Brett_Murphy (Ex-Patrón) said:
Things I've gathered from the board:
1. Modern Chevy V8s suck and will bend valve rods for no reason.
2. Mid size trucks are equivalent to the full size trucks of the 90s in terms of capability
3. The Toyota Tax is real, unless you get very high miles on it.
4. I don't like Ford (because of the FWD 3.7 engine in the fleet) but their trucks are popular for a reason. The FX4 ticks all the boxes.
I'm really struggling with what to look at, and plenty of good trucks around here get squatted or get 22 inch wheels put on them, and I don't want to spend time un-berkeleying somebody else's aesthetic choice.
Yeah... #1 is a great big negative. If you could kindly point out who told you that, I would like to slap them with a wet noodle.
The 87-95 TBI engines will run forever, mostly because they make about twelve HP and fifteen torques. I'm joking. They made closer to 20 hp.
The 96-98 Vortec engines will run forever and make surprisingly decent power, but you'll have to fix an intake coolant leak once.
The 99-up LS based engines are so reliable, I don't even really distinguish them from Toyotas. I mean, these days it seem like they'll all run for 350k, at which point the rest of the truck is so wasted you don't care.
My take on Chevy. First, I just bought one. I have owned dozens. Engines last forever, transmissions very good, interiors can be a little plastic-y. Electronics can be ever so slightly finnicky, but dumb stuff. You'll likely have to replace one DRL every year. Ever see a chevy truck with both daytime lights on at the same time? 4.8L is cute and adequate. 5.3L is great. 6.0L is a nominal step up in power and torque, but it seems a disproportionate drop in MPG. Holds its value poorly compared to the others.
My take on Ford. I've owned several. V8 Engines are a little wimpy, but they will run like a swiss watch for decades longer than you expect. Earliest 4.6L will have a single coil pack and plug wires. That's good. When they went to coil-on-plug, it was still good, but they way they seem to function is that when one goes out, the rest are soon to follow. Even if you determine the coil #4 has failed and you replace that coil, it won't be a week until another one fails. So you replace that one and the next one fails. The solution is to use a ford dealer scan tool to diagnose each coil and replace the one or four coils that look weakest. Once you've paid for that service, it's just cheaper to buy all 8 coils and do it yourself. 5.4L tends to have one of two spark plug designs; one that refuses to come out, and one that comes out on its own. Both situations are a lot less bad than you think. They are both super easy fixes. The Ecoboost has mixed reviews, and I've driven several but never owned any. I love the way they drive, though. Transmissions are very good, but a little more expensive to rebuild than chevy should you need it. Interior quality of materials and fit/finish put the other two to absolute shame. Ford's interiors last a long time and don't have the buzzes and rattles of some others.
Dodge. I've owned two; a Ram and a Dakota. Ram I owned for about a year before I wanted to set fire to it and collect the insurance check. The Dakota I got cheap I couldn't pass it up and I figured it couldn't be as bad as the Ram, but I was wrong. Sold it two months later. The world seems to love them, I personally DO NOT. Momma said if you can't say nice things, keep your mouth shut. I will offer one piece of empirical data. The Dodge trucks that came into our transmission shop typically cost nearly twice to rebuild compared to GM/Ford. GM and Ford transmissions wear out the clutches like any normal transmissions. Dodge transmissions sometimes like to break things inside which makes them look like a grenade went off. I had a Dodge junkyard on speed dial because it was often cheaper to buy a boneyard core to rebuild than to try and salvage what the customer had.
Nissan. It's like 90% as good as a Toyota, for the price of a Ford.
Toyota. It's like 20% better than a Chevy for 100% higher price. Also, be aware. There were several years of Tundra/Tacoma that had a recall for frame rust. If you get one from those years, you are either potentially buying swiss cheese, or you are buying a repaired vehicle that should have been given an R title. Toyotas are so far off my radar. When shopping for a used Taco, I found multiple examples of the "factor of two." If I found a Taco that compared in price to a Ranger or Colorado, it always had at least twice the mileage. If I found a Taco with the same mileage as a similar Ranger or Colorado, it was twice the price. It is most definitely not twice the truck.
With the full sized Chevy and Fords, how much room is in the access cab for full sized people? Should I look at the Titan trucks? What am I missing, here?
I'm definitely full-sized. 6'1" and 225. X-cab compact truck, I can tolerate my knees in my face for a couple miles. Crew cab compact or X-cab full size... not bad, but no long road trips. If you really want sedan-type rear seat size for full sized adults for more than a short trip, full size crew cab is about your only choice.... which means good luck finding a 6' bed.