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BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
"Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message:
I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. -- x ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 14:29:55 -0500, "Mr. Luddite"
wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). === If I were towing 5K to 6K lbs for any distance, I'd want a full sized pickup with a V-8. Your F-250 would be ideal and I'd bet that your wife would get used to it with a little practice. My wife drives our Tundra on occasion. She doesn't particularly like it but manages OK. The main issue with driving a truck is getting used to relying on the side view mirrors for everything. Even with a V-8 the Tundra's acceleration is nothing to write home about when towing close to the max. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/13/17 2:29 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). I have a 4WD TRD Sport with the manual transmission, V6 engine, and tow package. According to Toyota, the tow rating is 6,400 pounds. I've never hooked a sizeable trailer up to the truck, though. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote:
"Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
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BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/13/2017 3:21 PM, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 1/13/17 2:29 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). I have a 4WD TRD Sport with the manual transmission, V6 engine, and tow package. According to Toyota, the tow rating is 6,400 pounds. I've never hooked a sizeable trailer up to the truck, though. I must have misread. I thought you indicated that you had gone for the 4 banger and not the V6. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
Keyser Soze Wrote in message:
On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. -- x ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote:
Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
justan wrote:
Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. Your peabrain is farting -- Posted with my iPhone 7+. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
"Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message:
On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. I wonder what he'd tow with that bad boy? -- x ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/13/17 4:16 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. No, I wouldn't have bought a four-cylinder gasoline engine truck. I am, however, very impressed with the four-cylinder engine in my wife's Toyota Camry and probably wouldn't consider a car with a V-6 or V-8. The Camry is peppy, and cruises at interstate speed limits with the engine loafing. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/13/17 4:28 PM, justan wrote:
"Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. I wonder what he'd tow with that bad boy? Nothing larger than the typical open landscape utility trailer to take my tractor in for service or to bring home many bags of mulch or a couple of trees or many bushes. The mulch bags typically run about 40 pounds each, and I usually buy 100 bags of cedar mulch each season. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
Keyser Soze Wrote in message:
On 1/13/17 4:16 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. No, I wouldn't have bought a four-cylinder gasoline engine truck. I am, however, very impressed with the four-cylinder engine in my wife's Toyota Camry and probably wouldn't consider a car with a V-6 or V-8. The Camry is peppy, and cruises at interstate speed limits with the engine loafing. My new car has a v6. A 2.2 litre 4 with a turbo doesn' t meet my requirements for the vehicle. Gas mileage is better than my wife's crv. Go figure. -- x ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
Keyser Soze Wrote in message:
On 1/13/17 4:28 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. I wonder what he'd tow with that bad boy? Nothing larger than the typical open landscape utility trailer to take my tractor in for service or to bring home many bags of mulch or a couple of trees or many bushes. The mulch bags typically run about 40 pounds each, and I usually buy 100 bags of cedar mulch each season. How many trips to the mulch place for 100 bags? -- x ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 16:46:00 -0500 (EST), justan wrote:
Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 4:28 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. I wonder what he'd tow with that bad boy? Nothing larger than the typical open landscape utility trailer to take my tractor in for service or to bring home many bags of mulch or a couple of trees or many bushes. The mulch bags typically run about 40 pounds each, and I usually buy 100 bags of cedar mulch each season. How many trips to the mulch place for 100 bags? With mulch volume usually governs. Of course Harry's probably using ironwood mulch where weight would govern. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 16:41:00 -0500 (EST), justan wrote:
Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 4:16 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. No, I wouldn't have bought a four-cylinder gasoline engine truck. I am, however, very impressed with the four-cylinder engine in my wife's Toyota Camry and probably wouldn't consider a car with a V-6 or V-8. The Camry is peppy, and cruises at interstate speed limits with the engine loafing. My new car has a v6. A 2.2 litre 4 with a turbo doesn' t meet my requirements for the vehicle. Gas mileage is better than my wife's crv. Go figure. My wife got the top of the line Subaru to replace the VW diesel. Took it on the trip to Tampa. Very nice to drive and quite peppy with the four cylinder. In cruise control it automatically slows when pulling up behind a slower mover, then speeds back up when the lane is changed. Hell, there's nothing to do but keep the damn thing between the lines. And, without a signal on, the thing beeps at you when you get too close to a line. Got right around 30mpg for the trip. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/13/2017 4:34 PM, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 1/13/17 4:16 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. No, I wouldn't have bought a four-cylinder gasoline engine truck. I am, however, very impressed with the four-cylinder engine in my wife's Toyota Camry and probably wouldn't consider a car with a V-6 or V-8. The Camry is peppy, and cruises at interstate speed limits with the engine loafing. I have a similar opinion of the 4 banger in the Nissan Altima I bought almost a year ago. Nothing fancy but it has more than enough acceleration and cruises at 65-70 on the highway getting around 37 mpg. My brother drove it and was convinced it had the bigger V6 engine until I told him otherwise. I don't drag race but I don't purposely try to go easy either but it still gets 30-31 mpg in "around town" driving. It rides nicely, is quiet and handles ok. No need for a more powerful engine. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/13/17 5:17 PM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 16:46:00 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 4:28 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. I wonder what he'd tow with that bad boy? Nothing larger than the typical open landscape utility trailer to take my tractor in for service or to bring home many bags of mulch or a couple of trees or many bushes. The mulch bags typically run about 40 pounds each, and I usually buy 100 bags of cedar mulch each season. How many trips to the mulch place for 100 bags? With mulch volume usually governs. Of course Harry's probably using ironwood mulch where weight would govern. No, **** for brains. My post says I buy cedar mulch. The weight per bag was important to me because I didn't want to overload the springs and shocks on my old 4Runner, so one of the guys at Home Despot took a couple of dry bags of the mulch I buy and weighed them for me. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
Mr. Luddite wrote:
I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). It also has lousy reviews. --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
Poco Loco wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 16:46:00 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 4:28 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. I wonder what he'd tow with that bad boy? Nothing larger than the typical open landscape utility trailer to take my tractor in for service or to bring home many bags of mulch or a couple of trees or many bushes. The mulch bags typically run about 40 pounds each, and I usually buy 100 bags of cedar mulch each season. How many trips to the mulch place for 100 bags? With mulch volume usually governs. Of course Harry's probably using ironwood mulch where weight would govern. If that's premium mulch he wouldn't need to replace it with 100 bags each year. I call BS. --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
Poco Loco wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 16:41:00 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 4:16 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. No, I wouldn't have bought a four-cylinder gasoline engine truck. I am, however, very impressed with the four-cylinder engine in my wife's Toyota Camry and probably wouldn't consider a car with a V-6 or V-8. The Camry is peppy, and cruises at interstate speed limits with the engine loafing. My new car has a v6. A 2.2 litre 4 with a turbo doesn' t meet my requirements for the vehicle. Gas mileage is better than my wife's crv. Go figure. My wife got the top of the line Subaru to replace the VW diesel. Took it on the trip to Tampa. Very nice to drive and quite peppy with the four cylinder. In cruise control it automatically slows when pulling up behind a slower mover, then speeds back up when the lane is changed. Hell, there's nothing to do but keep the damn thing between the lines. And, without a signal on, the thing beeps at you when you get too close to a line. Got right around 30mpg for the trip. Subaru makes very nice cars. I've never heard a complaint from an owner. --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 20:05:47 -0500, Alex wrote:
