This is all very informative. Purchase is still months out (waiting on Yet Another Husky).
Capability priorities:
1) Dogs in the cab.
2) Smooth rollin' suspension.
3) Ground clearance and bigger tires.
4) Four driving wheels. RWD with lockers would probably cover this.
NV Pasenger in the running, but I suspect lift options for domestic vans are more prevalent.
The Ford Econoline with a Camburg lift is looking good. I wonder why it's so much harder to lift a 4WD van? Torsion bars? Axle angles? Is there a good lift for the AWD Chevy Express 1500? That'd pretty much check off all points.
I'm not a fan of diesels, but an I4 that puts down 300ftlb of torque and gets a van gas mileage in the 20s is okay by me. Too bad they never made them with the AWD.
The Expedition/Suburban looked like a great solution, but it is rather luxurious having a tall roof. I think that'd take precedence if possible.
Capability priorities:
1) Dogs in the cab.
2) Smooth rollin' suspension.
3) Ground clearance and bigger tires.
4) Four driving wheels. RWD with lockers would probably cover this.
NV Pasenger in the running, but I suspect lift options for domestic vans are more prevalent.
The Ford Econoline with a Camburg lift is looking good. I wonder why it's so much harder to lift a 4WD van? Torsion bars? Axle angles? Is there a good lift for the AWD Chevy Express 1500? That'd pretty much check off all points.
I'm not a fan of diesels, but an I4 that puts down 300ftlb of torque and gets a van gas mileage in the 20s is okay by me. Too bad they never made them with the AWD.
The Expedition/Suburban looked like a great solution, but it is rather luxurious having a tall roof. I think that'd take precedence if possible.