The stock Toyota jack. It's mechanical/screw and has a long range.
You need to put down blocks to bring the jack so it's almost touching what you want to lift.
And less space in the sleeping berth.
I'm not sure how all you couples are managing it, but I designed mine for NS sleeping (so both could get in an out without crawling over the other) and enough headroom for "romantic exploits"... and a taller flatbed style made the most sense.
The 610...
I don't think driving in the city is going to be fun in any of these. Don't know the particulars, but often two vehicles makes more sense. A smallish hybrid being ideal for city use, or even EV.
A few of the 5.7s in the 2nd gen have gone >1,000,000 miles. This guy did it in 2007 (2nd gen) with the 4.7, and is closing in on it with a 2014 with the 5.7. https://www.motor1.com/news/702983/2014-toyota-tundra-million-miles/
I don't think there is anything magic about any of them. A big V8...
The Tundra was closed C, with extra C-channel pieces riveted in top and bottom. My crude measurement is ~185x75x3.2mm (or 1/8") for the main part and similar thickness for the riveted in pieces, so ~6.4mm top and bottom. The rear part of the frame is smaller and single wall though.
The suspension forks are junk (wish they'd just put rigid ones on them), but the bikes in this range aren't too bad usually for casual riding.
I'd also consider this one: https://www.walmart.com/ip/Schwinn-29-Axum-Mens-Mountain-Bike-19-in-Frame-8-Speeds-Black/288838682
For the money it's a...
It's practically free... hard to go too far wrong I think...
I bought a Kona Unit fully rigid frame and build it up with 29x3" tires on i40 rims. I was considering a fatbike for sand washes, but I hate high Q factors. 29x3 works well enough in sand so far (more resistance is ok), but man... on...
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