Mr. Luddite wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). It also has lousy reviews. No, it has a great review! Funnier than ****: "For all of Toyota’s claims that this is an all-new truck, key features seem as though Toyota slept through the past decade’s advances in truck technology and interior design. Today’s modern full-sized trucks feature a quiet cabin, a semblance of handling responsiveness, and a tolerable ride. But the compact Tacoma has none of that. Unlike other V6-powered Toyota models, our tested Tacoma never feels quick from a standing start or when passing—despite the robust acceleration figures as measured on our track. Fuel economy with the not-so-smooth six-speed automatic transmission is 19 mpg overall on regular gas, quite good for a truck and a clear improvement over its predecessor. Out on the road, the Tacoma’s handling is ponderous, and its slow and numb steering never connects the driver to the front wheels. Clearly clumsy around corners, it never felt unsafe. The chassis’s propensity to jiggle and shudder delivers a Metallica snare-drum beat to your spine. Wind and engine noise drown out any chance of conversation, even at modest speeds. Braking performance is subpar. Inside, it still has a too-high step-in, a too-low driver’s seat, and a ceiling that scrapes scalps of those entering the cabin. The front seats are flat and uncomfortable, have limited support, and offer only the most basic adjustments. The rear seat in our crew cab is no better, with hard padding, cramped leg and foot room, and short cushions—although it flips up to reveal useful storage bins. Outward visibility is decent, but the narrow, shallow windows make it less commanding. Controls are basic and easy to read—essential when reaching for some of the faraway knobs and buttons." Excerpted from the June 2016 issue of Consumer Reports magazine. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
Poco Loco Wrote in message:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 20:05:47 -0500, Alex wrote: Mr. Luddite wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). It also has lousy reviews. No, it has a great review! Funnier than ****: "For all of Toyota’s claims that this is an all-new truck, key features seem as though Toyota slept through the past decade’s advances in truck technology and interior design. Today’s modern full-sized trucks feature a quiet cabin, a semblance of handling responsiveness, and a tolerable ride. But the compact Tacoma has none of that. Unlike other V6-powered Toyota models, our tested Tacoma never feels quick from a standing start or when passing—despite the robust acceleration figures as measured on our track. Fuel economy with the not-so-smooth six-speed automatic transmission is 19 mpg overall on regular gas, quite good for a truck and a clear improvement over its predecessor. Out on the road, the Tacoma’s handling is ponderous, and its slow and numb steering never connects the driver to the front wheels. Clearly clumsy around corners, it never felt unsafe. The chassis’s propensity to jiggle and shudder delivers a Metallica snare-drum beat to your spine. Wind and engine noise drown out any chance of conversation, even at modest speeds. Braking performance is subpar. Inside, it still has a too-high step-in, a too-low driver’s seat, and a ceiling that scrapes scalps of those entering the cabin. The front seats are flat and uncomfortable, have limited support, and offer only the most basic adjustments. The rear seat in our crew cab is no better, with hard padding, cramped leg and foot room, and short cushions—although it flips up to reveal useful storage bins. Outward visibility is decent, but the narrow, shallow windows make it less commanding. Controls are basic and easy to read—essential when reaching for some of the faraway knobs and buttons." Excerpted from the June 2016 issue of Consumer Reports magazine. Reportedly, Krause is a big fella. How is he gonna fit in the cramped cabin of a Tacoma? -- x ----Android NewsGroup Reader---- http://usenet.sinaapp.com/ |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
Poco Loco wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 20:05:47 -0500, Alex wrote: Mr. Luddite wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). It also has lousy reviews. No, it has a great review! Funnier than ****: "For all of Toyota’s claims that this is an all-new truck, key features seem as though Toyota slept through the past decade’s advances in truck technology and interior design. Today’s modern full-sized trucks feature a quiet cabin, a semblance of handling responsiveness, and a tolerable ride. But the compact Tacoma has none of that. Unlike other V6-powered Toyota models, our tested Tacoma never feels quick from a standing start or when passing—despite the robust acceleration figures as measured on our track. Fuel economy with the not-so-smooth six-speed automatic transmission is 19 mpg overall on regular gas, quite good for a truck and a clear improvement over its predecessor. Out on the road, the Tacoma’s handling is ponderous, and its slow and numb steering never connects the driver to the front wheels. Clearly clumsy around corners, it never felt unsafe. The chassis’s propensity to jiggle and shudder delivers a Metallica snare-drum beat to your spine. Wind and engine noise drown out any chance of conversation, even at modest speeds. Braking performance is subpar. Inside, it still has a too-high step-in, a too-low driver’s seat, and a ceiling that scrapes scalps of those entering the cabin. The front seats are flat and uncomfortable, have limited support, and offer only the most basic adjustments. The rear seat in our crew cab is no better, with hard padding, cramped leg and foot room, and short cushions—although it flips up to reveal useful storage bins. Outward visibility is decent, but the narrow, shallow windows make it less commanding. Controls are basic and easy to read—essential when reaching for some of the faraway knobs and buttons." Excerpted from the June 2016 issue of Consumer Reports magazine. That's the same review I read. It was uncharacteristic of CR so it must be really that bad. I'm sure this is what convinced Harry to buy it: "Controls are basic and easy to read" --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. https://www.avast.com/antivirus |
