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Thread: WTB : Toyota Tundra Double Cab
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06-24-2022, 05:21 PM #26
Or you could pay less than $5k more and buy a new Chevy Colorado.
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06-24-2022, 05:24 PM #27
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06-24-2022, 05:53 PM #28
WTB : Toyota Tundra Double Cab
The Tundra with bags handles the hard side just fine on backroads and highways. It struggles compared to the hd truck on freeways and in high winds, where it always ends up hunting gears. Keep the speed under 70mph and you’re golden. For the amount of time it’s on the truck these days I’m much happier daily driving the tundra than the PSD. Super duty hauled it with no modifications, just the stock overloads.
The tundra is very capable, you’ll be happy with the rig if you can find a decently priced truck.
Work has changed for us so we don’t get to use the Bigfoot as much in the winter as we used to, so if anyone out there has a hawk and wants a hard side hmu.Last edited by jackattack; 06-24-2022 at 06:21 PM.
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06-24-2022, 06:02 PM #29
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06-24-2022, 06:31 PM #30
WTB : Toyota Tundra Double Cab
If they suit you, all good. Our colorados replaced a couple 2016 tacos. The tacos had marginally better seats for my sciatica but were still cramped in the headroom without the sunroof. They also handled the cross ditches far better due to the clearance front and rear. The colorados come more base trim than the taco, but that is usually a wash for work trucks. Jury is still out on maintenance/reliability on the colorados.
But I still vastly prefer my old ‘03 gen2 taco over either.
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06-28-2022, 07:24 AM #31
‘03 Taco is 1st gen. I tragically just sold my 04. Even my son cried when it rolled away, and now I’m in the same boat as OP- I need a full-size and would much prefer to get a Tundra over a Chevy or Ram. Even considering a 2022 lease since I have a company vehicle and it won’t get driven much. Mainly just need to be able to fit 2 kids, and haul shit to the dump.
Originally Posted by JoeStrummer
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06-28-2022, 11:49 AM #32
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07-02-2022, 08:22 AM #33Registered User
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Well currently my leading contenders are:
2017 Tundra SR5 with 131,000 miles for $28K... kinda drives me crazy that this isn't cheaper given the number of miles but seems to be in line with the current market.
2022 Tundra ST5 TRD Off Road with a couple other little options for $49K. It'll arrive in 2-3 weeks.
Honestly when I run the math cost of ownership for what my monthly payment + maintenance + Insurance + gas is only around $130 more for the newer truck. I'm having a hard time creating an accurate depreciation schedule so I'm kinda leaving that as a question mark. I'd much rather own a cheaper vehicle but I'm not seeing a strong economic argument for it at the prices I'm looking at.
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07-02-2022, 02:34 PM #34
If that truly pencils out to only $130 bucks more what are you waiting for? If that is $130/mo more or $1500 annually. Still think that’s worth it. The new engine/tranny is a question. But it’s Toyota so I’d imagine you’re all good.
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07-03-2022, 08:13 AM #35Registered User
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I'd agree. With that pricing, the used car isn't a better financial decision. I think I have a vague misplaced hope that I can find a used one that makes the cost look better. I've just never spent money on cars before so a brand new vehicle makes me a little nervous.
There are some that pop up private party used that look like better deals. Here is one example:
https://rockies.craigslist.org/cto/d...501912185.html
Sadly this person has been non-responsive. With this many miles I'd assume lower maintenance costs which would make the price difference look a little more substantive. I'll get it sorted and thankfully have a few good leads that cropped up yesterday.
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07-25-2022, 10:12 PM #36Registered User
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Thanks for the feedback on this thread. I ended up tracking down a 2016 Tundra with around 70K miles for just north of $30k. Great condition with full dealer service records every 5,000 miles from a private seller who seemed legit. The guy had a trade in offer from a dealer for $30k and KBB had dealer trade in at $30.5. Thankfully it was only a couple hours from home and was easy to pickup. It feels a little overpriced but I'll feel less bad if this gets scratched up than a 2022 model.
I installed the camper. Leaning toward Firestone Airbags with Daystar Cradles and going from there as far as suspension goes. Some 80-20 ski racks for the rear are in the works.
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07-25-2022, 10:18 PM #37
That’s a nice fit. Congratulations
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07-25-2022, 10:30 PM #38
Honestly, I think you did pretty good in this market. Sweet rig.
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07-25-2022, 11:23 PM #39
That’s purdy.
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07-26-2022, 10:49 AM #40
Well done!
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07-28-2022, 07:49 AM #41
Envious as I said earlier - in UT 30k only gets you 175k+ hard miles or a branded/salvage title. I've looked at a couple over the past few months that had serious rust or other undisclosed issues once you got under the hood, still a really bad time to get a used truck.
My local toyota dealer called last week with a new 2022 I can get in early September, so looks like I will be going new for the first time ever. Only will have taken 6 months from refundable deposit to delivery and from what I can tell if you are paying MSRP that is considered a short wait. Weird times
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