PNW bow hunter
WKR
- Joined
- Jan 10, 2016
- Messages
- 601
What years are you looking at to make this happen?On the used market, I can really buy a F150 for 1/3 what a similar model year Tacoma goes for.
What years are you looking at to make this happen?On the used market, I can really buy a F150 for 1/3 what a similar model year Tacoma goes for.
At this point you're looking at something in the mid 2000s.What years are you looking at to make this happen?
I get rid of my vehicles when the become unreliable. There's few modern vehicles that don't go to 200k without any issues.They are also 1/3rd as reliable
Look at my previous posts.At this point you're looking at something in the mid 2000s.
New to new, obviously not, but the domestic stuff doesn't hold it's value at all compared to the Toyota.
I can find Tacomas for the same price and the same year, but they'll have 2x the milage and likely a rebuilt title.
I get rid of my vehicles when the become unreliable. There's few modern vehicles that don't go to 200k without any issues.
Lack of horsepower can definitely help the drivetrain survive. The Toyota diffs are surprisingly stout for their size. The only significant issue I ever saw was running the 5.71's. The pinion is tiny. This was back in the late 80' and early 90's. Not sure what they used in later years.Look at my previous posts.
Lift it, lockers. Big tires chains. And you be walking out every weekend with that weak front end stuff.
I'm not talk road reliability.
Yes at 5.29 and lower they start getting weaker.Lack of horsepower can definitely help the drivetrain survive. The Toyota diffs are surprisingly stout for their size. The only significant issue I ever saw was running the 5.71's. The pinion is tiny. This was back in the late 80' and early 90's. Not sure what they used in later years.
I have 5.29s w/37s...kinda have to with those tires, but east coast gear supply makes some quality 3rd membersDual cases were very popular then as well. Never had any real issue with 5.29. We would always recommend against the 5.71 but some guys just had to have them. I worked for a guy that did a 5.3 Chevy conversion in one. It was the shop truck so I drove it some. That thing would scoot!
Lots of new 1/2 ton ram 4x4 with a v6 in the $35000 range with 0% financing. That’s full size crew cab. About the same as a new basic Tacoma.I currently have a 2002 F-350 Powerstroke. It's been a Money Pit. Only 144K on it. Just dries my vag out driving it everywhere. Foot has to stay up the ass....no balls. A pain to park. Just kinda Over It.
But these prices had me reconsidering on the drive in to work....to maybe just keep it and F the Tacoma price tags.
At almost 50yo....I just can't wrap my head around the new truck price tags. I am not a Dave Ramsey nerd, but my credit card has maybe $500 on it. Mortgage is very reasonable. Child Support ends next summer.
But I've never been a Truck Pimp. Never had a blinged out Newest and Bestest truck. I've build and priced diesel Colorados, F-150 EcoBoosts....even the plainest Janes are $45,000 to start. New Taco is the same. And I am not really certain a new Taco or Colorado is large enough for me and Sweets and a few dogs in the back.
You can't Sniff a new full sized rig with a gas engine for sub $50,000
So this thread....has done little to aid my direction. The truck I missed....the '98 with 106K was prolly the best bet going. The other that just popped up is a year older (97) with 185k on the Odo. Think I need a kick in the crotch for even considering it.
Thats exactly whah happened with my first toyota. Bought it for 1700$, did nothing to it, sold it for 2300$ to some guys who could barely speak english and were driving it down to central america. If i remember correctly it had 261k miles on it when i sold it.Tacomas are requiring a premium now a days. Any 1st gen tacomas if aren't bought by someone innthe states is gobbled up by a crew that transports them back south of the border. (Not exagerating). I've had a 97 4runner 08 Tacoma and now my 17 tacoma. People on the tacoma forums I am part of are sometimes selling their 17-19 tacomas to vroom because they are getting more $$ for it then what they paid for the vehicle. If you look at ANY tacoma make sure you crawl under it to make sure the frame hasn't rusted away. New factory replacement frame would be the best for an older one and I would pay a premium for that vehicle. Good luck with your search I think a jeep cherokee with the 4.0 strait 6 might be more economical.
Tacomas are requiring a premium now a days. Any 1st gen tacomas if aren't bought by someone innthe states is gobbled up by a crew that transports them back south of the border. (Not exagerating). I've had a 97 4runner 08 Tacoma and now my 17 tacoma. People on the tacoma forums I am part of are sometimes selling their 17-19 tacomas to vroom because they are getting more $$ for it then what they paid for the vehicle. If you look at ANY tacoma make sure you crawl under it to make sure the frame hasn't rusted away. New factory replacement frame would be the best for an older one and I would pay a premium for that vehicle. Good luck with your search I think a jeep cherokee with the 4.0 strait 6 might be more economical.
It's like anything else we use.......people can spend a ton of money on junk several times over, or they can pay a higher starting price on something that is known to last 30+ years. I haven't had a monthly vehicle payment since 1991. That right there is HUGE as far as financial independence goes.I bought a 1981 Toyota truck for 4000.00 back in 1984 for 4000.00 dollars. I just sold it last week for 3800.00. That was the best vehicle I ever seen. My buddy’s bought trucks back at the same time and we all bet who’s would last the longest. Shoot there’s were broke down and needed repairs constantly. And they all got rid of them long long ago. In fact I don’t know how many trucks sense then most have gone through.
Prices are getting stupid on those as well. But they do make a pretty capable little car.....Matt's Off Road Recovery has me thinking. Build an XJ and haul it with my F250?
Prices are getting stupid on those as well. But they do make a pretty capable little car.....
That is funny! Same exact thing with my '92. It went to Honduras. The guy that bought it from me signed the title release as Juan Moore. I didn't even catch the name until my wife pointed it out to me.Thats exactly whah happened with my first toyota. Bought it for 1700$, did nothing to it, sold it for 2300$ to some guys who could barely speak english and were driving it down to central america. If i remember correctly it had 261k miles on it when i sold it.
So I’ve had a 2017 Colorado that seen the shop zero times in 80k.If you have ever owned a brand new Chevy after 2007 you’d understand why a 30 year old Toyota goes for so much. I had more repair costs on a truck with 45,000 miles with an extended warranty than I have had on three different Toyota’s with all well over 100,000 miles on them.
IMO this is where the Toyota's excel. I've run my 1989 like I'm in the Baja 1000 many many times over the last 32 years......basically anytime I get it on trails or curvy dirt roads. It's stock except Bilstein shocks and 31x10.50 tires. I love driving that truck. It's sometimes used as a daily driver, but I try to save it for the fun stuff these days as I'd have no idea what I'd get to replace it with.2. Beating the shit out of it. Self explanatory. Take the aforementioned truck with all those add ons(or even a totally stock truck) and run it down some logging roads or dirt roads not worried about the ruts, holes, rocks, etc at higher speeds and tell me how long your stuff lasts. Even the 2500/3500 trucks won’t stand up to this although they’ll hang on longer.