Home » Fight Me: The Ranger-Based ‘II’ Was The Best Ford Bronco Ever

Fight Me: The Ranger-Based ‘II’ Was The Best Ford Bronco Ever

Bronco Ii Flippin Great Ts

The charts speak for themselves: the revived-for-2021 Bronco has been an absolute sales smash success. Created as a straight-on competitor for Jeep’s Wrangler, it’s become a formidable challenger for the descendant of that World War II legend. However, is such a giant-tire-clad and wide-tracked product really a true spiritual successor to the original 1966 Bronco? I would have to say no; it’s way too big, too flashy, and too expensive.

There was, however, once a Bronco sized within inches of each dimension of the first one that offered a more comfortable and usable daily driving experience of the 1966 first generation without losing any of the capability or economies of that legend. Unfortunately, that similarity to the original might have helped make it one of the most notorious Fords ever. Still, that’s not the fault of the product so much as how it ended up typically being used; certainly, it shouldn’t take away from the fact that the 1984-90 might actually be the greatest Bronco of all time.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

From The O.G. To The O.J.

The idea of a vehicle like the Jeep CJ that offered more user-friendly features like the witchcraft of actual doors and roll-up windows was not a new thing in 1966; admittedly, the International Scout was there first. However, Ford was the first Big Three member to actually produce such an entry with the legendary first-generation Bronco. With a size between a CJ-5 and the Scout, it was ideal for serious off-road duty but could also be used as daily transportation if you were willing to deal with the shortcomings of the design for such tasks.

Ford Bronco 1966 1280 B913cd5e159eaeab7a701bc990b8e9182f
source: Ford

The Bronco sold relatively well at first, but the introduction of Chevy’s full-size, truck-based Blazer, along with Jeep’s two-door Cherokee, started to eat into Ford’s market rather quickly. Eventually, Dodge entered the game with a large Ramcharger, and even the Scout got “upsized” to the point that a relatively unchanged-from-1966 Bronco was very much out of contention in 1977.

Ford made the inevitable decision to follow the other Big Three brands and base the new 1978 Bronco on a shortened F-series truck body and chassis.

Bronco 2 2 6 7
source: Ford

This continued when the 1980 “Bullnose” trucks were introduced and Ford gave us the new, also large Bronco.

Bronco 3 2 6 7
source: Ford

Of course, this “O.J.” Bronco was launched just as the effects of the 1979 oil crisis were really setting in, with doubling fuel costs, high interest rates, and inflation that made owning a giant V8-powered utility vehicle a bit of a liability. Ford’s smaller truck offering at the time was simply a rebranded Mazda pickup, so it was clear that Ford needed to come up with something internally that was easier on owners at the pump: a little Bronco that brought the harkened back to the past.

Yummy Yuma

Ford Ranger Na 1986 Pictures 1
source: Ford

Ford knew that a home-grown solution was going to be required to complement the big F-series and began what was called “Project Yuma” in 1976. Conceived to be smaller and more efficient, the design parameters of the little truck still required it to carry four-foot-wide items in the bed. With Ford’s financial struggles in 1980 and the need to recoup the cost of the “Bullnose” redesign, “Project Yuma” was almost cancelled. President Donald Petersen persevered, knowing the importance of the project in the current economy as well as the fact that GM was developing its own domestic compact truck. Released in January of 1982 as a 1983 model called the Ranger, the plan for the immediate future included a Bronco based on a shortened version of the new little truck.

Again, Ford needed something to combat Chevy and GMC’s new two-door SUV versions of their S-10 and S-15 models, which complemented their full-sized Blazer and Jimmy. The product Ford launched in March of ’83 was over a foot shorter than the “Bullnose” Bronco; even the new S-10 Blazer was over six inches longer.

Bronco Ii Brown 1 3 11
source: Ford

Even more stunning was the width of what would be called the Bronco II, which was almost a foot narrower than the full-sized model. This meant that the new little Bronco was almost identical in size to the 1966 and could go through all of the tight places that the original could. It also meant something else that wasn’t quite as good that we’ll get to shortly.

If the S-10 Blazer cut a rather slick profile, the Bronco II was all business and bore a strong resemblance to its big brothers. The only real concession to unique and even frivolous styling was the cool rear quarter windows that radius curved into the roof.

Brocno Ii Rear 3 11
source: Ford

One of our commenters (nlplt) just pointed out that on very early ones you could actually remove those rear quarter windows!

