The 2001 Ford F-150 SuperCrew Opened The Floodgates For 4-Door Trucks

No other pickup truck popularized double cabs as much as the tenth-generation Ford F-150.

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The Ford F-150 was the best-selling vehicle in America last year and the year before that. And the year before that. You’d have to go back decades to find a year that the F-150 didn’t dominate sales in one way or another, but America’s love affair with four-door trucks took off in the early aughts, when Ford debuted the first full-size pickup with four doors in 2000 — much to my chagrin.

I’m kidding. I was a fan of the 2001 Ford F-150 SuperCrew because it looked like my family’s F-150 SuperCab (or extended cab) but with four doors and a stubby little bed. Even though four-door trucks had been around before the new millennium, Ford got away with calling the F-150 the “first” full-size (half-ton) double cab due to its weight rating and its front-hinged rear doors, as Car And Driver wrote upon the truck’s release:

In fact, the company unabashedly attaches that exact word —”first” —to the new F-150 SuperCrew, even though Nissan’s Frontier crew cab and the Dodge Dakota Quad Cab rolled onto the scene a bit earlier. How can this be? Simple. The F-150 SuperCrew is the first full-size crew cab with a gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of less than 8500 pounds. See? The Dakota crowds F-150 turf, both in power and work ethic, but it’s just small enough to qualify as a compact.

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Be that as it may, the key to the F-150 SuperCrew —ditto for the Frontier crew cab and Dakota Quad Cab —is simple: To accommodate the extra set of sedan-style doors, the cab was stretched. And to keep overall length in check, the cargo box —sheet steel inside, composite outside, an industry first —was shortened.

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The C&D review of the revolutionary F-150 SuperCrew goes on to explain that Ford’s “traditional” crew cab was the F-Series Super Duty, or F-350, which differed from Ford’s light duty trucks in meaningful ways, such as handling. Before the F-150 SuperCrew, driving a full-size truck with four doors meant moving around a much larger and unwieldy vehicle. Kind of like today.

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The 2001 F-150 SuperCrew got around this by extending its cab length by one foot, and reducing its bed length by 11.6 inches to yield a truck with the same 138.5-inch wheelbase as the F-150 SuperCab. You could haul more people, albeit less cargo in the SuperCrew’s 67.2-inch bed. But the tradeoff was hardly a sacrifice at all according to truck buyers in the U.S., and the rest is history.

I thought the original F-150 SuperCrew was great, and the early model was not yet oversized nor menacing. I couldn’t have know, however, that it would be one of the major factors behind full-size sedans dying off in ensuing years. By 2000, the U.S. was already in love with SUVs but the full-size four-door truck handily took over sales and has been in the lead ever since.

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Folks who bought single cabs started buying extended cabs. And those who went for extended cabs traded in for double cabs, including my own family. Looking back on the 2001 F-150 SuperCrew, the truck was remarkably short compared to today’s trucks — meaning it was still easy to load and unload.

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The introduction of the FX4 model gave the F-150 a moderate lift and paved the way for off-roaders like the Raptor. Comparing a first-gen F-150 FX4 and modern F-150 Raptor is jarring, but the progression is clear. The first F-150 SuperCrew is also the origin of high-end pickup trucks, according to Motor Trend.

The tenth-generation F-150 is when Ford first released the King Ranch (also as a SuperCrew) which went on to inspire others to make expensive trucks that rivaled luxury cars. The first SuperCrew basically changed our automotive landscape in the year 2000, like Y2K but with F-150 instead. For better or worse, it introduced modern trucks — as we know them — to the U.S. market.

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Image for article titled The 2001 Ford F-150 SuperCrew Opened The Floodgates For 4-Door Trucks
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Image for article titled The 2001 Ford F-150 SuperCrew Opened The Floodgates For 4-Door Trucks
Photo: Ford
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Image for article titled The 2001 Ford F-150 SuperCrew Opened The Floodgates For 4-Door Trucks
Photo: Ford