And it’s still a Chevy. The last one I drove for work was a disaster.
A couple years ago I picked up a Chevy work truck, got it out of there and on the freeway and had to take the first exit because it was not good, really aggressive shudder
Pulled over (my wife was behind me in her tundra so i wasn’t going to be stranded) and made a couple calls and the guy above me asked if I thought I could get it 2hrs home, I told him I don’t mind trying but I don’t know, he said if it breaks down leave it and call him
Anytime I didn’t have power to the truck it would start violently shuddering, but I figured out if I gave it power, it would quit, so I realized I had to just drive it like I stole it and made it to town, and dropped it off at the mechanic the next morning… 2 weeks and 3500$ later and it was drivable again and I eventually got comfortable with all of the bugs that thing had… about half way through that year, my Chevy started doing the same thing, then it started systematically falling apart, and I had a decision to make… do I take it in and get everything fixed? I loved that little pickup, but I think it would have cost a lot to get the bugs worked out (10k,maybe more) and it was still going to be a Chevy. That particular model pickup is my favorite vehicle Made today, but I can’t trust them
Neither of those pickups had 120k on them, way too big of problems for the amount of miles. If I was a little more wealthy I’d probably go back to the Colorado zr2 and just trade them in for a new one every other year, but Chevy will never be a long term option for me again.
My wife’s tundra with more miles (that we bought new) has not cost a penny more than normal maintenance (breaks, tires, oil changes)
I traded my Chevy in for a taco, and it’s not near as fun to drive as my zr2’s , i miss having them, but reliability is the biggest feature I need a pickup to have.
We traded my first Colorado zr2 in for the tundra (needed a half ton) and then I talked my wife into driving the tundra and I got my second zr2. I have drove 4 Chevy pickups, and been around a lot more, and they have all been problematic, usually something big by 120k
I have a friend who drives Chevy pickups and hasn’t had any big issues, but he traded them in every other year… until I can justify that, I’m sticking with Toyota… I have had a pile of them in all different conditions, and the only major issue I’ve had was with a 4Runner that had a 22re that I bought with 225k, and drove it for 2 years without changing oil or any maintenance (would add oil when the oil pressure light came on) and beat that thing to death.
It was so gutless that I would pretty much red line it trying to pass people on every hill… it lived longer than it should have with how I treated it. (I’m way better with maintenance now days obviously)
I have had bad luck with Chevy, I watched my first one burn down about 6 months after getting it, and my luck didn’t get better after that. I would love to see them with Toyota reliability, but for now…….