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BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Friday, January 13, 2017 at 4:23:57 PM UTC-6, Poco Loco wrote:
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 16:41:00 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 4:16 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. No, I wouldn't have bought a four-cylinder gasoline engine truck. I am, however, very impressed with the four-cylinder engine in my wife's Toyota Camry and probably wouldn't consider a car with a V-6 or V-8. The Camry is peppy, and cruises at interstate speed limits with the engine loafing. My new car has a v6. A 2.2 litre 4 with a turbo doesn' t meet my requirements for the vehicle. Gas mileage is better than my wife's crv. Go figure. My wife got the top of the line Subaru to replace the VW diesel. Took it on the trip to Tampa. Very nice to drive and quite peppy with the four cylinder. In cruise control it automatically slows when pulling up behind a slower mover, then speeds back up when the lane is changed. Hell, there's nothing to do but keep the damn thing between the lines. And, without a signal on, the thing beeps at you when you get too close to a line. Got right around 30mpg for the trip. wifes 2016 Honda CRV has all the 4cyl pep you need and gets 32-36 with cruise locked on 65 |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/13/2017 11:35 PM, RGrew176 wrote:
Mr. Luddite;1074809 Wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). To bad you can't wait until 2019. Ford has a new Ranger pickup coming out then. A new Bronco is coming out in 2020 and the F-150 will be getting a 3.0L Powerstroke diesel in 2018. I think down the road that 3.0 diesel will find its way into other Ford products such as the Ranger, Bronco, Expedition and Explorer. Is that when the new Ranger is debuting? I'd actually like to wait and see because according to the press release I saw it will be a "mid-sized" truck. I really liked the Ranger as did a lot of other people. You certainly see a lot of them on the road. The problem is that I am not so sure her Mountaineer will last that long. She uses it a lot and it has about 175K miles on it now. The only bad experience I've ever had with Ford products was the 2005 F-350 diesel (6.0L) and it's problems were all related to the International engine. If those problems hadn't existed I'd probably still be driving it now. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/13/2017 11:51 PM, Tim wrote:
On Friday, January 13, 2017 at 4:23:57 PM UTC-6, Poco Loco wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 16:41:00 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 4:16 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. No, I wouldn't have bought a four-cylinder gasoline engine truck. I am, however, very impressed with the four-cylinder engine in my wife's Toyota Camry and probably wouldn't consider a car with a V-6 or V-8. The Camry is peppy, and cruises at interstate speed limits with the engine loafing. My new car has a v6. A 2.2 litre 4 with a turbo doesn' t meet my requirements for the vehicle. Gas mileage is better than my wife's crv. Go figure. My wife got the top of the line Subaru to replace the VW diesel. Took it on the trip to Tampa. Very nice to drive and quite peppy with the four cylinder. In cruise control it automatically slows when pulling up behind a slower mover, then speeds back up when the lane is changed. Hell, there's nothing to do but keep the damn thing between the lines. And, without a signal on, the thing beeps at you when you get too close to a line. Got right around 30mpg for the trip. wifes 2016 Honda CRV has all the 4cyl pep you need and gets 32-36 with cruise locked on 65 Does that have the "shiftless" transmission? The Altima has that and initially it took a little getting used to. Now I like it. Plenty of acceleration when you need it, even on the highway when you stomp on it. After driving the truck mostly, I have been amazed at the gas mileage. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/13/17 10:57 PM, Alex wrote:
