Ford rigorously test vehicles in Dubai’s dunes
Ford tests their cars in the soft dunes of Dubai where temperatures can soar to over 60°C by midday. Read more about it here.

For Ford’s engineers, it’s the ideal time to head into the desert and torture test bakkies and SUVs, including Rangers, to ensure they’re built to take the heat.
In Dubai, that job falls to Ziyad ‘Z’ Dallalah and his product development team. Dallalah established the team in 2009, and they’ve become an integral part of Ford’s global test programme since.
In addition to the searing sand in the desert, the punishing test schedule includes city and highway driving. Crowded city streets and slow-moving traffic provide the perfect conditions for testing powertrain cooling and climate control systems – while open highway and mountain driving add performance, body and chassis (noise, vibration and harshness), and handling analysis.
But it’s in the deep, power-sapping sand of the desert where the team pushes Ford’s off-road capable bakkies and SUVs to the limits ensuring they’re engineered for the extremes.

“Truly, driving in deep, soft sand is like dragging a heavy weight around. That resistance you feel when dragging that weight – it’s the same thing for vehicles in the desert,” Dallalah said.
While the summer sun sends temperatures soaring, driving on sand means the engine and transmission need to work harder than on the road, creating more heat. Vehicle speeds are typically slower than they are on the road, so cooling systems don’t get the same airflow to dissipate that extra heat.
Inside the cabin, the team monitors the performance of the climate control system after letting the vehicle soak in the sun with the engine off and windows closed for over an hour and then setting the A/C on max. The hottest temperature ever recorded by the team during this soaking process was 72°C.
“Whether you’re based in Dubai, Durban or Darwin, you need to know that if you set the climate control to 15.5°C, it’s going to deliver,” Dallalah said.

This type of real-world testing compliments an enormous amount of work that Ford teams worldwide pour into ensuring vehicles, systems, components and parts are engineered to cope with everything owners demand. That includes using computer-aided design (CAD) and engineering (CAE) to help accelerate and streamline vehicle development.
“CAD and CAE have helped transform how we design and engineer our vehicles,” Dallalah said. “But nothing beats real-world testing to expose issues you didn’t anticipate. And until you experience the kind of heat and conditions we get here, it’s hard to imagine how that affects everything your vehicle needs to handle.”
Source: QuickPic



