The recent troubles with my Cherokee have me rethinking its status as my daily driver. For sure, this comes in part from a place of frustration from dealing with chasing random electrical gremlins (everyone's least favorite type of repair job), but it goes beyond that. There's more deferred maintenance that needs to be caught up on, in addition to being of an age where unforeseen problems are bound to crop up, it's loud, it's leaky, it's hot/cold depending on season, has poor road manners...The list goes on.
Basically, what it boils down to, is I'm realizing that I've arrived at a place in my life where I've got better things to do with my precious time than wrench on the DD. I have a project house and a project car I'd much rather be working on and just want something where I can get in, turn the key, and go.
A lightly used pickup seems to make the most sense, as I've got house projects galore and want for a car trailer in the not too distant future. The question is which truck. Vans and SUVs are out, as the open bed is frankly of more to me than enclosed cargo or passenger space. Parameters are as follows:
-Budget roughly $10-12k ideally, could maybe stretch to mid teens for the 'perfect' truck
-Reliability is paramount
-Cheap to run and low money pit potential
-Decent mpg, at least similar to the XJ (18 avg)
-Min 4-5 year life at ~20k miles per year
-4wd would be preferable, but I'd consider rwd
-Extended or crew cab would be nice, but I could live with a regular cab
-Stick shift would be sweet, but I realize this is something I'll likely have to compromise on
Half ton is probably the sweet spot for me. I've always liked Tacos, and they check a lot of boxes, but the Toyota tax is steep and tow capacity pretty marginal. On the other end of the spectrum, a diesel would be a new kind of fun, gets decent mileage, and opens up more manual transmission availability, but again carries a steep tax and is really way overkill. But I could certainly be convinced otherwise.
My prevailing thought at the moment is find a nice, low mile GMT800, but I'm curious to hear what the hive has to say.