Agreed. That's why I bought a '99 2 door Tahoe Sport 7 years ago.. with NOT the barn doors. Really good mileage on that Tahoe in the video. I know I have NEVER seen 18mpg, but I am running BFG AT KO's
Let's go Chevy. Big fan of GMT400 platform. Best mpg I ever got out of my 97 suburban is 18.3mpg cruising at 74mph. Have gotten 18mpg before, but 18.3 was the best and most recent ever got. On the highway, I will typically see 16-17.6 mpg depending on the speed. 18.8 mpg even on a tahoe is mind-blowing for a stock suv, but sure you all cruise at a lower speed than I typically do.
I miss those plush, deep cushioned seats so much. My work has a 2020 Suburban and the seats are excruciating. Flat bottom that has absolutely no plushness or comfort and the back is rock hard. My muscles are screaming after riding in that thing for more than an hour.
The Tahoe has stood the test of time the best because it’s the closest to having the features of today’s vehicles that everyone wants. So Chevy was definitely ahead of the curve in that regard. Also Andre and Nathan need a lesson in opening an envelope 😂.
Man that Tahoe is mont mint. You dont see thwse that clean anymore. 118k mi on that 350 means it just got broken in. The TBI 350s that came before them are even more simple and reliable but these Vortecs are pretty damn stout on the reliability front.
My 1997 Tahoe 2 door mirrors Andre's results. Plus it has 270,000 miles and we still take ~1,500 mile trips in it. Just got back from beating on it for 3 hours at Hot Springs Off Road Park where it owned the mountain! Best value ever in a used truck.
34 y/o millennial checking in first vehicle was an 87 F-250. The vehicle my mother drove around in when I was young was a banged up 1961 chevy pickup, followed by an early 80's chevy celebrity. Roman seems like one more boomer that doesn't know what year millennials stopped being born so applies the term into the 2000's.
im gen x. I'm a couple years too old to be a millennial. Considering I was born in 1980 it's weird to be in the same group as people born in the late 60s
As a 41 year old millennial I'm annoyed by the constant references to my generation as if we are still teenagers.... can't they reference another group?
My last road trip, I went 437 miles, filled up, put 7.282 gallons in it, which with the calculator came out to 60 MPG. I've very happy with my little car. Not quite as luxury as a big SUV, but still nice enough to feel good at the end of a long trip. (:
My single mom bought a new 2002 Tahoe v8 Which was passed down to me last year 20+ years later. It has never been in the shop except for routine maintenance oil, brakes , spark plugs battery. That's it. It needs new rear shocks and I think it needs a ball joint on the driver's side. Still running strong. 188k on the dash, and I'd have no fear to drive it to Colorado and back. In town mpg is crap at 10-12 mpg. But out in the country. I live in a very hilly area of East Texas. I can manage 16-17mpg.
Can confirm, albeit with very different vehicles of the same era. 2002 Avalanche Z71, my grandpa bought it new. He got about 17-18 with it, I couldn’t keep 16 because I like v8 noises. Still runs great, minimal maintenance. I just acquired an 01 gmc sierra 1500hd, 4x4 6.0L, and I believe I get about 13-15 mpg on 285/75/17s.
My in laws have an Expedition with the same drivetrain. Pushing 400k miles on the original engine and trans. Runs flawlessly and sounds great. Never needed any major repairs. Just the basic things over the last 27 years such as coil packs, plugs, belts, basic sensors and an alternator. Very reliable vehicles with simple maintenance.
We were one of the first to get the expedition in 97. It was a beige XLT on steel wheels. The looks and compliments I used to get driving it. Mind you I was 17 (it was my dad's). It was a great truck. We then got a 99 with sold it at 240,000 miles. Not a hiccup and we used it to tow a boat often. They just aren't made like that anymore. It's a shame.
