Postby Quelah » Thu Jan 12, 2017 12:38 am
Haven't read the whole thread. I have a 2007 F250 6.0 diesel (horrified gasps!) 4x4, extended cab, long bed, manual transmission. I custom ordered the truck to my specs. I love it like I've loved few things in my life. Yes the 6.0 doesn't have a great rep, I have a good one. Hopefully I'm not jinxing it by saying that. When our mobile mechanic was out working on DH's truck (2006 F350, also 6.0, has custom utility bed, weighs ~13K going down the road) he asked if I wanted him to stick my truck on the computer. Sure! He did, and looked at me "If you ever do a radiator flush on this truck you should save the flush, bottle it, and sell it as holy water to other 6.0 owners."
Anyway, I love my truck. I love Fords. I also have a Mustang (the grey pony) which I love very much. I loved my Honda Accord for many years, then it got stolen, hence the Mustang, which is beautiful, and I love it.
Back to trucks.
It is unlikely I would ever buy anything but a Ford. Their ergonomics work for me. When you spend the hours in a truck that I have, this is important. I broke my back very badly 10+ years ago. There are very few chairs I find comfortable for very long. I could live in the front seat of my truck. I once drove a friends very nice crew cab dually fully loaded leather Duramax with a 3 horse trailer from San Luis Obispo to Cave Creek AZ. ~ 600 miles. Longest day of my life. On paper, a lovely truck. I hated it. Killed my back, the Allison transmission irritated me no end. Dodge, just no. I have great respect for the Cummins engine, if Dodge ever builds a decent truck around that engine, everyone else can go home. I know many people that have them and love them, my farrier has two, and old one that you can't kill, she had an early 2000s that she hated, she just got a newer one and loves it.
Here's my advice, for the trailer you want, you need a 3/4 ton. 4x4, up to you. Better to have it and not need it than to need it and not have it. My definition of off road is a gravel parking lot, that said, I've used it on wet grass at horse shows, and going up gravel driveways. My tires are all terrain but not aggressively so. Parelli Scorpions, I've been very happy with them FWIW.
All makers haver strengths and weaknesses. Go sit in trucks (unless you're young or not a person who finds things uncomfortable and then it doesn't matter so much). Sit in them for a long time, at least an hour. Read a book. Then drive them. Buy a truck that you ENJOY driving, that feels natural, and safe, and solid. Can you drive it smoothly? Really smoothly? Pull away from a stop with a glass of water on the dash and not spill any? My BFF has a gas Chevy, nice truck, newish truck. Something about the way the accelerator is designed makes it very hard to pull out of dead stop smoothly. Like its got a laggy carburetor but it's obviously fuel injected. And the mirrors suck.
Get what you like, get a 3/4 ton, get 4x4 if you possibly can, and get a long bed. I would never buy a truck with a short bed, for a variety of reasons.