All these new vehicles are great but is your objective to save fuel or to save money?
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If the objective is to save money, you might want to reconsider what buying a $30 - $40k vehicle is going to do to your cash flow. Unless you can put a big down payment when you buy you may be looking at monthly payments of over $500 or even close to $1000. You can buy a LOT of gas with that money, and consider this: you only buy gas when you travel but once you are locked into that payment you are making it every month whether you are using the vehicle or not.
I thought about that too. I'd like to get one more cross country trip in with my fiancé before we really settle down and can't take that much time off. My thought was buy a new (or newer) truck, and set off... Or I can just take my current fuel hog of a truck and not plunk down a payment on a new truck and use whatever I'd have in the bank for fuel instead.
Say the trip is 7500 miles total. I doubt it would be that much but anyway...
7500 miles / 16 MPG x $3/gal (premium) = just over $1400 in fuel. I spent MUCH more than that on my cross country trip in 2010 when I paid almost $5/gal for regular in socal, averaging about the same fuel mileage.
It's really the mileage around town/commuting that gets me... I only get 10-11 MPG in more than half of my driving. But even with a newer truck, that number won't be as significant as a jump as the highway MPG improvement.
Finding an "Overlander" that gets 20 - 24 MPG on the highway is not that difficult. There are lots of them out there with ratings in that range. Hell the newer Suburbans I believe are rated at 14/21 or something!
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What's tough is finding an "overlander" that will still get that MPG after you put on:
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* Those 33" AT tires
* The 2" lift you needed in order to mount the 33" tires
* The +80lb winch bumper with the 70lb winch
* The airflow-destroying roof rack and lights and
* The 200lbs of Zombie Apocalypse gear you carry around in it.
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That's the nut that's tough to crack. One of the reasons I'm losing my affection for my "mid sized" 4runner is that while they can turn in impressive MPG numbers in bone-stock form with street-slick tires and no gear, once you start loading them up that advantage often disappears and what you are left with is a vehicle that is both underpowered AND gets poor MPG - the worst of both worlds (the power of a 4 cyl and the fuel economy of a V8.)
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I'm starting to think that if I started with a full size vehicle, my initial MPG might be lower but my MPG after some mods would likely not take a nosedive quite as far as they do with a compact/midsize vehicle.
If it's the around-town MPG that's killing you, is a 2nd vehicle an option? That's exactly what I did. My gas guzzling (relatively) 4runner sits at home and my current DD is a 1996 Mazda B2300 (AKA Ford Ranger) that gets 24 - 25 MPG pretty consistently. 2.3l 4 cyl, 5 speed and the AC is ice cold. Cost me $2000 in 2013 and the only money I've put into it is a $200 CL topper (color matched, no less!) and a $135 Crutchfield stereo. Also great when I want to pick up some bags of bark or an old table and don't want to risk the nicer interior of the 4runner.
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Previous DD was a 1997 Mazda Protégé sedan with a 1.5 and a 5 speed that could get 32 MPG all day and 38 if I was on the highway. I paid $900 for that car and put a new (used) engine in it for about $2300 a year later so my total investment was still well under $4k.
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Depending on where you live it could be easy to find a 10 - 15 year old Honda, Toyota or similar compact car that will get you 30mpg easily. Of course, if you live in states where they salt the roads, finding an older car in decent condition may be tougher to do. It's pretty easy here in Denver.
My curiosity is around what happens with the Midsized truck game - if we start to see midsized 4dr trucks offering nearly as good mileage as my Subaru and getting 5 star crash ratings its going to be a hard sell for me to not replace the Subaru with one of those new midsized truck for better hauling capability beefier cooling capacity and better off road clearance etc.
This is what I want. Bring me a new Ranger 4 door diesel.
.My curiosity is around what happens with the Midsized truck game - if we start to see midsized 4dr trucks offering nearly as good mileage as my Subaru and getting 5 star crash ratings its going to be a hard sell for me to not replace the Subaru with one of those new midsized truck for better hauling capability beefier cooling capacity and better off road clearance etc.
.This is what I want. Bring me a new Ranger 4 door diesel.
Not a new design, just a new application. The engine and transmission have been used in Europe for many years.Thanks for all the replies. Initially i was very intrigued by Dodge's ecoDiesel, but like most people, i am kind of weary about new engine designs, plus i've heard that because of emmissions you have two more fluids that need to be replaced, and they're not cheap.
Another one is the 1500 with the Hemi, Binksman isn't the first ine that i've heard get a decent mpg, so i am going to look into that as well.
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