I inherited my uncle's 04 Expedition Eddie Bauer that he bought brand new. I drove it to 338K while still using it for Lyft and would regularly get complements on it. It ran like new, had ice cold AC, and all the bells and whistles worked like new. Over those 338K; it only needed an ignition coil. It's still the favorite vehicle I've ever had and regret trading it in. CarMax was amazed when they seen how many miles it had on it and how good of shape it was in. It handled very well thanks to the long travel IRS and was also quite capable off road with some AT tires. The first and second gen Expeditions with the 2V Modular engines are some of the best vehicles on the road.
@OhPhuckYou Did those have the 4.6 or 5.4? We had a 97 F150 and drove that thing 240k miles before selling it. It was such a sharp looking truck. People regularly complimented it when that body style first came out.
@@TheMeanmarine13 The second gen Expedition had both the 4.6 and 5.4 Triton. 03 and 04 had the 2 Valve Triton. 05 and later had the 3 Valve variants of the Triton.
I have a newer Tahoe and even if you baby it you barely get 20mpg highway… these older vehicles get pretty much the same mpg as todays “ultra technologically advanced” vehicles
Id say if the epa would leave em alone they could focus on making more efficient vehicles not worrying about different exhaust systems to collect the carbon outputs.
@@om617yota7 It's getting increasingly difficult to find the old fullsive SUV's like the ones in this test that haven't been ruined or have succumbed to rust. I haven't seen a 90's Landcruiser in over 15 years. Most people that have a Tahoe from this era know what they have and won't sell, and the ones that are for sale were neglected to the point you'll be spending tens of thousands to try and save it from the crusher.
I have owned many brands of trucks. Believe it or not, the least costly maintenance wise was the chevy half ton with that darned 350 and EFI. Well, over 400k maintenence free miles. But the paint flaked, and the brakes were lacking. But that mid ninety Z 71 regular cab 8 foot bed regularly got about 18.5 mpgs, tooling down the highway at a good clip with 3.73s. Amazing.
@@karlschauff7989happened to my '03 silverado. Bad fuel filler too, everything connected to the fuel tank is broken. Give me a ford body with a dodge interior and a chevy engine!
the obs pre 2000 chevy tahoe...probably nicest looking truck out there...plus comfortable and reliable and simple...i have a 2000 tahoe z71 in the dark blue and i love it
Probably the peak of SUV. That Tahoe was not cheap back in the day. Andre said $37K sticker price which today amounts to $71,000. During the high gas prices of the mid/late 2000s these things were about being given away. I'm assuming many were destroyed with cash for clunkers program.
I like your "mileage loop" tests. I've been doing these on my vehicles since I've bought my first Geo Metro,3/5. I now own an '04 & '06 Toy Cor. and a 91 Blazer FULL SIZE. I do mileage loops whenever I do any major maintenance. It helps me know when things are beginning to go/ something is needing some care. Good Job , Fellas!
Had a black fully loaded 99 Tahoe back in the day. That is one of the few vehicles I have ever owned that I truly miss. Just a great vehicle all around.
Not the biggest GM fan of there modern stuff, but these old trucks are bullet proof to say the least!! Love the work you guys do and I hope you guys continue these even with Nathan moving to L.A.!!! Keep up the incredible work!👍
I give props to Nathan for his mpgs in the Expedition. Even with bigger tires than Andre and no cruise control in the heaviest vehicle, he was 2 mpg shy of the Tahoe. I think he could've closed that gap more with cruise control
Unless the road is always flat cruise control gets worst mpg cause it’s can’t see the hill your about to climb so once it sees the mph drop it’s to late and it floors it instead of a person seeing it and giving it a little more gas before the hill and keeping a lower throttle percentage through out the hill
All three were great vehicles back in the day and even today they would be great. Simple engines, simple 4x4, no complex electronics to break. What does Andre always say? Everything you need and nothing you don't. ( Outside of cruise control). Perfect Sunday morning fun video. I need to correct myself here It is Roman with the "everything you need and nothing you don't" My bad 😬
I don’t know I’d call expeditions all that reliable. I’ve only owned 1, but it was a handful. Compressor for the air ride always going out, constantly chasing a misfire no mechanic in my area was ever able to find, windshields leak causing a computer under the dash to fry twice before the windshields was pulled to reseal. Did I mention it was a dog trying to tow anything?