Brondo Window 3 3 11
source: Ford

Bronco Illo

Bronco Window 2 3 11
source: Ford
Bronoc Window 1 3 11
source: Ford

Also, Ford offered plenty of period paint and stripe packages to spice up this rather utilitarian ride. You can’t get much cooler than a glorious brown with tan stripes, can you?

Bronco Ii Brown 3 3 11
source: Ford

Unlike the Ranger and the GM competitors, you couldn’t get a Bronco II with a four cylinder; only Cologne V6 engines were available for the duration of the production run. This meant even in standard form, the Bronco II was sold as the best choice for those who like to tow.

Brocno Ii Tow 3 11
source: Ford

One important note: many sources that I read stated that the Mitsubishi 4D55T turbodiesel found in the Ranger was available in the Bronco II for 1986 and 87. I see nothing stated in any brochure or technical information that this was ever on the options list, and I couldn’t find any evidence of these ever existing: if they really were a thing, and you have one, I’d like to hear about it in the comments. Please.

Also, Bronco IIs were only sold as 4WD at the beginning, but gained a 2WD version later. Funny detail: the transfer case was still in place on rear drive models, and the hole where the front driveshaft would have attached was simply sealed!

While Jeep XJ Cherokees gave you a solid axle up front and S-10 Blazers a more conventional independent front suspension, the Bronco II got a scaled-down version of Ford’s famed “Twin I Beam” independent system that was prized for ostensibly offering the benefits of both.

Twin I Beam 3 11

Interiors ran from basic up to fancy donut-hole headrest versions to the luxurious, later Eddie Bauer-branded models.

Bronco Ii Interior 3 11
source: Ford

For such a small vehicle, the Bronco II offered great cargo space, with folding rear seats that had pivot-forward cushions to allow for a flat floor. There’s also a plethora of storage bins inside.

Bronco Ii Cargo 3 11
source: Ford

Bronco IIs compared well in this expanding market of the early eighties:

For 1989, the Bronco II got a refresh along with the Ranger, but the basic truck stayed pretty much the same otherwise.

1990 Bronco Ii 3 11
source: Ford

Sales were strong, and unlike the original Bronco the new Bronco II found a lot more buyers. In fact, they found a lot of new customers that had never owned or even driven a tall Jeep-like SUV before. This would turn out to be a blessing but also a very, very big curse.

II Tall IV The Street

Everyone driving an SUV today will see the cartoon on the sun visor of a vehicle doing Joie Chitwood-style driving on two wheels stunts to warn that you are not driving a car; you’re in something with a high center of gravity. We tend to ignore these stickers since most current products have been carefully developed to lower their propensity to tip over during hard cornering. That’s because their manufactures know that if drivers of traditional cars ignore these warnings they’ll end up in hot water like one car brand did with a certain early SUV. That brand was Ford; the SUV in question was the Bronco II.

With early Jeeps and that 1966 Bronco, most buyers knew they were driving an off-road machine that, if they knew the limitations, could be safely used on the road. For the Bronco II, brochure shots like below show that Ford was absolutely not targeting these types of hard-core outdoorsman.

Bronco Ii Blue 3 11
source: Ford

In his book Why Lawsuits Are Good For America: Disciplined Democracy, Big Business, And The Common Law, author Carl Bogus claims that Ford was aware of these issues during development Bronco II but did not want to delay the launch and let the S-10 Blazer have the market to itself. In 1987, Detroit news said that year there were 43 deaths attributed to Bronco II rollovers versus only 8 in the also-tipsy Suzuki Samurai; however, the NHTSA investigated and found that Bronco II was no more prone to rollovers than any other SUV (also remember that there were a lot more Bronco IIs out there than Suzukis).

Despite this, the damage was done. Ford’s claim that essentially all of these rollover fatalities were based on driver error was likely true, but considering they were marketing this purpose built off roading machine as a family car seemed to bite them. Their argument certainly didn’t work in court; by the year 2000 Ford had paid out nearly $2.4 billion in damages related to Bronco II rollovers.

Bronco Ii Red 3 11
source: Ford

Much of this controversy affected the Bronco after it left production to be replaced by the Explorer in late 1990. Over 600,000 found homes over the production run, but the poor reputation meant that the attrition rate was high. That doesn’t mean you can’t find them if you look.

