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My brain injured sister bought a Ford F150 for $42K last month.
For the 1/2 ton, go with the Hemi. Nothing better.
For 3/4 and up, go for the Ford Super Duty. Nothing Better.
I am going to buy a pick-up truck. (used)
I have never owned one before, so I'm seriously depending on my "phellow~phanatics" to give me some sound advice on what would be a wise choice and investment. Thanx!
Buy a Ford of a Chevy. I've had Fords and Dodges (Dad's a Chevy guy) and I had nothing but trouble with the Dodge.
I think I'd avoid a Toyota like the plague after reading several reports of the frames rusting in two.
I don't really get the "who's better" thing when it comes to trucks. It seems they all have their strengths and weakness. I'm a truck omnivore, so here are my takes:
Toyota - Best gas mileage truck I ever owned. Frame rusted in two. I sold the diesel engine for more than I bought the truck for, and it's still probably hauling tourists around in South America or the Phillipines with 300,000+ miles on it when I sold it.
Dodge - '78 Power Wagon was the crudest vehicle I've ever known. Body rusted off it, hard riding, tough shifting SOB, but 360 V8 was freakin' invincible.
Chevy - Most civilized truck I ever owned. Ran good, lasted a long time, but Chevy can't make a pickup door to save their everloving lives. I think they start falling apart and delaminating the day they roll off the assembly line.
Ford - Kind of a compromise between Dodge crudity and Chevy civilization. If I were in the market for a pickup today, though, I'd pick up a 1/2 ton with a 300 c.i. straight six. Simply the toughest engine ever built. Our veterinarian had one with 1,000,000+ miles on it.
So, you pays your money and you gets what you gets. No fan-boy, here...
Of course, here's a picture of the last pickup I drove:
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Damned Fords; always breaking down, anyway...![]()
You're right,Toyota has had a problem with frame rust on 1995.5-2004 Tacomas, especially in the northeastern part of the U.S. The frames were supplied by Dana and some weren't rustproofed properly. Because of this, Toyota has extended the frame warranty to 15 years from date of first use. If the frame develops a hole within 15 years Toyota buys back 1995.5 to 2000 Tacomas at 150% of Kelley blue book value in excellent condition no matter the condition of the truck. If it's a 2001 to 2004 Toyota replaces the frame,leaf springs,etc which is about a 60 hour job. Plus in either case Toyota pays for a rental car the entire time. Would Chevy,Ford,or Dodge do this? Could they even afford to?
Shouldn't you have left it better than you found it?
I bought a Honda Ridgeline and couldnt be happier. Obviously not a big work truck
As far as "rugged" goes, NONE of the Big 3 have anything on Toyota. YouTube - Top Gear - killing a Toyota pt 1 - BBC
YouTube - Top Gear - killing a Toyota Pt 2 - BBC
YouTube - Top Gear - killing a Toyota Pt 3 - BBC
I don't know what your definition of "ruggedness" is, but I haven't seen too many of any of the current generation of trucks from anyone broken in two anywhere.