@@AdvantureRoad What year was yours? How many miles on it? How much weight were you towing? They are simple engines, not sure why they couldn't fix a miss.
19:30 my 8.1 gets the same fuel as my 6.0 Chevy got. Also- changing tire sizes on my 08 tundra was detrimental to fuel economy but I went from stock on my 8.1 Yukon to 255/85r16 and increased by 12% fuel economy (accounting for odometer difference).
You don’t think you can get the same or better fuel economy on a similar drive cycle? Also having the comfort, features and over double the torque has its advantages.
True manufacturers keep making vehicles bigger and heavier due to the epa and emissions the epa thinks big vehicles can have lots of emissions compared to smaller vehicles, however with the right tuning and gearing you can get great mileage with a modern engine and drivetrain in older vehicles
I have a 1998 k1500 sierra pup that has 230,602 miles and climbing. It has the 305cu vortec that's never been opened too my knowledge, although that might change within the next year or so and still probably gets around what the yukon got for fuel economy I haven't done the math recently. I'd buy it again, it's been a great vehicle for me.
Shoot, my 03 Tahoe gets like 13.5 on highway. 14.5 if I really baby it. But, it's got a small lift with very aggressive 33s, spare on the roof strapped to a roof basket that is 8 about 10 inches tall, with lights on the roof as well and a homemade winch mounting system... and tow mirrors.... and 4.56 gear ratio in the axles. The 4.56 gears really brought the mpg up. I was getting 9.5-10 in the city and about 11 highway, even driving like a grandma. Currently get about 12-12.5 city and up to 14.5 highway.
The Expedition is awesome on long road trips. My ‘02 has gotten me from Delaware to San Antonio with no issues. Twice. So smooth and comfortable 💪 and ya know, when you’re having fun, nobody pays attention to gas mileage 😅
People tend to forget that we grew up with corded home phones, VHS an Cassette tapes, and were lucky to have dial up internet. Were the last generation to live pre technology revolution.
I think “millennial” is the default term that pre-Millennials go to when they’re talking about those younger than they are. I’m technically a “millennial,” and I’m 41 years old. I assume Raunchy Roman is only in his 50’s, so he really ain’t that much older than I am.
Us GenX named you millennials while we were in high school in the 90s, it means kids that would remember almost nothing but the new millennium. Millennials were born 90-08 according to long documented factual documented generational years, not the fake years so popular by millennials lately. Stop stealing half my generation with your bogus made up years.
I still think American cars are inferior to Japanese but the Americans got it right with that Tahoe. Also the panther platform, 3.6 gm v6 found in old Buicks to name a few.
I knew the Tahoe would win. In the early 2000's I had a '96 Yukon with the 350 and would frequently break 20 MPG if I kept it under 60. Under 70 I would pull 19.
LOVE these classic SUV comparisons. These are what's still affordable for the majority of Americans, and speaking as somebody who is looking to upgrade to a bigger, solid axle vehicle soon, it is super valuable
Living on the east coast with the rolling country roads and no traffic I find i can top cruise control by about 2mpg using my foot so the speed increases going down hill and decreases going uphill instead of constantly downshifting. I have a '97 suburban family hauler 2" lift 265/75-16 3:73 that averages mid 19's, a '97 expedition 5.4 tow rig with 2" lift 265/75-16 3:74 that averages mid 17's when not towing and a 2000 expedition xlt 5.4 performance improved engine with 2" air bag lift 265/75-16 3:55 that averages high 17's when not towing. The 97' Eddie Bauer has the extreme tow/4x4 option and can out tow the burban while being exceptional to park even with a trailer due to length and turning radius.
