? my Sequoia was just shy of 300hp and in town did a solid 12mpg. 5600lb wdh max load. Road trips it did a solid 15mpg average at 70-75. My Iphone on wheels Expedition gets a solid 17mpg in town kid hauling and 21-23mpg road trips. 400hp 9200lb max rated and has a rear Elocker the Sequoia didn’t and yes I got stuck a few times thanks to that little oversight.
All my Toyota’s were very brake hungry. My 4runner, J80, and the Sequoia. My ranger definitely not I ran it 80,000 miles on a set of pads zero issues, tossed new pads on and kept going. My Subarus towed and hauled heavy I did pads only every 45,000 no issues with the discs.
So far the Expedition brakes are really good but the new 10spd and the 3.5 definitely don’t have engine braking like my past vehicles so will be interesting to see what I get out of the pads. But so far at 30,000 it’s looking like they have my sequoia beat by about 25,000 possibly 30k on pad life.
1st gen Sequoia, I assume?
My brakes are still good at @35k; time will tell how they hold up.
I would never in a million years drive an EcoBoost Expedition.
This study is mostly why. But also, the three people I know with them have problems. Mostly smaller, annoying issues, but two have the dreaded 10speed clunk where it feels like the transmission has broken in half under the truck. And one guy (his is a 2019) just had the cam phaser issue fixed under warranty. He had it fixed after Ford said they fixed them for good, and all new EBs will not have the problem. The noise was back almost immediately, and the service manager at his dealership shrugged at him and said they’re all like that.
New features and better MPG are nice, but I still think that if you want to get out to very remote places and come home every time, older Toyotas are your best bet. The trade off is lower payload and poor fuel economy. If I end up needing more payload because we start pulling a much larger boat or some giant glamper, I will have to say goodbye to the Tundra.