DoctorBlade wrote:
I know everyone buys Suburbans, no one bought Excursions. I've heard the fix for the Ford front end problem was swap a front axle from a F350. I'd go Chevy.
what the hell are you talking about?
1) WHAT front end problem? I'm not aware of one.
2) The excursion from the A pillar forward, including the axle, is a superduty (f250/350). All excursions had dana 50's. 2002 and new f250/350's had dana60's. They are externally damn near identical, only difference is the taper on the axle shaft and the ring gear diameter. The 60 is stronger but I don't personally know anyone that has broken a 50.
I went through the same thought process as the OP last year. I had a pathfinder, liked my SUV, it was worn out, was buying something new. I have a '78 f150 play truck I needed to haul around, and also had an old 20' deckover trailer I was restoring. I wanted something 3/4 or heavier to tow with but I liked the SUV, since I wanted this vehicle to keep for 10 years or so and am planning on starting a family (and have dogs). I had to have 4wd for the places I tow my trailer, its kept me from getting stuck a few dozen times. My choice was either buy something cheap that I didn't need to finance, or finance, which meant buying something newer and lower miles as the bank wouldn't finance anything older than '04 and with more than 75k. After looking at what fell into my price range for cheap, I immediately realized I would have to finance to get something reliable enough to replace my daily driver.
So I was mainly looking at 2000 and newer 3/4 suburbans and excursions and also crewcab trucks. The suburbans do have a smoother ride, however they have a more complicated suspension and many users report having to replace bushings and get them aligned frequently. The interiors do always seem busted, I don't know why. The smaller engines are a bit peaky to try and tow with, and the 454 is a towing beast and aparently pretty darn reliable, but I couldn't live with the 10 mpg mixed mpg that is daily driving one. I did find some amazing deals on suburbans though, especially since they were used extensively by governments so there are lots of surplus ones (beware, many of these have really weird options as well as holes in the roof and etc). If chevy had put a diesel in the newer suburbans there is a good chance I would have bought one, but I wasn't going to settle for a small block, I found them to be lacking in torque. The big block was just too bad on gas (I read thread after thread in the chevy forums about actual MPG, and 10 mpg is pretty accurate).
I'm a ford guy at heart, and I believe the super duties are great trucks, so I turned my attention back to the fords. I really wanted a diesel because of the weight that I tow (fully loaded, the trailer is close to 10k). The excursions I found locally that were diesel, 4wd, newer than 04, and less than 75k were going for $3k-5k over book value (mid twenties and up) I couldn't afford that. I really wanted a diesel excursion, but every time I would find one in my price range that wasn't marked up way over book, it would be gone by the time I called about it. so I started looking at trucks
The rub was that I really wanted 4 doors, and crewcab trucks weren't much cheaper. I shopped for months and months, not really finding exactly what I wanted. I finally found an 04 door 4wd truck for around $22,000, it had 70,000 miles and was in good shape. The thing is, it was a base model. Vinyl seats. vinyl floor mats. I could have lived with that. But it had 4 wind up windows, manual locks, an am/fm radio... I can't live with that in my daily driver. 4 doors with wind up windows in a truck 8' wide... pretty worthless. I was still contemplating buying it when a truck popped up at a dealer lot all the way down in arkansas. It was an 04 excursion limited, 50k, 4wd, diesel. every single option (rear seat dvd, chrome tube steps, leather, rear captains, etc). I didn't necessarily want a loaded truck, but the price was right ($23k, just believe kbb retail) so I put a deposit down sight unseen and drove down and bought it after checking it out.
Its got the 6.0, but aside from a leaking fuel pressure regulator (the fixing of which allowed me to install an updated revision) I haven't had any major maintinance issues. It tows anything I want to tow. The truck itself weighs in at about 8200 lbs, and I've rolled the scales fully loaded at 17,000 before. The rear springs are a bit soft for towing, and eventually I want to add air bags for towing. The front has sagged with the weight of the diesel and the brushguard, but I have f250 front leaves to swap on when i buy new tires.
the motor has more power than you can even really use. It will tow any load up any grade at any speed you want to travel at, but you have to keep an eye on your temperatures. I keep a scangauge II on mine to monitor the oil cooler.
The front brakes are small for the size of the truck, so if you two regularly you have to use napa premium rotors or they will warp. The 5r transmission is awesome, tow haul mode handles loads coming down hills and lets you keep your foot off the brake in stop and go traffic.
And the steering is pretty vague and sloppy if you are used to rack and pinion, but its just about like every other leaf sprung live axle truck. It rides like a truck, so rough.
The good parts about the truck, leaf springs and live axles front and rear. Dead simple, easy to maintenance, reliable. Tons and tons of space, you can haul 5 friends and all of their camping gear without putting anything on the roof or on the hitch. Fuel efficiency, for an 8000 lb brick shaped vehicle, I can get as high as 22 mph highway if I try (shift into neutral down hills and try to follow trucks), but I can get 18 mpg just by setting the cruise control to 65. I consistently get around 14 mpg towing.
so the diesel is nice.
The v10's, from what I've read on the forums will do about 12 mpg mixed driving, maybe 14 on a good highway tank, and single digits towing. There are tons and tons of guys on the excursion forum on ford truck enthusiasts that have 200k or more on their v10's with very little maintenance. The spark plugs can get stripped out on a few model years. newer trucks revised the heads, and there are fixes for the older ones. The real fix is to carefully torque them to the correct spec. I can't say I'd recommend the v8 in a vehicle this size, the v8 guys report as bad or worse mpg as the v10's as they have to floor it everywhere. I think it would be pretty worthless for towing.
If you have any specific questions about the excursion let me know. I am pretty happy with mine so far, I've put about 40k on it. I would trade my 6.0 for a 7.3 any day just for the simplicity and reliability, but for what its worth, mine is quieter, makes more power, and gets better mpg.
I have seen 200k 7.3 excursions in the $6-10k range, depending on condition. Of course there are always the really nice looking ones with 200k and the owners are still asking $12 or more, but I don't think those trucks are finding many buyers. Check the roof on any potential excursion, the factory roof rack was designed superlow so they fit into garages, and as a result it often rubs against the roof and wears the paint off, which can lead to rust. I pulled mine off and replaced them with yakima bars. The factory bars won't hold any weight anyway.
If I was doing it all over again, I'd definitely take a harder look at the suburbans. I lost the job I had when i bought the excursion, and the fact that I could have got a big block suburban in similar shape to my excursion for $6,000 less would be a chunk off my monthly payments.
I've lately been seeing some pretty nice looking 2000 ish suburbans popping up with bad transmissions for around $1000-1500, which seems like a steal, though you know what they say, if it sounds too good to be true...
I've also seem some good deals on excursions, both v10 and diesel. I am pretty familiar with the ford v10's, and I would give a slight advantage to the GM 454 big block as far as reliability goes, but I would have no qualms with owning either, as long as I had decided I could live with 10 mpg. If you go with a suburban, definitley go with the 2500. The 1500 is weaker in a number of ways and the transmissions are weak.