Poco Loco wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 20:05:47 -0500, Alex wrote: Mr. Luddite wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). It also has lousy reviews. No, it has a great review! Funnier than ****: "For all of Toyota’s claims that this is an all-new truck, key features seem as though Toyota slept through the past decade’s advances in truck technology and interior design. Today’s modern full-sized trucks feature a quiet cabin, a semblance of handling responsiveness, and a tolerable ride. But the compact Tacoma has none of that. Unlike other V6-powered Toyota models, our tested Tacoma never feels quick from a standing start or when passing—despite the robust acceleration figures as measured on our track. Fuel economy with the not-so-smooth six-speed automatic transmission is 19 mpg overall on regular gas, quite good for a truck and a clear improvement over its predecessor. Out on the road, the Tacoma’s handling is ponderous, and its slow and numb steering never connects the driver to the front wheels. Clearly clumsy around corners, it never felt unsafe. The chassis’s propensity to jiggle and shudder delivers a Metallica snare-drum beat to your spine. Wind and engine noise drown out any chance of conversation, even at modest speeds. Braking performance is subpar. Inside, it still has a too-high step-in, a too-low driver’s seat, and a ceiling that scrapes scalps of those entering the cabin. The front seats are flat and uncomfortable, have limited support, and offer only the most basic adjustments. The rear seat in our crew cab is no better, with hard padding, cramped leg and foot room, and short cushions—although it flips up to reveal useful storage bins. Outward visibility is decent, but the narrow, shallow windows make it less commanding. Controls are basic and easy to read—essential when reaching for some of the faraway knobs and buttons." Excerpted from the June 2016 issue of Consumer Reports magazine. That's the same review I read. It was uncharacteristic of CR so it must be really that bad. I'm sure this is what convinced Harry to buy it: "Controls are basic and easy to read" I thought the CR review was hilarious. When I bought my 2016 Tacoma, the only other "choice" for a pickup in that class was the Chevy-GM model and the Tacomas had a better resale value historically and much better reliability. I doubt that has changed. The Honda pickup was and still isn't a real truck and the Dodge offering is...well, the typical Dodge-Jeep crapola. The Nissan is not a contender. My truck is quiet enough for me to listen to my favorite classical music at moderate sound pressure levels. It'll do 0-60 in under 8 seconds and probably closer to 7, fast enough for a pickup truck. I'm getting 22-24 mpg in our suburban area with my manual transmission V-6. The "handling" is typical pickup truck, exactly what I would expect. There's no chassis jiggle or shudder. The model I have has heavier duty shocks and springs, which serve it well off-road. The step-in is high, but my truck is a 4X4 with a raised suspension. Duh. I've yet to "scrap" my scalp while getting into the cab. The reality is, if one of the right-wing deplorables here had the truck, most of the fellow deplorables would be singing its praise. I think the testers at CR were looking for a Honda Civic in a truck, as opposed to...a truck. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 22:00:52 -0500 (EST), justan wrote:
Poco Loco Wrote in message: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 20:05:47 -0500, Alex wrote: Mr. Luddite wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). It also has lousy reviews. No, it has a great review! Funnier than ****: "For all of Toyota’s claims that this is an all-new truck, key features seem as though Toyota slept through the past decade’s advances in truck technology and interior design. Today’s modern full-sized trucks feature a quiet cabin, a semblance of handling responsiveness, and a tolerable ride. But the compact Tacoma has none of that. Unlike other V6-powered Toyota models, our tested Tacoma never feels quick from a standing start or when passing—despite the robust acceleration figures as measured on our track. Fuel economy with the not-so-smooth six-speed automatic transmission is 19 mpg overall on regular gas, quite good for a truck and a clear improvement over its predecessor. Out on the road, the Tacoma’s handling is ponderous, and its slow and numb steering never connects the driver to the front wheels. Clearly clumsy around corners, it never felt unsafe. The chassis’s propensity to jiggle and shudder delivers a Metallica snare-drum beat to your spine. Wind and engine noise drown out any chance of conversation, even at modest speeds. Braking performance is subpar. Inside, it still has a too-high step-in, a too-low driver’s seat, and a ceiling that scrapes scalps of those entering the cabin. The front seats are flat and uncomfortable, have limited support, and offer only the most basic adjustments. The rear seat in our crew cab is no better, with hard padding, cramped leg and foot room, and short cushions—although it flips up to reveal useful storage bins. Outward visibility is decent, but the narrow, shallow windows make it less commanding. Controls are basic and easy to read—essential when reaching for some of the faraway knobs and buttons." Excerpted from the June 2016 issue of Consumer Reports magazine. Reportedly, Krause is a big fella. How is he gonna fit in the cramped cabin of a Tacoma? Like this: http://tinyurl.com/gqd8dlm |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 22:57:43 -0500, Alex wrote:
Poco Loco wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 20:05:47 -0500, Alex wrote: Mr. Luddite wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). It also has lousy reviews. No, it has a great review! Funnier than ****: "For all of Toyota’s claims that this is an all-new truck, key features seem as though Toyota slept through the past decade’s advances in truck technology and interior design. Today’s modern full-sized trucks feature a quiet cabin, a semblance of handling responsiveness, and a tolerable ride. But the compact Tacoma has none of that. Unlike other V6-powered Toyota models, our tested Tacoma never feels quick from a standing start or when passing—despite the robust acceleration figures as measured on our track. Fuel economy with the not-so-smooth six-speed automatic transmission is 19 mpg overall on regular gas, quite good for a truck and a clear improvement over its predecessor. Out on the road, the Tacoma’s handling is ponderous, and its slow and numb steering never connects the driver to the front wheels. Clearly clumsy around corners, it never felt unsafe. The chassis’s propensity to jiggle and shudder delivers a Metallica snare-drum beat to your spine. Wind and engine noise drown out any chance of conversation, even at modest speeds. Braking performance is subpar. Inside, it still has a too-high step-in, a too-low driver’s seat, and a ceiling that scrapes scalps of those entering the cabin. The front seats are flat and uncomfortable, have limited support, and offer only the most basic adjustments. The rear seat in our crew cab is no better, with hard padding, cramped leg and foot room, and short cushions—although it flips up to reveal useful storage bins. Outward visibility is decent, but the narrow, shallow windows make it less commanding. Controls are basic and easy to read—essential when reaching for some of the faraway knobs and buttons." Excerpted from the June 2016 issue of Consumer Reports magazine. That's the same review I read. It was uncharacteristic of CR so it must be really that bad. I'm sure this is what convinced Harry to buy it: "Controls are basic and easy to read" Very uncharacteristic. I've never seen a humorous review in CR. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 05:29:57 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 1/13/2017 11:35 PM, RGrew176 wrote: Mr. Luddite;1074809 Wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). To bad you can't wait until 2019. Ford has a new Ranger pickup coming out then. A new Bronco is coming out in 2020 and the F-150 will be getting a 3.0L Powerstroke diesel in 2018. I think down the road that 3.0 diesel will find its way into other Ford products such as the Ranger, Bronco, Expedition and Explorer. Is that when the new Ranger is debuting? I'd actually like to wait and see because according to the press release I saw it will be a "mid-sized" truck. I really liked the Ranger as did a lot of other people. You certainly see a lot of them on the road. The problem is that I am not so sure her Mountaineer will last that long. She uses it a lot and it has about 175K miles on it now. The only bad experience I've ever had with Ford products was the 2005 F-350 diesel (6.0L) and it's problems were all related to the International engine. If those problems hadn't existed I'd probably still be driving it now. If you and several others hadn't had so many problems with that diesel engine, I'd probably be driving a Ford now. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 5:37:54 AM UTC-5, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 1/13/2017 11:51 PM, Tim wrote: On Friday, January 13, 2017 at 4:23:57 PM UTC-6, Poco Loco wrote: On Fri, 13 Jan 2017 16:41:00 -0500 (EST), justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 4:16 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 1/13/2017 4:12 PM, justan wrote: Keyser Soze Wrote in message: On 1/13/17 2:40 PM, justan wrote: "Mr. Luddite" Wrote in message: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration.. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). That ought to be able to haul a 20 ft Pahkah, his last known, (thought to be real), boat. And once again, you display your ignorance. The boat with engine and gear and fuel was about 3400 pounds, and the trailer added substantially to that, putting the weight of the full rig way over 3,500 pounds.. Stick to what you know, whatever that might be. You agree with Luddite's findings then? You overstated your capacity by a whopping 3000 pounds. Almost twice the real capacity. I'm wondering if you know anything that really matters. I could have sworn that he told us that his Tacoma had the four cylinder rather than the V6 but apparently I was wrong. The Tacoma with the V6 and the tow package is indeed rated for 6400 lbs towing. No, I wouldn't have bought a four-cylinder gasoline engine truck. I am, however, very impressed with the four-cylinder engine in my wife's Toyota Camry and probably wouldn't consider a car with a V-6 or V-8. The Camry is peppy, and cruises at interstate speed limits with the engine loafing. My new car has a v6. A 2.2 litre 4 with a turbo doesn' t meet my requirements for the vehicle. Gas mileage is better than my wife's crv. Go figure. My wife got the top of the line Subaru to replace the VW diesel. Took it on the trip to Tampa. Very nice to drive and quite peppy with the four cylinder. In cruise control it automatically slows when pulling up behind a slower mover, then speeds back up when the lane is changed. Hell, there's nothing to do but keep the damn thing between the lines. And, without a signal on, the thing beeps at you when you get too close to a line. Got right around 30mpg for the trip. wifes 2016 Honda CRV has all the 4cyl pep you need and gets 32-36 with cruise locked on 65 Does that have the "shiftless" transmission? The Altima has that and initially it took a little getting used to. Now I like it. Plenty of acceleration when you need it, even on the highway when you stomp on it. After driving the truck mostly, I have been amazed at the gas mileage. My wife's Maxima has the CVT transmission. You're right, it is different, but that and the V6 really moves that car. It seems to pick an RPM to run at based on throttle position, then varies the tranny ratio to accelerate. Other than some reports of long-term reliability, there's nothing not to like. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/14/17 8:35 AM, Poco Loco wrote:
