Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#21
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "I am Tosk" wrote in message ... In article , says... I could never claim to be tall in a newsgroup where every second poster claims to be 6' 4" and weighing 230 or so .................... but on the other hand, if you stood me next to Scotty, Always the troll, it's clear what Donnie is here for. Wonder if Harry will condone this bull**** or if he will prove himself a hypocrite? -- Rowdy Mouse Racing - Pain is temporary, Glory is forever! Hey........ just sayin'. |
#22
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/6/11 3:13 PM, YukonBound wrote:
"Harryk" wrote in message ... On 1/6/11 11:00 AM, YukonBound wrote: "Harryk" wrote in message ... On 1/3/11 11:49 PM, Tim wrote: I haven't seen where smaller trucks are really that great of a savings compared to their bigger counter parts, Especially if you plan on really using them. It depends on how you plan to use a truck. I no longer have a trailer boat so I don't need a full-sized truck to tow a heavy boat. The smaller trucks are...smaller...and therefore easier to park, easier to maneuver, a little easier on the gas. Most of the time the "stuff" my wife buys at the garden shops and other stores will easily fit into a smaller truck. The other times, the "stuff" is too large for even a full-size pickup truck. I happened to park next to a new Toyota Tundra the other day, and thought that truck was just humongous. I owned a Tundra some years ago; it was significantly smaller than the current models. The new trucks do seem way too big for a city dwelling weekend warrior. I did have the Ranger for three years , but I have mixed feelings about them. I could never claim to be tall in a newsgroup where every second poster claims to be 6' 4" and weighing 230 or so .................... but on the other hand, if you stood me next to Scotty.................. anyway, they jack the Rangers up.. even the 2WD versions and seem to compress the cab height so you have to sit in a lower seat that say, a mini-van or even a RAV4. I found the seat of firm foam uncomfortable for a couple of months and even called the salesman to see if I could unload the Ranger and move up to a F150. He told me to wait and the foam would conform to my shape.. and he was mostly right. If I was in the market today, I'd take advantage of the great sales Ford has been offering and try to find a short wheelbase regular cab F150. (6.5 foot box). That's all I would need the vast majority of the time and I could always put a cap over the box to accommodate the dog. I had a Ranger and an F150. Both were good trucks, as was my Tundra. I've eliminated the Chrysler and GM small trucks; they don't do much for me. That leaves Toyota and Ford, I guess. I need to take a test drive in the Toyota Tacoma 4x4 small truck. I sat in the Tacoma cab while having my RAV4 serviced and found that the windshield cut off too low. I felt like the roof was caving in on me..... and the seating is low, similar to the Ranger. Too bad that Honda Ridgeline is so expensive. It might be a good choice for a light, mid-sized pickup. Hmmm. I haven't looked at a Honda or its pricing... :) |
#24
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Harryk" wrote in message ... On 1/6/11 3:13 PM, YukonBound wrote: "Harryk" wrote in message ... On 1/6/11 11:00 AM, YukonBound wrote: "Harryk" wrote in message ... On 1/3/11 11:49 PM, Tim wrote: I haven't seen where smaller trucks are really that great of a savings compared to their bigger counter parts, Especially if you plan on really using them. It depends on how you plan to use a truck. I no longer have a trailer boat so I don't need a full-sized truck to tow a heavy boat. The smaller trucks are...smaller...and therefore easier to park, easier to maneuver, a little easier on the gas. Most of the time the "stuff" my wife buys at the garden shops and other stores will easily fit into a smaller truck. The other times, the "stuff" is too large for even a full-size pickup truck. I happened to park next to a new Toyota Tundra the other day, and thought that truck was just humongous. I owned a Tundra some years ago; it was significantly smaller than the current models. The new trucks do seem way too big for a city dwelling weekend warrior. I did have the Ranger for three years , but I have mixed feelings about them. I could never claim to be tall in a newsgroup where every second poster claims to be 6' 4" and weighing 230 or so .................... but on the other hand, if you stood me next to Scotty.................. anyway, they jack the Rangers up.. even the 2WD versions and seem to compress the cab height so you have to sit in a lower seat that say, a mini-van or even a RAV4. I found the seat of firm foam uncomfortable for a couple of months and even called the salesman to see if I could unload the Ranger and move up to a F150. He told me to wait and the foam would conform to my shape.. and he was mostly right. If