that motor to the five-speed manual’s bell housing (Note: Home-built EV conversions commonly bolt electric motors to existing manual transmissions, so this isn’t particularly novel) and the the truck’s frame, possibly at the existing motor mount locations.

Image for article titled This Manual Transmission Electric Ford Ranger Has A 30 Mile Range And It's For Sale

This EV Ranger will do 60 mph according to the seller, and though it doesn’t have air conditioning, it does get a heater, though it’s not clear how that’s set up. The fittings in the dashboard through which heater hoses would have gone on the stock Ranger have been replaced with a metal cover that has two small wires or cables passing through it, so it doesn’t appear that someone just replaced the engine with a pump and a resistance heater to feed the under-dash heater core.

As for filling up the battery, the truck comes with this charger that can apparently plug into a house’s 220 volt or 110 volt outlet:

Image for article titled This Manual Transmission Electric Ford Ranger Has A 30 Mile Range And It's For Sale

Range when fully charged, the seller says, is “30+,” but that assumes that the batteries are in good shape (which on this vehicle, they aren’t—the seller says they need to be replaced soon), and that the person behind the wheel engages in “conservative driving.”

The asking price for a Ford Ranger that only manages 30 miles in the best case, needs new batteries, and can do 60 mph but is “not meant for highway travel” is $4,500, and though that seems quite expensive, I suppose if someone needed a truck to haul supplies around their farm, this homebrew EV Ranger might work well.

Image for article titled This Manual Transmission Electric Ford Ranger Has A 30 Mile Range And It's For Sale

Of course, I’d be mad if I wrote about an electric Ranger without mentioning the electric Ranger. Back in the late 1990s, Ford built the Ford Ranger EV, and it was quite an interesting machine, with the early models getting a De Dion Tube rear suspension located laterally by a Watts linkage and sprung by composite leaf springs.

Sending juice to the rear-mounted 90 horsepower AC three-phase induction motor mated to a single-speed reduction were—according to a —39 eight-volt lead-acid battery modules from auto supplier Delphi. Together, those batteries had a capacity of .

Later Rangers—which had traditional steel leaf springs and eschewed the Watts link—had 25 Panasonic Nickel/Metal-Hydride modules. The image below shows that battery cells were packaged in the transmission/driveshaft/exhaust tunnel:

Image: Ford

According to the EPA, the yielded a better MPG equivalent rating of 58 versus the truck’s 47 MPG, though the latter scored a higher range of 55 miles versus 50. According to Southern California Edison, Ford’s estimated range for the lead-acid car was 77 miles, and for the NiMH truck was 90 miles. Ford’s own literature on the Ranger EV breaks down mileage into different types of operating conditions, though I’m not sure about the particularities of these cycles (; I’m not sure about the rest).

Image: Ford

If this 1987 Ranger and even the 1998 Ranger EV tell us anything, it’s that the world has come a long way in terms of battery and EV tech. Thank goodness; these range numbers are sad, and I bet charging time is, too.

Comments
Welcome to zzdcar comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Buying
At $11,500, Will This 1992 BMW 325ic Prove the Ultimate Cruising Machine?
At $11,500, Will This 1992 BMW 325ic Prove the Ultimate Cruising Machine?
The seller of today’s 325ic touts that, after 167,000 miles, the odometer still works. That’s a laudable achievement for any old BMW, but could it make this car worth a low five-figure asking? Last Friday we looked at a that had a pretty good party trick up its sleeve,...
May 5, 2026
Flood-Damaged Cars From California Are About To Hit The Used Market
Flood-Damaged Cars From California Are About To Hit The Used Market
The recent that have hit California have dumped trillions of gallons of water on the state. While that’s , the downside is that all that winter weather and water have caused billions in damages across the state. Included in that number as shows are thousands of flood-damaged cars that...
May 5, 2026
At $99,500, Could This 2015 Porsche 911 Targa 4 be a Party Favorite?
At $99,500, Could This 2015 Porsche 911 Targa 4 be a Party Favorite?
To be the hit of any party, you need to arrive in a car like today’s Porsche Targa and operate its fancy top a few times. Let’s find out what being such the life of the party might effectively cost. One can imagine that if yesterday’s had been a...
May 5, 2026
People Aren’t Leasing Cars, and It’s Killing the Used Market
People Aren’t Leasing Cars, and It’s Killing the Used Market
More and more seem to be foregoing in favor of them outright, according to a new report from . The outlet says that leases made up just 17 percent of the car market in July of 2022. That’s a big drop compared to the 31 percent share leases had...
May 5, 2026
Ford Is Giving $2,500 to Bronco Buyers Who Cancel and Change Their Orders
Ford Is Giving $2,500 to Bronco Buyers Who Cancel and Change Their Orders
Ford’s are forcing the automaker to get creative about . Ford is giving $2,500 in discounts to buyers who agree to cancel their original orders and place new orders on Bronco trims that work around Ford’s current lack of supply. The discount will also apply to different Ford models...
May 5, 2026
Nissan Finally Fixed the Z's Face, But Only For Japan
Nissan Finally Fixed the Z's Face, But Only For Japan
When Nissan brought the to last year’s Tokyo Auto Salon, it teased the world with a one-off wearing a distinctive mug. This was the , with flared arches, orange-and-black paint and, most notably, a grille evoking the rare, homologation-special Fairlady Z432R. Some fans begged Nissan to bring the car...
May 5, 2026
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.zzdcar.com All Rights Reserved