johngottfredson
Threat Level Midnight
- Location
- Alpine
Looking at getting a bigger truck. God bless my tundra, but I’ve had to tow heavy a few times in the last month and it revealed how light duty that thing really is. I have a few more years of construction projects ahead of me so hauling dump trailers and equipment will be fairly common.
My lean is toward the 6.7 F350, probably fairly new. I’ve borrowed my friends 2020 to haul some loads a fairly long distance and was blown away by the performance. Runner up is the 7.3Zilla
Question 1: Any reason I should cross shop Ram or GM offerings? I have a lot more experience with Ford and have been pretty happy with their stuff the last few years, plus I have peeps at the dealer.
Question 2: Is my reasoning off here? I like the 6.7 for the power and fuel economy. I know I’ll never make up the premium for the diesel option in fuel savings, but I plan on getting that back when I trade/sell in a couple of years at most. So the day to day cost savings is nice, but mostly it’s the mental satisfaction of having that much power at those mpg’s. Coming from all those land cruisers which were both gutless AND thirsty, I feel like the catharsis of 1050 lbs of torque at 20 mpgs might wash away years of Toyota Performance Anxiety (TPA) and would be worth the extra coin up front, especially if I can get it back on the resale.
I will turn the time over to the Quorum for discussion
My lean is toward the 6.7 F350, probably fairly new. I’ve borrowed my friends 2020 to haul some loads a fairly long distance and was blown away by the performance. Runner up is the 7.3Zilla
Question 1: Any reason I should cross shop Ram or GM offerings? I have a lot more experience with Ford and have been pretty happy with their stuff the last few years, plus I have peeps at the dealer.
Question 2: Is my reasoning off here? I like the 6.7 for the power and fuel economy. I know I’ll never make up the premium for the diesel option in fuel savings, but I plan on getting that back when I trade/sell in a couple of years at most. So the day to day cost savings is nice, but mostly it’s the mental satisfaction of having that much power at those mpg’s. Coming from all those land cruisers which were both gutless AND thirsty, I feel like the catharsis of 1050 lbs of torque at 20 mpgs might wash away years of Toyota Performance Anxiety (TPA) and would be worth the extra coin up front, especially if I can get it back on the resale.
I will turn the time over to the Quorum for discussion