All around 300k miles with no major services and only regular maintenance might I add. But they all did start out with the cream of the crop drivetrains
Placing bets - Ford: 16. Chevy: 17. Toyota - 13.5. EDIT having watched it: Impressive for the Toyota. I remember getting a big highway MPG boost when I had 33's on stock gears. My current long term average with 33's and 4.56 gears, according to my always running Torque app (yes Andre, the Land Cruiser was OBDII compliant before it was required in 1995), is 12 mpg. Mostly city. On the highway I've seen as high as 17, but usually around 13.5
Dad had one about 15 yrs ago. A 2000 expedition Eddie Bauer with the 5.4L. thing was a beast and could tow just about anything. Had a 2000 explorer Eddie Bauer 4.0L afterwards. Miss both of em.
This was fun, guys. Thanks for doing it. Until last year I had a 2002 5.4L F150 King Ranch. It performed similarly to the Expedition Nathan drove - 15-16 mpg. I sold mine last year after 22 years of reliable service. for $10,000. It's still running strong - saw it on the highway the other day.
My Dad's daily driver is a 2000 Tahoe, I might be off a year, but driving back and forth from Ohio and Florida pulling a cargo trailer. He tells me he gets around 14 mph pulling the cargo trailer, 18 without towing.
Parents brand new 1992 k1500 blazer with 5.7L tbi engine got 18mpg without ethanol between 92-01 when they traded it in on 01 Silverado that got...... 12
As much as I like the Land Cruiser and am more of a Ford guy emotionally, I have to say that in this class of cars the Chevrolet is the best all arounder. As for the powertrains, I think it’s a bit of a wash, because all three guys presented their engines in a positive way, and rightfully so. Perhaps, the Chevrolet wins by a small margin because it has the largest displacement and is the least stressed one at producing its power.
Roman, I have a 95 80 Series as well, but I have 35” tires, drawer system, expedition rack, and I only achieve about 10-12 mpg’s on the highway. You did really well!!
Andre', You might want to check on that rear end ratio. Most Tahoes that year came with a 3.42 rear ratio! The Z71Tahoe had the 3.73. Old Marine and owner of a 1997 Z71.
154,000 is probably a lot for a land cruiser i boght a 97 yukon with like 300,000 miles and it drove fine i hade to fix the ac and stuff because texas but i drove it for a couple years and sold it running
These trucks are a blast! I have a 99 expedition with a ton of stuff done to it and I love it super cool truck and very capable lifted on 35s gets about 10 to the gallon on the triton v8 but that’s just the price you pay for a big loud and fun gas guzzler!
im only about 30 seconds into this video, but we used to have a 1996 Toyota Landcruiser and it got less mpg's than a 1997 GMC Suburban that we had in our fleet at the time. Just wanted to say it in advance :)
That’s actually pretty good for the Landcruiser. I’ve got a 92’ LC and it used to get 12mpg regularly with the 4.0L I-6 running 33” tires. I swapped a 6.0LS and 4L80 into it around 5 years ago, 3” OME Lift and 35” tires, gets around 16mpg now. My 15’ Tundra 4wd usually only averages around 14mpg.
Here in Yuma, Az, before they added the alcohol to the fuel, I was able to get 14.1 city, and 21.4 on the freeway loop,(going into California), some 60 miles round trip, @ 68 MPH. Since we've had that nasty Ethanol, it's like 11 city, and 15 hwy, same route. Give us our GASOLENE BACK!!!!!
Gm vehicles have kinda always gotten better mpg than every other vehicle........ not surprised at all.... I'm really surprised the toyota got that good, everyone I know that had those only gotten 14 tops
Before watching this video I am going to make a prediction that the Tahoe is going to get the best fuel economy. For me it's a real toss-up between the Land Cruiser and the Expedition as to which one will come in second. I'm going to toss a coin here and say the Land Cruiser will just barely edged out the expedition. But I really don't expect that I'll be right because I feel like that's a 50/50. Of course because I'm doing this before watching the video, I could be completely wrong entirely. This is just my educated guess.
I had the Expedition at 16 and the Chevy at 17, I know both of those well. Can tell you right now that the chevy is taking any drag race and the Ford should win the braking.