I was in the market today, I'd take advantage of the great sales Ford has been offering and try to find a short wheelbase regular cab F150. (6.5 foot box). That's all I would need the vast majority of the time and I could always put a cap over the box to accommodate the dog. I had a Ranger and an F150. Both were good trucks, as was my Tundra. I've eliminated the Chrysler and GM small trucks; they don't do much for me. That leaves Toyota and Ford, I guess. I need to take a test drive in the Toyota Tacoma 4x4 small truck. I sat in the Tacoma cab while having my RAV4 serviced and found that the windshield cut off too low. I felt like the roof was caving in on me..... and the seating is low, similar to the Ranger. Too bad that Honda Ridgeline is so expensive. It might be a good choice for a light, mid-sized pickup. Hmmm. I haven't looked at a Honda or its pricing... :) Consumer Reports seems to like it... here's some of their online report... "Honda RidgelinePhotosVideo Base MSRP price range:$28,900 - $36,830 HighsRide, handling, powertrain, rear seat, access, in-bed trunk, dual-action tailgate, crash-test results, composite bed, reliability. LowsRoad noise, towing capacity, turning circle. See our user reviewsAlready own it? Write a reviewCar Type: Compact pickup trucksCR overall score Honda's pickup truck has agile handling and a ride that's supple and steady. The tailgate opens vertically or horizontally, and beneath the bed is an all-weather, lockable trunk. The 3.5-liter V6 is quiet, smooth, and responsive. Road noise is pronounced. The roomy crew cab is nicely detailed and easy to access. The five-foot-long cargo bed has no wheel-arch intrusion and is made of composite material. While not designed for serious off-roading, the Ridgeline is capable in mild off-road conditions and it can tow 5,000 pounds Realibility, ride, owner satisfaction and acceleration are all better than average but fuel economy is worse. |
#25
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"YukonBound" wrote in message
... "Harryk" wrote in message ... On 1/3/11 11:49 PM, Tim wrote: I haven't seen where smaller trucks are really that great of a savings compared to their bigger counter parts, Especially if you plan on really using them. It depends on how you plan to use a truck. I no longer have a trailer boat so I don't need a full-sized truck to tow a heavy boat. The smaller trucks are...smaller...and therefore easier to park, easier to maneuver, a little easier on the gas. Most of the time the "stuff" my wife buys at the garden shops and other stores will easily fit into a smaller truck. The other times, the "stuff" is too large for even a full-size pickup truck. I happened to park next to a new Toyota Tundra the other day, and thought that truck was just humongous. I owned a Tundra some years ago; it was significantly smaller than the current models. The new trucks do seem way too big for a city dwelling weekend warrior. I did have the Ranger for three years , but I have mixed feelings about them. I could never claim to be tall in a newsgroup where every second poster claims to be 6' 4" and weighing 230 or so .................... but on the other hand, if you stood me next to Scotty.................. anyway, they jack the Rangers up.. even the 2WD versions and seem to compress the cab height so you have to sit in a lower seat that say, a mini-van or even a RAV4. I found the seat of firm foam uncomfortable for a couple of months and even called the salesman to see if I could unload the Ranger and move up to a F150. He told me to wait and the foam would conform to my shape.. and he was mostly right. If I was in the market today, I'd take advantage of the great sales Ford has been offering and try to find a short wheelbase regular cab F150. (6.5 foot box). That's all I would need the vast majority of the time and I could always put a cap over the box to accommodate the dog. Reply: Son in law has an older Tundra. Nice size truck. I drove it about 500 miles. Ride and driving did not impress me. Sloppy steering and truck did not give a solid feel. Felt like lots of road steer. My 1989 s-10 extended cab was a nice size truck for most city people. Hauled just about every thing you needed to haul as a home owner. I love my 2004 Crew cab, short bed diesel Chevy 2500. Comfortable, decent mileage. 19 mpg no towing and driving 80 mph to Los Angeles. 14 towing a 3300# boat and trailer with a 1500# pop-up camper. Drawbacks? Takes huge area to turn around in and large parking spaces. Newer Tundra's seem to be oversized, poor mileage from the people I have talked to. Seems as if most of the trucks are supersized these days. The Tacoma would be the small truck I would get today if not towing or hauling a camper. Is a nice size unit. Was looking at an F-100 Ford the other day driving down the road. Seemed to be about the same size as the Tacoma. And the F-100 was a popular truck for a lot of years. |
#26
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message ...