Pocket-Size SUV For Pocket Change

As a GenXer I can remember when these “II”s were essentially everywhere, but the passage of time, hard use and depressed values from the rollover reputation making even moderate repairs uneconomical has decimated the supply. The remaining good ones, you would imagine, are prized by collectors and fans of “real” off road machinery. You would imagine wrong.

Here’s a really nice 1988 model in one of Ford’s signature Bronco II two-tone combinations.

Bronco Ii For Sale 3 11 2
Bring A Trailer

I sure miss the kicking Bronco logo that they removed from sides of later models.

Bronco Ii For Sale 3 11
Bring A Trailer

This one even has the desirable manual five speed on the floor.

Bronco Ii For Sale Interior 3 11
Bring A Trailer

Like many later version, this one is loaded up with options like power windows and locks.

Bronoco Ii For Sale Inteiror 2 3 11
Bring A Trailer

The rear seat is cozy to be sure but still better than a Wrangler, and look at all of that glass!

Bronco Ii Rear Seat 3 11
Bring A Trailer

Early models had rather crude 4WD shifting systems, but by the time this one was built, you got a high-tech ceiling-mounted pushbutton control for the drive system.

Bronco Ii Switches 3 11
Bring A Trailer

The 1986-on 2.9 liter version of the Cologne V6 was known for its durability even if the 140 horsepower is hardly massive output.

Bronco Ii Engine 3 11
Bring A Trailer

How much for this highly usable and more practical alternative to a Wrangler? How about $9,000? Looking at Bring A Trailer, most really good examples sell for mid-teens at best, with a lot of great deals in the four-figure range. Mitsubishi Mirage (used Mirage at that) money for a tough little four-wheeler? Are you kidding?

You Want To Spend Five Times As Much On A Not-As-Good ’66?

That new 2026 Bronco might look a lot like the 1966, but it couldn’t be further from the principals of the original SUV. It’s oversized and heavy where the first one was lean and lightweight, it’s an honest design where the new one is almost overblown with massive fenders and rolling stock. Not only is the Bronco II almost identical in size to the 1966 Bronco, its compact, functional purity makes it the true spiritual successor the legendary first generation. It takes all of the qualities of its forebearer and adds more comfort without compromising useability. It might bite if you try to make it do things it wasn’t designed to do, but you wouldn’t tickle a grizzly bear either, would you?

Brocno Ii Dust 3 11
source: Ford

Ultimately, Ford ended up with a product that gets lumped in with the Pinto simply because the brand launched a purpose-built machine with outstanding overlanding qualities and sold it to people who didn’t know what to do with it. Does that make it a bad product? Absolutely not. In fact, these qualities could make the Bronco II the best Bronco ever. Even if they don’t, I’m certain that it deserves a lot more of our respect than we ever give it; hopefully that changes before they’re all gone.

Top graphic image: Ford

 

 

 

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FunkyTrunks
Member
FunkyTrunks
6 days ago

I just bought a GMT800 Z71 Tahoe recently, and while it’s clean, comfy, and surely at least decently capable, part of me wishes I’d have held out for something small and utilitarian like this. I really like the boxy look and smaller size for my four-wheeling needs.

KevinB
KevinB
6 days ago

Here’s a better idea: Take this vehicle, already with a very basic suspension meant for a small, light duty pickup, add four doors, more weight, a V8 engine, and ignore the tire manufacturer’s requirements for inflation, and call it “The Explorer”. What could possibly go wrong?

Pat Rich
Pat Rich
6 days ago

cool, cool…but have you driven one? They are pretty terrible.

Piston Slap Yo Mama
Member
Piston Slap Yo Mama
6 days ago

As a kid I thought they were awkwardly proportioned. As an adult, I love them. Here’s the world’s nicest Bronco II – in Dusseldorf Germany of all places. This is the Classic Remise, a world class repository of the greatest cars known to humanity. Finding one there is indicative of … something.

Last edited 6 days ago by Piston Slap Yo Mama
Allen Lloyd
Allen Lloyd
6 days ago

These are the poster child for the Montana car effect. That effect is temps so cold they do not use salt on the roads. So when I moved here from Ohio, I was shocked that these vehicles that rusted to death were everywhere and relatively rust free. There is a black and gold Bronco II in town that I would love to buy and find an old black and gold lotus to pull behind it.

