My buddy had a 1st gen diesel and it was awesome, tried buying the 2nd gen and had nothing but issues and sold it with less than 20K on it because of it.Been looking at the Coloado ZR2's. Looks like a very capable midsized pickup.
My buddy had a 1st gen diesel and it was awesome, tried buying the 2nd gen and had nothing but issues and sold it with less than 20K on it because of it.Been looking at the Coloado ZR2's. Looks like a very capable midsized pickup.
It's a brand of a pop up "wedge" camper.Excuse my ignorance but what is a GFC style camper?
What were some of the issues? Was it another diesel?My buddy had a 1st gen diesel and it was awesome, tried buying the 2nd gen and had nothing but issues and sold it with less than 20K on it because of it.
Yes it was another diesel, It leaked a lot of fluids and they couldn't track it down. He went in 3-4 times I think before he got tired of it and got the dealer to take it back.What were some of the issues? Was it another diesel?
So where you hunt is a major factor. Id love a longbed lifted 350 with cap or camper top and all the fixings but hunting in central CO, most USFS roads are single track and they are called jeep roads for a good reason. F150+ sized vehicles can have a hell of time attempting to turn around, back up or even going forward up switchbacks or letting other vehicles through. This applies to much of Wyoming and Idaho as well. Its not about approach angle, lift or lockers as much as length and turning radius of the vehicle. The modern Tacoma/4runner is about as big as it gets for being jeep road nimble and I would not take any larger vehicle up unknown roads, particularly in busier OTC areas or in September when the non hunter users are still going up jeep roads. Tacomas/four runners/ chevy colorados/ ford rangers/ jeeps (if you like breaking down haha)/ are all about the max vehicle size Id recommend. You only need to watch an F250 8 point turn up a switchback on a 40 degree face shelf road once to realize they aren't it. Or have to back down a trail half a mile because the 1500 long bed couldnt fit in the pullout to let you pass.... For my money the FJ cruiser is the best rig Ive hunted in. Excellent turning radius, can tow 5k, can sleep in the back and can crawl up any road without worry of whether I can turn around or make it up.
I want to second what @Str8shooter said. I'm in south central CO and previously had an F250. A full size, especially an HD truck, can be an absolute liability on some of these super tight mountain roads. A lot of these roads wind up being more like goat paths. I traded my F250 in on a 2013 Tacoma.I've had Frontiers for awhile and I absolutely love them. Throw a camper on it and it does everything I want with decent mpg. I originally wanted a taco but I couldn't justify the extra 10K here in CO. As much as I'd love to run something American, every Ford or Chevy I had growing up was nothing but problems. I don't tow anything though, it's just my commuter/hunting&fishing rig.