On Thu, 6 Jan 2011 19:37:29 -0400, "YukonBound" wrote: Hmmm. I haven't looked at a Honda or its pricing... :) Consumer Reports seems to like it... here's some of their online report... "Honda RidgelinePhotosVideo Base MSRP price range:$28,900 - $36,830 HighsRide, handling, powertrain, rear seat, access, in-bed trunk, dual-action tailgate, crash-test results, composite bed, reliability. LowsRoad noise, towing capacity, turning circle. See our user reviewsAlready own it? Write a reviewCar Type: Compact pickup trucksCR overall score Honda's pickup truck has agile handling and a ride that's supple and steady. The tailgate opens vertically or horizontally, and beneath the bed is an all-weather, lockable trunk. The 3.5-liter V6 is quiet, smooth, and responsive. Road noise is pronounced. The roomy crew cab is nicely detailed and easy to access. The five-foot-long cargo bed has no wheel-arch intrusion and is made of composite material. While not designed for serious off-roading, the Ridgeline is capable in mild off-road conditions and it can tow 5,000 pounds Realibility, ride, owner satisfaction and acceleration are all better than average but fuel economy is worse. We looked at a Ridgeline a while ago. It is basically the Odyssey with a pickup looking body. The road noise thing is typical of all Hondas. We have had 3 (Accord, CRV and my Prelude) and they all sound like you are running cheap snow tires. This is still a car with a truck like body. You can't confuse it with a real truck. It is similar to the GM Aztec Not the Aztec. The car that made a Pacer look good. I do agree with it being a car and not a truck. I think any of the units with a 5' bed are not really trucks. |
#27
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jan 6, 12:39*pm, "MMC" wrote:
The Land Rover 110 used to be the hot ticket but the Toyotas are a lot more dependable and handle a lot better. The old one liner: "Did you hear about the guy that bought a new Land Rover and it didn't leak any oil so he kept taking it back and hounding the dealer till they got it right?" |
#28
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jan 6, 6:51*pm, wrote:
On Thu, 6 Jan 2011 19:37:29 -0400, "YukonBound" wrote: Hmmm. I haven't looked at a Honda or its pricing... *:) Consumer Reports seems to like it... here's some of their online report... "Honda RidgelinePhotosVideo Base MSRP price range:$28,900 - $36,830 HighsRide, handling, powertrain, rear seat, access, in-bed trunk, dual-action tailgate, crash-test results, composite bed, reliability. LowsRoad noise, towing capacity, turning circle. See our user reviewsAlready own it? Write a reviewCar Type: Compact pickup trucksCR overall score Honda's pickup truck has agile handling and a ride that's supple and steady. The tailgate opens vertically or horizontally, and beneath the bed is an all-weather, lockable trunk. The 3.5-liter V6 is quiet, smooth, and responsive. Road noise is pronounced. The roomy crew cab is nicely detailed and easy to access. The five-foot-long cargo bed has no wheel-arch intrusion and is made of composite material. While not designed for serious off-roading, the Ridgeline is capable in mild off-road conditions and it can tow 5,000 pounds Realibility, ride, owner satisfaction and acceleration are all better than average but fuel economy is worse. We looked at a Ridgeline a while ago. It is basically the Odyssey with a pickup looking body. The road noise thing is typical of all Hondas. We have had 3 (Accord, CRV and my Prelude) and they all sound like you are running cheap snow tires. Really? My wife just bought a 2009 CRV and even though I'm really nit impressed with the ride (I'm biased, I drive large float-mobiles), I thought it was pretty quiet. and it gets about 30 mpg. highway... |
#29
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/6/11 10:25 PM, I am Tosk wrote:
I still hate front wheel drive.. Just doesn't make sense to have the steering and drive on the same axle, Please explain. |
#30
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/7/11 7:53 AM, I am Tosk wrote:
In , payer3389 @mypacks.net says... On 1/6/11 10:25 PM, I am Tosk wrote: I still hate front wheel drive.. Just doesn't make sense to have the steering and drive on the same axle, Please explain. Pffftttt... Yeah, I kinda figured *that* was the lack of thought underpinning your absurd statement, "Just doesn't make sense to have the steering and drive on the same axle." Fortunately, Alec Issigonis wouldn't have paid any attention to you back then, and no automotive engineer would pay any attention to you today. But, hey, go ahead...go through life wallowing in your ignorance. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Trucks | General | |||
Those %^%$% Ford F series trucks | General | |||
Mexican Trucks in the USA? | ASA | |||
Towing Specs for Used Trucks? | General | |||
old trucks and old boats | Cruising |