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Thread: Trucks.
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02-14-2020, 01:08 PM #1876
So much complaining in here. F350 crew cab long bed here with a northern lite camper left on year round. It's my daily driver in the West Portland burbs. Trade offs? And yep, sometimes I take wife's car for certain missions, but that's more to do with the camper. Before the camper, no fucks given and I'm really surprised to see fucks are given at all over tacos or f150s with 5.5ft beds.
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02-14-2020, 01:20 PM #1877
Not really complaining... the truck is fucking great. I've always had SUV's and love the change, especially for being able to throw a bunch of mountain bikes over the back, nice and easy.
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02-14-2020, 01:36 PM #1878
I used to have a Frontier, 4 door "long bed" (which in that truck meant 6' box). When I switched to a Sequoia, which is a big SUV, all the reviews talked about its size and turning radius as negatives, but fuck, the thing handles like a sports car compared to the Frontier. I can even (sometimes) pull into parking spaces with a second/third straightening maneuver!
"fuck off you asshat gaper shit for brains fucktard wanker." - Jesus Christ
"She was tossing her bean salad with the vigor of a Drunken Pop princess so I walked out of the corner and said.... "need a hand?"" - Odin
"everybody's got their hooks into you, fuck em....forge on motherfuckers, drag all those bitches across the goal line with you." - (not so) ill-advised strategy
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02-14-2020, 01:51 PM #1879
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02-14-2020, 01:56 PM #1880
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02-14-2020, 01:59 PM #1881
for multiple reasons, we chose the SUV (ended up with a 100-series land cruise) with utility trailer route instead of a pickup. wanna talk about the joy of town (not city) driving and parking?....
i have only had to parallel park (in reverse) on a busy street a few times (less than 20) with the trailer hitched. when in town, there are lots of people driving with utility trailers and lots of long bed trucks. most strip malls and grocery parking lots have peeps with hitched trailers parked in the back 40. i park at downtown edge and walk when i need to run errands in the main street areas when the trailer is hitched. i definitely like having a dumping trailer with wood panels and flood over a pick-up bed for hauling and dealing with outdoor stuff like gravel, mulch, soil, slash, leaves/needles, etc. i've never done it in-town, but I have used the farm jack multiple times to help maneuver the back end of the trailer, both loaded (this can be sketchy!) and unloaded.
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02-14-2020, 02:19 PM #1882
like other rural areas, the road system in my area was mostly developed pre-motor vehicle. the paved county road that accesses my neighborhood is very steep (up and down from one watershed into another) with a few sharp corners. the last snow storm we got in January (last time nor cal received any measureable precip ), they closed schools-midday, when the shit was hitting the fan. on the way to pickup the kids, the closest sharp corner to my home had a 4runner high centered up an embankment destroying a bank of mailboxes. at the base of the large steep hill that must be climbed to leave my neighborhood, there were several vehicles in the ditch or shoulder who lost control while descending the hill. i was behind a 4wd f150 that either had MT or AT tires. The only way that turck made it up from the base of the hill on the road was because 3 people (drivers/passengers from the vehicles in the ditch) were pushing the truck's rear end sideways to keep it from sliding off the road (due to road crown) into the shoulder/ditch as one front tire was pulling the truck up the grade. eventually, it got enough momentum (and into the center of the road) that the driver got the rear end to track with the front.... on the way back down the hill to get home later during the storm, there was a long bed long wheelbase diesel pick-up perpendicular to the road at the base of that hill with its rear axle and tires deep in the ditch. I'm glad I missed that episode. i see plenty of vehicles driving around w/o front bumper covers since that day.
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02-14-2020, 02:35 PM #1883
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02-14-2020, 07:19 PM #1884Banned
- Join Date
- May 2007
- Location
- Sandy, Utah
- Posts
- 14,410
Fuck really? Trouble in parking lots with a taco? Wtf??? I park my 06 tundra double cab and 6'5" bed. Even parallel park it sometimes. You guys ever learn to drive? Shit I just had it in Manhattan 2 weeks ago. They get out of your way I can tell ya that.
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02-14-2020, 10:42 PM #1885Been there, skied that.
- Join Date
- Feb 2004
- Location
- Loveland, Chair 9.
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- 4,909
https://ritholtz.com/2020/02/bollinger-b1-truck/
Bollinger B1 Truck - all electric, too spartan for me but some like that.
https://ritholtz.com/2020/01/rivian-r1t-pickup-truck/
Rivian R1T Pickup Truck is much better in finish and zero to 60 in 3 secondsTGR forums cannot handle SkiCougar !
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02-16-2020, 05:12 PM #1886
It looks like a Ridgeline raped a Buick.
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02-16-2020, 10:47 PM #1887
Yes, that was the design brief.
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02-17-2020, 07:05 AM #1888
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02-17-2020, 07:07 AM #1889
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02-17-2020, 10:06 AM #1890
Double Cab Tundra Longbed.
This bitch is a county mile long (25' actually) and I give zero shits here in Idaho. If pressed, I might be willing to admit I like the backup camera if I have been been drinking.Live Free or Die
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02-17-2020, 10:15 AM #1891
People give me shit about parking my 22 foot and change 170 sprinter...when I tell them I’m shorter than the longest tundra they call bullshit
Sent from my iPhone using TGR ForumsI rip the groomed on tele gear
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02-17-2020, 10:31 AM #1892
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02-17-2020, 10:36 AM #1893
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02-17-2020, 10:37 AM #1894
Trucks.
Pretty sure my long box crew cab Chevy is 22’ long...you have another 3’ ?
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02-17-2020, 10:48 AM #1895
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02-17-2020, 10:57 AM #1896
I've never seen a Tundra with an 8' bed other than with a single cab. I don't think any of the other configurations have the payload to make use of it.
The typical 4-door (small back seat = 6.5' bed, big back seat =5.5'-?) 4WD Tundra has something like a 1500' payload capacity. An 8' bed and longer frame would reduce capacity due to added metal, so now down to what, 1300#? Not much you can fill up a longbed with and stay under capacity. Insulation?
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02-17-2020, 11:01 AM #1897watch out for snakes
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02-17-2020, 11:22 AM #1898
And you have to subtract weight of passengers and any gear carried in cab. I loved my tundra dearly, and preferred many of it's characteristics to my new truck, but payload and "the general ability to haul heavy shit up a mountain at speed" weren't among those.
Anyway, Google says the double cab long bed exists. I don't know that I've ever seen one.
On a final FWIW note, I've had people + well over 2000lbs in the bed of my old tundra several times (gravel, fence posts/boards, dump runs), and never had any issue with a bone stock suspension. Only issues: the small rated payload, and trying to maintain speed limit towing 7-8k lbs uphill at altitude. We did it, but mostly at redline.
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02-17-2020, 11:36 AM #1899
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02-17-2020, 12:02 PM #1900Hucked to flat once
- Join Date
- Oct 2005
- Location
- Idaho
- Posts
- 11,001
There is a Tundra double cab long bed that is an 8'. I test drove one because it had a nice new Icon suspension on it I wanted to check out. It turned okay...at the time I was in a F350 double long though. You don't see many long bed Tundras around. I ended up with the double cab 6.5' a few year later. It's fine 98% of the time and turns a lot better than the 8' bed and is easier to park.
Here's a pic from the drive for proof. Not sure if they'll still configure them this way.
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