*Jason*
*Jason*
4 days ago
Reply to  Allen Lloyd

I grew up in Michigan and my parents are still there. Every time my parents visit my dad can’t stop pointing out on the all the old but rust free cars and trucks driving around town.

Amazing what not wasting billions to dump salt on the road does more vehicle longevity.

Nlpnt
Member
Nlpnt
6 days ago

Fun fact: those panoramic windows were meant to be removable, an option that the plug was pulled on almost as soon as production started, presumably due to liability concerns. At least one example survives; Bronco II “The Unicorn” – YouTube

Likewise, GM offered a sliding side window option for the Blazer which stayed in production but the take rate was low.
DT gets the bragging rights here, it was AMC/Jeep’s solution for rear passenger ventilation that the public went for – four doors with wind-down windows. The take rate for that on XJ Cherokees was not low.

986istheanswer
Member
986istheanswer
6 days ago

Having owned both back in the early 90’s this is a bad take.

My 1990 Green Bronco XLT is the one car I sold that I still wish I had. That Bronco II I owned before it can rust in hell.

Squirrelmaster
Member
Squirrelmaster
6 days ago

I like the Bronco II, but I would argue the first gen Explorer is better. Granted, it dropped the Bronco name, but it refined everything the Bronco II was and fixed a lot (but not all) of the issues the Bronco II had.

PBL
PBL
3 days ago
Reply to  Squirrelmaster

I had one of the earliest Explorers (4-door, 5-speed) and it was vastly better than the Bronco II, at least on the road. Of course, it was a much different size class. Even the 2-door Explorer was a much longer and heavier vehicle.

Squirrelmaster
Member
Squirrelmaster
2 days ago
Reply to  PBL

Mostly true. The Explorer was only slightly wider, by like 1-2″, but it did have an 8″ or so longer wheelbase (2-door, I think the 4-door was like 18″) to try to stabilize the handling more. I do think the extra 200lbs the 2-door Explorer carried were worth it to get an 8.8″ rear axle instead of the 7.5″ the Bronco II had.

Madison B
Madison B
6 days ago

My first ride was an ’87 in two-tone burgundy/silver. A lot of great memories in that ‘ole B2 (I lost my V in the back)…I got rid of it in college when I didn’t know any better..
Fast forward to 2022 I did the online deep dive and found a 4wd ’88 3hrs away in Lexington NC…with the help of a friend I towed it back to Wilmington, and with the constant help of one of your fellow columnists (Stephen Gossin) I got her road worthy again. A LOT of hours and parts put into her, but she runs great; the old Cologne V6 has never failed (knock on wood).
An over-engineered and comically underpowered machine that I love, rust warts and all.
As far as mid-life crisises go, this one is a win.

Stephen Walter Gossin
Stephen Walter Gossin
5 days ago
Reply to  Madison B

Madison is one of my closest friends; a truly great dude with incredible talent on guitar and an excellent taste in cars.

We’re super glad and lucky to have him here in the Comments and as a fellow Autopian here in our little car culture community!

Last edited 5 days ago by Stephen Walter Gossin
Cheap Bastard
Member
Cheap Bastard
6 days ago

One of my friends in HS had one of these. I remember liking it very much, it was comfy, quiet and had that cool overhead 4×4 button for Tahoe snow.

Autojunkie
Autojunkie
6 days ago

I cannot and will not disagree with you, sir. It was indeed the perfect little truck and quite possibly even the best Bronco. I didn’t think that way at the time it was new, but my mind changed based on the SUV explosion in the decades since and how the midsize Explorer grew into some oversized station wagon.
If this could have remained in production, did not grow at all in size, and was eventually offered with an open top option, the Bronco II would have been nothing short of a decades-long success story as it morphed into just being the Bronco.

TDI_FTW
Member
TDI_FTW
6 days ago

Bronco II couldn’t remove the top therefore I reject this premise.

Madison B
Madison B
6 days ago
Reply to  TDI_FTW

There was a verrry short run of ’84s that you could remove the back glass, but I think only one exists (the unicorn)

Speedway Sammy
Speedway Sammy
6 days ago

S-10 and Ranger were both nice platforms. At least Ford was smart enough to bring out the Maverick and Bronco Sport which have done well. I think Tesla would have found success with a pickup on the Y platform instead of the cartoonish Cybertruk.