On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 05:29:57 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/13/2017 11:35 PM, RGrew176 wrote: Mr. Luddite;1074809 Wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). To bad you can't wait until 2019. Ford has a new Ranger pickup coming out then. A new Bronco is coming out in 2020 and the F-150 will be getting a 3.0L Powerstroke diesel in 2018. I think down the road that 3.0 diesel will find its way into other Ford products such as the Ranger, Bronco, Expedition and Explorer. Is that when the new Ranger is debuting? I'd actually like to wait and see because according to the press release I saw it will be a "mid-sized" truck. I really liked the Ranger as did a lot of other people. You certainly see a lot of them on the road. The problem is that I am not so sure her Mountaineer will last that long. She uses it a lot and it has about 175K miles on it now. The only bad experience I've ever had with Ford products was the 2005 F-350 diesel (6.0L) and it's problems were all related to the International engine. If those problems hadn't existed I'd probably still be driving it now. If you and several others hadn't had so many problems with that diesel engine, I'd probably be driving a Ford now. You want problems, expensive problems, you should buy an Audi. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 8:28:52 AM UTC-5, Keyser Soze wrote:
My truck is quiet enough for me to listen to my favorite classical music at moderate sound pressure levels. It'll do 0-60 in under 8 seconds and probably closer to 7, fast enough for a pickup truck. The tests of your truck report 0-60 times of *over* 8 seconds, with professional drivers. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 8:40:27 AM UTC-5, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 1/14/17 8:35 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 05:29:57 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/13/2017 11:35 PM, RGrew176 wrote: Mr. Luddite;1074809 Wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). To bad you can't wait until 2019. Ford has a new Ranger pickup coming out then. A new Bronco is coming out in 2020 and the F-150 will be getting a 3.0L Powerstroke diesel in 2018. I think down the road that 3.0 diesel will find its way into other Ford products such as the Ranger, Bronco, Expedition and Explorer. Is that when the new Ranger is debuting? I'd actually like to wait and see because according to the press release I saw it will be a "mid-sized" truck. I really liked the Ranger as did a lot of other people. You certainly see a lot of them on the road. The problem is that I am not so sure her Mountaineer will last that long. She uses it a lot and it has about 175K miles on it now. The only bad experience I've ever had with Ford products was the 2005 F-350 diesel (6.0L) and it's problems were all related to the International engine. If those problems hadn't existed I'd probably still be driving it now. If you and several others hadn't had so many problems with that diesel engine, I'd probably be driving a Ford now. You want problems, expensive problems, you should buy an Audi. How would you know? You don't own one. Based on a sample size of one that a friend owns? I've had two, and my second one has needed *nothing* in the way of maintenance other than oil changes. Maybe you should stick to what you know. What is that, other than being an asshole and 7th grade attempts at insults? :) |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/14/17 8:50 AM, Its Me wrote:
On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 8:40:27 AM UTC-5, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/14/17 8:35 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 05:29:57 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/13/2017 11:35 PM, RGrew176 wrote: Mr. Luddite;1074809 Wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). To bad you can't wait until 2019. Ford has a new Ranger pickup coming out then. A new Bronco is coming out in 2020 and the F-150 will be getting a 3.0L Powerstroke diesel in 2018. I think down the road that 3.0 diesel will find its way into other Ford products such as the Ranger, Bronco, Expedition and Explorer. Is that when the new Ranger is debuting? I'd actually like to wait and see because according to the press release I saw it will be a "mid-sized" truck. I really liked the Ranger as did a lot of other people. You certainly see a lot of them on the road. The problem is that I am not so sure her Mountaineer will last that long. She uses it a lot and it has about 175K miles on it now. The only bad experience I've ever had with Ford products was the 2005 F-350 diesel (6.0L) and it's problems were all related to the International engine. If those problems hadn't existed I'd probably still be driving it now. If you and several others hadn't had so many problems with that diesel engine, I'd probably be driving a Ford now. You want problems, expensive problems, you should buy an Audi. How would you know? You don't own one. Based on a sample size of one that a friend owns? I've had two, and my second one has needed *nothing* in the way of maintenance other than oil changes. Maybe you should stick to what you know. What is that, other than being an asshole and 7th grade attempts at insults? :) A close relative owns one. It spends a lot of time in the shop with its over-engineered systems breaking down. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On 1/14/17 8:43 AM, Its Me wrote:
On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 8:28:52 AM UTC-5, Keyser Soze wrote: My truck is quiet enough for me to listen to my favorite classical music at moderate sound pressure levels. It'll do 0-60 in under 8 seconds and probably closer to 7, fast enough for a pickup truck. The tests of your truck report 0-60 times of *over* 8 seconds, with professional drivers. I beat 8 seconds several times once the truck had 5000 miles on it, and I'm not the word's best shifter on the manual tranny. Incidentally, you boychiks left out the best parts of the CR review, the reasons why the Tacoma is the leading seller in its class: "While full-sized pickup trucks increasingly adopt luxury trappings, compact trucks remain utilitarian workhorses. The Tacoma is a reliable but down-and-dirty example of function trumping form. 'Simply put, the Tacoma is the perfect truck for landscapers and contractors. "This beast of burden has a bulletproof reliability track record, a tough-as-nails chassis, and a durable composite-Â*plastic bed. For off-roading adventures, the capable Tacoma has few peers. "True to its heritage as a work truck, the Tacoma admirably tolerates those sorts of duties. It trundled up our rock hill with ease. The damped tailgate is a charm to lower but a chore to raise. And though it varies based on the body and powerÂ*train, our truck is rated to tow 6,400 pounds—that’s a 23-foot Airstream trailer, folks." Have nice day, truck poseurs. |
BTW ... about your Tacoma Harry ...
On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 8:57:22 AM UTC-5, Keyser Soze wrote:
On 1/14/17 8:50 AM, Its Me wrote: On Saturday, January 14, 2017 at 8:40:27 AM UTC-5, Keyser Soze wrote: On 1/14/17 8:35 AM, Poco Loco wrote: On Sat, 14 Jan 2017 05:29:57 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote: On 1/13/2017 11:35 PM, RGrew176 wrote: Mr. Luddite;1074809 Wrote: I've been doing some research on smaller trucks to replace the F-250 I have now. The main criteria is something that Mrs.E will feel comfortable driving (meaning smaller) yet still has the tow capacity to handle the little camper she bought last summer. Ideal would be a tow capacity of 5K to 6K lbs to tow the little 4K lb. camper. I happened to be looking at the Tacoma and recalled you posting that yours is rated to tow 6,400 lbs. You also have said you have the four cylinder, 4x4 with a manual transmission. You might want to verify your tow rating for that configuration. According to Toyota, it is only rated to tow 3,500 lbs. (2016 model specs). To bad you can't wait until 2019. Ford has a new Ranger pickup coming out then. A new Bronco is coming out in 2020 and the F-150 will be getting a 3.0L Powerstroke diesel in 2018. I think down the road that 3.0 diesel will find its way into other Ford products such as the Ranger, Bronco, Expedition and Explorer. Is that when the new Ranger is debuting? I'd actually like to wait and see because according to the press release I saw it will be a "mid-sized" truck. I really liked the Ranger as did a lot of other people. You certainly see a lot of them on the road. The problem is that I am not so sure her Mountaineer will last that long. She uses it a lot and it has about 175K miles on it now. The only bad experience I've ever had with Ford products was the 2005 F-350 diesel (6.0L) and it's problems were all related to the International engine. If those problems hadn't existed I'd probably still be driving it now. If you and several others hadn't had so many problems with that diesel engine, I'd probably be driving a Ford now. You want problems, expensive problems, you should buy an Audi. How would you know? You don't own one. Based on a sample size of one that a friend owns? I've had two, and my second one has needed *nothing* in the way of maintenance other than oil changes. Maybe you should stick to what you know. What is that, other than being an asshole and 7th grade attempts at insults? :) A close relative owns one. It spends a lot of time in the shop with its over-engineered systems breaking down. As I said, a sample size of one. I've actually had experience with four... my two, and two that my wife had from her previous job where cars were provided to the executives. They were all very reliable, with virtually no time in the shop. All vehicle have lemons from time to time. You're experience isn't indicative of the world. "Improvement is possible. Audi, once described by Consumer Reports as "a sinkhole of service problems," is now the top-ranked European brand in the magazine's annual reliability rankings. Audi, which is one of several Volkswagen (VLKAF) luxury brands, has improved greatly over the last few years, according to the report." Maybe your relative just has an old, worn out one. |
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