Trucks are meant to be tough, capable, and long-lasting, and YouTuber Whistlin Diesel’s latest video provides some non-scientific evidence of just how strong modern pickup frames can be. Host Cody Detwiler is, as our very own David Tracy put it, entertaining and “in some ways – insufferable (no disrespect).” Detwiler is an entertainer (who, many say, puts on a persona for his channel), not a journalist, and he himself literally calls this video “unbiased bullish!t” so keep that in mind.
[Ed Note: Note that this video isn’t a scientific test and to some it’s a bit insufferable. If you’re going to be bothered by this particular YouTuber, you’re welcome to read our story on tire wear pollution capturing devices instead. But if you just want to see someone beat on a Ford F-150 and be amazed by the concept of ductility and material toughness, here you go. -DT]
That doesn’t mean that he isn’t capable of demonstrating certain automotive design features, though. After breaking the rear chassis casting on his Cybertruck in what he called a durability test, commenters said that the Ford F-150 in that same test would’ve suffered a similar fate had it been subjected to the exact same abuse.
That abuse, in the eyes of those commenting specifically, pertains to a moment where the hitch of the Cybertruck lands on some concrete. Critics claim that the casting actually fractured at that moment and then only broke when subjected to a towing force.
This did not sit well with the Whistlin Diesel host, who decided to submit the Ford to far worse punishment to prove a point about the differences in construction. That punishment involved lifting the rear of the F-150 up in the air via the hitch and then dropping that area of the truck on a concrete wall.
That’s right, he rented a crane, hooked it up to the hitch of the Ford, lifted just the rear up in the air, and then released the truck when its rear end was just above a concrete wall. This isn’t a scientific test by any means but there’s no question that it’s a wild spectacle.
The hitch nor the frame seem to suffer any noticeable damage after he does it the first time so he repeats the test over a dozen more times. It’s unclear exactly how many times the F-150 was dropped on its rear end but damage does occur over time (the counter in the video is counting the “feet dropped onto concrete,” which reaches 40). Shocking, I know.
Instead of snapping or fracturing, the frame bends. That doesn’t stop the truck from functioning, though, (ditto with the Cybertruck; it still drove afterward) as Detweiler does donuts with it looking sort of like a shoe I’ve had stuffed in a bag for a week. Then, the host attempts to yank the hitch off by driving away from a concrete block that he’s chained up to.
If anything, the frame begins to straighten back out and that trend of automotive chiropractic care continues when he drops a concrete block on the hitch from roughly 15 feet in the air. Detweiler attributes the difference in performance between this frame and the Cybertruck to Ford’s use of steel rather than aluminum.
No doubt the metallurgy plays a role in the way the two handle abuse. There are clear benefits to each way of building a vehicle. The Cybertruck saves weight with its cast aluminum frame but it does appear that it gives up toughness in a silly ‘test’ like this. In fact, it’ll be interesting to see if he tries this same thing with the Tesla when he gets it back.
It’s also worth noting the castings are indeed repairable, so we’ll have to wait to see what shape the Cybertruck is in when it returns from service. Ultimately, this is entertainment, not a realistic test that we can actually pull real data from but it’s an interesting way to show just how strong a steel frame can be.
[Ed Note: Again, there’s plenty of dumb stuff in that video, including discussion about how the host feels an obligation to test whether the “government-required electric trucks” are better than gas trucks. This test he’s doing is less about EV vs gas, and more about different manufacturing methods, but again, it’s a silly video. Rivers and I still enjoyed watching it, which is why we’re sharing it. We share things with you that we’d share with our friends, even if some of our friends might say “Uh, not my thing.” -DT]
Screenshots:Â WhistlinDiesel (YouTube)
It’s news to me that EVs are government mandated…so where’s mine?
Repairable or replaceable? Not a chance in hell I’d allow a repaired/welded cast rear.
Word. In my head I know that a well done weld is probably stronger than the casting around it, but my gut says the strength gradient at that spot is steeper than it once was and is therefore more fraught. I can’t be comfortable with it.
Cody strikes as a decent enough dude, playing a douche canoe for his generally very obnoxious videos. I did appreciate these two on the CT, though, because in addition to the standard mindless destruction they actually raise some important questions about the CT.
FWIW, if you want a YouTube channel with the best reviews/comparison, it’s Project Farm, hands down, no competition. The data that guy brings to the table is unparallelled.
Project Farm is awesome… it’s kinda like Consumer Reports but better in every way
I think he will grow out of just ruining stuff at some point.
One of my favourite YouTubers, Robert Dunn, who is frequently mentioned on this site because of his recent quality work, also did “destruction reviews” years ago for clicks and adolescent fun.
Mythbusters, on the good ole TV, went the same way, from blowing stuff up and giggling about it, to.. well, no wait, they just kept blowing stuff up, for tv ratings.
But Adam Savage has a rather chill YouTube channel nowadays, that was what I was think of 🙂
Mythbusters wouldn’t start at more explosives. They would work themselves up to the huge explosion, stopping along the way to explain why the smaller explosion wasn’t producing the desired results.
Project Farm and Torque Test Channel are my two favorite review type channels by far.
Partial credit. At some point he may stop ruining stuff, but it will be when it stops paying via view count and I don’t think it will have anything to do with growing up.
I love Robert Dunn, Whistlin’ Douchebag, not so much.
Robert Dunn now destroys things by paying money for them.
To be honest, I’d rather watch a truck get tested to failure this way than repeated stress with a hydraulic test rig in a lab.
Everything on cable or broadcast television is dumbed down to about a third grade level. Parts of YouTube chase that market, and these guys are just cashing in. People just want to watch stupid shit.
So, going to add as watched the first and saw what others saw with the drop, and while the Ford didn’t go through that, I was confident it would not have suffered the same fate as the Cyber Truck, and this video (un-scientifically) seems to show that. Now why the failure happened is another question, it as DT mentioned about different metallurgy, and WD talks about, steel bends, cast aluminum can break. Certain metals may be stronger, but can also be more brittle.
As for WD videos, I haven’t watched many, but he just tears up stuff, and a lot of people like. Where I think he failed the Cyber Truck was in how well it handled the riot at the end…wish he would have done that to the Ford as well, it would have been obliterated.
Why does anyone give this shitgibbon attention? All he does is tear shit up.
That’s pretty much it, right there. Entertainment. Not importance or value of any description. Not even remotely.
I started to watch his channel for a while, having gotten hooked by the amusing editing. Then I unsubscribed because I just got tired of seeing him wreck nice stuff. Then at some point I noticed he allowed a few glimpses of what appears to be his true self out on video once in a while and it seems like he’s probably a decent, smart, well-adjusted guy irl. Suddenly all the videos I’d walked away from as disgusting wastes by an insufferable idiot that decided he’d be a “YouTube influencer” for a living looked like parodies of insufferable idiots that decided to be YouTube influencers for a living. They’re kinda hilarious to me now in that light.