ImissmyoldScout
Member
ImissmyoldScout
6 days ago

Brother had an ’89 XLT with the 5-speed MT. I thought it was one of the coolest things ever back then, and I have a saved search on E-bay that I will occasionally peruse just to see what’s out there. My ony beef with them were the ones with the red interior. I do not like the red interior.

Johnny Ohio
Member
Johnny Ohio
6 days ago

I don’t think I remember the rollover stories about these but that may be because I was a bit too young. My babysitter drove a red on red one and I liked it. Funny how even the Explorer had rollover issues as well with the Firestone tire debacle.

Arch Duke Maxyenko
Member
Arch Duke Maxyenko
6 days ago

It’s 1983 Ford launches a Bronco based on the Ranger
It’s 2021 Ford launches a Bronco based on the Ranger

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
6 days ago

Almost bought one of the early models ten years ago, the biggest thing holding me back was the early 80s level of safety.

It would have been a family car, and at the point my kids were still in LATCH seats. Additionally it had only lap belts in the rear, and the low-back no headrest seats gave me visions of broken necks in slightly older kids if rear-ended.

Honestly, I LIKE the idea of these things much more than the reality of them, and I still wouldn’t put my now teenage sons in one.

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
6 days ago

In a lot of ways, it was the Bronco Sport of its day.

A classmate in high school had the exact one in the top shot (that color combo was everywhere back then) and I often rode to school in it. Given teenage driving and most people’s unfamiliarity with truck dynamics (that’s what these things were often referred to back then…”SUV” wouldn’t be coined until a decade later), I’m now fairly mystified that we never went over.

Ishkabibbel
Member
Ishkabibbel
6 days ago

As the former owner of one of these unfettered pieces of horse $&!+ (an insult to the good name of horse $&!+, in fact), please consider me throwing down right now.

I’ll grant you that these seemed great on paper, but the build was trash. I knew what day of the month it was because mine failed every month on or about the 15th of the month. Among the many, many failures:

The frame was riveted together and some of the rivets rusted through
The rear hatch hinge failed due to rust so I couldn’t close the door
The starter self loosened and chewed the ring gear off the flywheel
The heater core failed and it somehow spewed antifreeze up onto the windshield
The shift linkage came apart while driving, making finding a gear a guessing game

And that’s not mentioning “ordinary” failures like the radio giving up, leaking valve covers, and the standard Ford rust all around the bottom and under the mirror mounts.

The only thing I will say for it is that it didn’t roll over – and I came “I need a clean pair of shorts” close to it at least once.

The funniest thing? I sold it to a guy who claimed to be a Lincoln engineer at the time the BII was created.

I wouldn’t own another one of these if all I needed was a boat anchor.

Last edited 6 days ago by Ishkabibbel
Littlebag
Member
Littlebag
6 days ago
Reply to  Ishkabibbel

Counterpoint: I loved mine. It never let me down whether I was commuting to work or driving across the country with all of my earthly possessions inside. I only let it go when my life came to a place where a two door wasn’t really viable anymore. Maybe I was lucky or you got a lemon.

Now that my days of being dad-cabby are coming to a close I might get a 2 door NuBronco before they stop making the manual.

Frank Wrench
Frank Wrench
5 days ago
Reply to  Ishkabibbel

I miss my 87 Ranger 2WD, V6, 5 speed, long bed. I’ll agree with you on the following: leaking valve covers, and the standard Ford rust all around the bottom and under the mirror mounts.

Also, the paint flaked off like dried onion skin.

But it was a great truck otherwise.

Palmetto Ranger
Palmetto Ranger
6 days ago

They look great. I also know two people who rolled theirs over.

George Danvers
George Danvers
6 days ago

Awesome interior colors. The good ol’ days.

Bronco2CombustionBoogaloo
Bronco2CombustionBoogaloo
6 days ago

I drive one every day as my winter wheels, and for what it’s worth, I get thumbs-up and compliments from strangers almost every time I take it out. It just has a friendly vibe. That being said, the driving dynamics are what I would call “agricultural”.

Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
Member
Carbon Fiber Sasquatch
6 days ago

I wouldn’t DD one but for the price, I would be glad to put one in my driveway. The 80’s trucks do have a fantastic look to them

Lori Hille
Member
Lori Hille
6 days ago

They look like a big Bronco that shrunk in the dryer. You do point out some benefits. Would it be too heavy to tow behind an RV?

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
6 days ago

I always felt these got undeserved hate. I’ve always liked the styling.

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