Ford Bronco

This ‘real’ Bronco’s chassis is derived from the Ranger pick-up truck, with a beam rear axle and independent front suspension.

See it and a Wrangler pictured together (it has been out in America long enough for multi-car reviews) and you can see the extent to which it’s targeted at the Jeep. In four-door form, it’s 4.8m long and 1.9m wide.

You can get a soft or hard top. They’re both rugged, separate- chassis cars with 2WD modes and 4WD with high and low ratios. The doors and roof come off. Even the tailgate swings open sideways.

Jeep sells more than 200,000 Wranglers per year and does a pretty good line in parts, too, so you can see why Ford would fancy dropping a strong name into that class.

The Bronco is a car built for adventures in the kind of space that Americans enjoy but of which we don’t have so much.

The range is broad and Ford’s recommended starting price is less than $30,000 in the US, but dealers are charging a mark-up. They’ve taken 165,000 orders so far, so it’s in high demand.

This Outer Banks edition is a sort of mid-range model, on more road-focused tyres than those above it – although, as with Jeeps, the more rugged they are, the better Broncos look (to my eyes, at least).It comes with a 2.3-litre Ecoboost engine making 270bhp and driving through a 10-speed automatic gearbox. There’s also a 2.7-litre V6 and a manual option, plus a 3.0-litre performance Raptor is coming.

Inside, our Bronco does looks the authentic rugged part. The driving position is sound, with an imperious view out punctuated by the bonnet grab handles – there for strapping on a roof-mounted kayak or mounting ‘limb risers’ (which move branches out of the way). All the active stuff.

Plus, they make the car easy to place. The ergonomics are sound. There are separate chunky heating and ventilation controls and audio buttons, waterproof-looking rubberised switches, plus a modest touchscreen and a configurable digital instrument pack (whose dials could be rounder and clearer).

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