I’d have to agree with you. It reminds me of my first truck, a ‘94 Zr2 S10 but a hundred more hp and and 5 more mpg.
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New tires. 265/75r16 (31.7”) Goodyear ultraterrain.
Decided to paint the steelies white for that international hilux/ land cruiser look.
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New tires. 265/75r16 (31.7”) Goodyear ultraterrain. Load range SL.
Decided to paint the steelies white for that international hilux/ land cruiser look.
They’re silent and ride a little better than the e load snow tires I took off. Got a little wheel spin merging into traffic in the rain today but that’s probably normal. The snow tires I took off were narrower and softer so I didn’t get much of that before.What do you think of the Ultraterrains? I dont see them much because they are Discount Tire only, but everyone who has them says they are great.
The Ranger is nice but it was already behind the 8 ball when it was released in the US. By the time it was released here it was already 8 or 9 years old elsewhere so it looked pretty dated inside and out. I think the new 2023 Ranger will be a hit and raise a lot of eyebrows. I'm certainly looking forward to it.
So was every other truck though. The Colorado was and the Frontier was from 2005 or whatever. The Taco technically was updated in 2016 but its still on the old chassis, and by most accounts, the driveline was a step backwards.
GM also has the next gen twins coming out in 2023 and allegedly it will have the 2.7L inline 4. Thats a big deal. That 2.7 makes them the first mid-sized truck that I’d actually think about buying to replace my F150 for towing.
Maybe Ford will do the same with their 2.7
Do you really think the average Tacoma buyer really cares about chassis and drivetrain though? People are superficial and they care more about looks (out and in), tech, crawl control, and new shiny factor. The average Tacoma buyer probably didn't know that the 2nd and 3rd gens shared the same frame and cab. All they knew was that it had a new body and that everyone else on IG had one so they would buy one. The GM twins were reintroduced in 2015. By the time Ford introduced the Ranger in 2019 it was already 4-5 years behind Toyota and GM in reputation and aftermarket. Jeep released the Gladiator in 2019 so it would have to compete with that as well. The Frontier held strong and continued to sell 80k units a year because it was a cheap truck that you could get for $28k brand new. It was a crowded market when the Ranger joined the party. Even though it was a newcomer to the US market it already looked much older than the other trucks.
TBH I don't think Ford had high hopes for the Ranger as it is. They weren't aiming to take over the Tacoma market. Rather I think they wanted to release it to establish some reputation and perhaps gain some market share to set up the successor in 2023. Personally I think it's going to be a killer platform and for a Toyota guy like myself I'm excited to see what the 2023 Ranger brings. I think it's going to be the best in the segment and probably take over GM as the 2nd best mid-size truck in terms of sales. I don't have high hopes for the next gen Tacoma (2024 maybe?) with the way Toyota has been doing things and I think it'll be a subpar product but will still be sales king due to reputation and fanboyism. My only hope is that Ford releases the new Ranger with a Super Crew long bed and the 2.7L. That would be the ideal setup for me.