21' F250 to a 18' Tundra

I saw a newer F-150 crew cab the other day with a load of gravel. The tires were buried way into the wheel wells. I'm surprised the rear bumper wasn't scraping the asphalt. I don't know if the driver will be bitching about the leaf springs for the next 2 decades, but Ford doesn't do these guys any favors by advertising payload and towing capacities only for the single cab models with the payload upgrade packages. These guys buy a crew cab and wonder why they're on the ground with 1500-2000 lb in the bed or on the ball hitch.

My '14 f150 has holes in the bed from a 5th wheel......

I really wonder about people sometimes. :ROFLMAO:
 
If you need the payload, you’ll never get it out of the tundra. I love my tundra(s). Owned a few. The g2 is great. If you want a truck to do what most people actual need, the tundra will exceed that. If you are the rare type that needs the towing and payload, you’re going to be missing the 250.

I would love to justify the 3/4 or 1 ton but I don’t tow enough. Tundra does everything I need
 
I saw a newer F-150 crew cab the other day with a load of gravel. The tires were buried way into the wheel wells. I'm surprised the rear bumper wasn't scraping the asphalt. I don't know if the driver will be bitching about the leaf springs for the next 2 decades, but Ford doesn't do these guys any favors by advertising payload and towing capacities only for the single cab models with the payload upgrade packages. These guys buy a crew cab and wonder why they're on the ground with 1500-2000 lb in the bed or on the ball hitch.
So desperate....:rolleyes:
 
If you need the payload, you’ll never get it out of the tundra.

Buddy finally sold his 6.0 powerstroke and picked up a tundra. He really liked the thing. But dragging his camp trailer an such up into the brush, said he was using ALL of the truck. Didnt have it long. Ended up in a newer powerstroke, and pretty happy about it.

I know the mindset on here is bare minimum, smallest, lightest etc etc. But sometimes its ok to have a bit extra on reserve.

Course if as the OP said. He doesnt have the need for a 3/4 ton anymore...Kinda reads though as he's going through a divorce and wants to hit the reset button on everything. Which that I totally understand
 
Buddy finally sold his 6.0 powerstroke and picked up a tundra. He really liked the thing. But dragging his camp trailer an such up into the brush, said he was using ALL of the truck. Didnt have it long. Ended up in a newer powerstroke, and pretty happy about it.

I know the mindset on here is bare minimum, smallest, lightest etc etc. But sometimes its ok to have a bit extra on reserve.

Course if as the OP said. He doesnt have the need for a 3/4 ton anymore...Kinda reads though as he's going through a divorce and wants to hit the reset button on everything. Which that I totally understand
I don’t see it as bare minimum, but rather get what you need rather than get a bunch of extras that don’t add value. Can apply across the board but I tend to see guys on here making recommendations aimed towards function and skill over a new piece of gear. But maybe I’m not reading it right.

As far as trucks go, I personally pay more attention to payload than towing (again, I don’t tow often enough to matter). And while there are dudes who load half tons to the gills and send it, it’s pretty easy to overload a crew cab half ton. And it’s really hard to compete with the new 6.7, I drove one across country to Idaho and it was ripping through the mountains like we had nothing in the truck or on the hitch.

It may be off topic, but I’ve personally had good experience with the 21+? Nissan titans, specifically the XDs. They didn’t sell well because Nissan didn’t know what they had, and people didn’t understand the truck. It’s the same reliable gas v8, but in a crew cab, a longer bed, and higher payload. And because it’s a discontinued Nissan, prices are much cheaper in comparison. OP may find that to be a good option. If you find one of the pro4x versions you get a rear locker too, which I’ve used more than once in some shitty backcountry roads.
 
As far as trucks go, I personally pay more attention to payload than towing (again, I don’t tow often enough to matter). And while there are dudes who load half tons to the gills and send it, it’s pretty easy to overload a crew cab half ton. And it’s really hard to compete with the new 6.7, I drove one across country to Idaho and it was ripping through the mountains like we had nothing in the truck or on the hitch.

Agreed. I picked up a supercrew 5.0 f150 a while back. Read enough about them, I had high hopes.... and to say I was disappointed is an understatement. It was replaced with a wore out v10 f250 :ROFLMAO: On paper is one thing, real world is sometimes very different.

While that f150 was a super comfy rig. For me it wasnt good for much more than a commuter rig. Probly the last 1/2 ton I buy. I'll sick with my mini trucks and 3/4ton an up from here on.
 
Agreed. I picked up a supercrew 5.0 f150 a while back. Read enough about them, I had high hopes.... and to say I was disappointed is an understatement. It was replaced with a wore out v10 f250 :ROFLMAO: On paper is one thing, real world is sometimes very different.

While that f150 was a super comfy rig. For me it wasnt good for much more than a commuter rig. Probly the last 1/2 ton I buy. I'll sick with my mini trucks and 3/4ton an up from here on.
I've heard people say that their new F150 ecoboost blows away their old 7.3 F350 in every way. I can't help but laugh. Many a time I've seen one of those old one tons with a load that would bury an F150.
 
Your F250 is a lot more truck with more capability.

Gas mileage between the 2 isn't that much of a difference.

I'd fix the AC on the Ford and stick with it.

Change all the fluids regularly and no reason you shouldn't get 250 -300k miles out of it.
 
I've heard people say that their new F150 ecoboost blows away their old 7.3 F350 in every way. I can't help but laugh. Many a time I've seen one of those old one tons with a load that would bury an F150.

Same here. And lets be honest, a 7.3 was no powerhouse :ROFLMAO:
 
A F250 with the 6.2 V8 and the 6 speed transmission will very lakily reach that milage and even exceed by a lot.

I have this combo but in a 2014 half ton. Currently at 101k miles. Some days I wonder about it’s longevity and then I’m reminded by posts like yours


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I have this combo but in a 2014 half ton. Currently at 101k miles. Some days I wonder about it’s longevity and then I’m reminded by posts like yours


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

One of the ford forums has a thread about mileage on the 6.2's. Was a guy on there delivering steel with his. IIRC had near 500k when it ate the cam. Stuck a new motor in and was over 900k when he hit a cow. Transmission was never touched and His list of parts he threw at that truck was pretty short.
 
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