nickw
Adventurer
I'll stand by my opinion, simple LC doesn't have a place in the US, there is no supply chain to support it and the $$ to performance ratio would be way out of whack....which to my point earlier is why I brought up the example of a Ram 2500, not comparing domestic vs Toyota, but a counter example of why a LC70 ute isn't viable, if Toyota made a 3/4 - 1 T we could have used that too.I live in South Texas, every other person drives a diesel truck down here and I am on my 6th one so it's safe to say that I get quite a bit of time around them and their owners. Now, everyone's experience and opinions are relative to their exposure but it's safe to say that "in my experience" a diesel will have a longer and more reliable life span if worked heavily than the equivalent gasser HD. Where diesels run into issues is when they are treated like grocery getters. Payload is always sacrificed in a 3/4-ton which is why I am happy that I made the move to a 1-ton, my 3500 has a payload of nearly 4,600 lbs, granted you do sacrifice ride quality for the sake of more payload but priorities be what they are lol.
While I agree with you that a stripped down LC probably wouldn't sell well here in most regions (it would if they replaced the 4Runner with such a vehicle) there would still be certain niche enthusiasts such as myself and others here that would jump at the chance to own such a vehicle. Our domestic HD trucks have a lot going against them in other parts of the world, many of which you already highlighted, but I don't think that they'd ever compete in terms of long term reliability or resale beyond this current markets insanity.
Speaking of the stripped down 70's....romantics want them but lets be honest, they sound better on paper than reality. People don't daily drive leaf sprung jeeps from the 70/80s for good reason, that's effectively a base model 70. Never mind trying to go on a long trip hauling a camper or trailer like the majority of Americans travel....which gets into the do-loop of if you are just going to bounce around town in one, what's the point? It just becomes an expensive status symbol (a pretty cool one I'll admit). Very very few guys would enjoy the experience more than the nostalgia and romanticism around it....even less women would
US trucks are starting to catch on in Aus:
VFACTS June 2021: Ram and Chevrolet US pick-ups set sales record in Australia
Australians bought a record number of full-size pick-ups from the US last month, as buyers took advantage of tax incentives at the end of the financial year.
www.drive.com.au
Toyota refuses to sell the Tundra in Aus (maybe undercut Hilux?) and the Aussies are spending ~$100k+ (USD) for these rigs....imagine if they were $45-50k (USD) like here, with our cheap fuel, more open living arrangements, less restrictions, etc...they'd be all over the place, at least in the more metro areas vs remote bush villages....