Hey, just a little heads up on that gas cap on the Land Cruiser. I don’t think it should be pressurized like that. I had a 97 Silverado that did that and it caused a lot of problems mechanically. Look into it, but might want to clean the vent, leave the cap a bit loose, or get a new cap.
I've had several 80 series landcruisers in my life. It's almost unfathomable to think that they could have squeezed 16.3MPG out of that. I've never seen mileage like that ever, over the course of owning 4 of them previously. Mind you I do live in a bit more of a hilly area, but even straight highway I had a hard time cracking 12mpg on my completely stock 80 series. My lifted 97LX with 35s (same vehicle just lifted) I couldn't break 11mpg on the highway no matter what I did. My mileages were all hand calculated, using the 30 second rule too. Sheesh!!! I live at sea level though - It must be the altitude!
@@shashankshekhar2611 I agree. I like the way my 21 Escalade looks but there are some things i wish didn't exist and were just nice smooth lines like the hideous wheel wells for sure and maybe the lower door creases. I loved the design of my old suburban but the red looks so good on it compared to the white mine was.
Yes, if it is that slow then the filter needs changing. Happens where I work all the time, though usually for the diesel. Edit: Oh yeah, and I wrote this while in a drive-thru in a 97 2 door Tahoe with 273,985 original miles on the original engine. Still runs as quiet as new.
We had a 22 4Runner TRD Offroad for a short time, took a 6,500 mile road trip and it only got 16.2mpg for the whole trip. Sold it after the trip. Gutless and lowsy milage.
Wow, 6.6 gallons to go 111 miles. That is insane! My cars tank is only 9.8 gallons. When I have used 6.6, I am at 1/8 of a tank according to the gage. With my tank, I've gone up to 430 miles, and put 7.2 gallons in it. I like my 1.2L I3.
It's no SUV, but I just got back from a 650 mile trip in my 2011 TDI 6 speed wagon, 51mpg!! Diesel FTW! It's fun to drive my 6.0 diesel, but dang it gets maybe 20mpg.
Those GM400s are still my favorite Tahoe design. Such clean lines
Ya because it's one clean line from one side of the block to the next
Agreed. That's why I bought a '99 2 door Tahoe Sport 7 years ago.. with NOT the barn doors.
Really good mileage on that Tahoe in the video.
I know I have NEVER seen 18mpg, but I am running BFG AT KO's
Agreed. One of the most timeless and handsome exteriors on any vehicle ever. Looked great new and still looks great now. A true American classic.
I love those seats. My 2002 was the best !
I got a 96 Silverado basically the same thing very nice vehicles 288k original miles runs great no motor problems but got it’s issues
Beautiful minty barn door Tahoe! 18.8mpg without cylinder deactivation.
This is what the government took away from you.
With 3.73s too.
yeah, those barn doors are awesome for loading stuff with a forklift. It is very difficult to load the Expedition with a forklift (but we managed it).
My 97 Express conversion van was always 19-20 mpg on the highway with the 5.7L.
My 98 suburban got 18-22 on the highway all day long on long steady trips.
Cant beat gmt 400 or 800 best bang for your buck , most reliable , cheapest to fix , easily worked on ...
And shockingly good mpg with those 350 v8s.
Ya I'm gm all the way but I have to work on my own stuff so it only makes sense
5:12 "I don't have cruise control because Andre bought this." 😆
He will have to live with that for the rest of his life lol!
It’s Andrei he’s Russian
@@ssoltys41280:54
The hilarious trio are back.
Please do more challenges like these, you three produce the greatest content.
Let's go Chevy. Big fan of GMT400 platform. Best mpg I ever got out of my 97 suburban is 18.3mpg cruising at 74mph. Have gotten 18mpg before, but 18.3 was the best and most recent ever got. On the highway, I will typically see 16-17.6 mpg depending on the speed. 18.8 mpg even on a tahoe is mind-blowing for a stock suv, but sure you all cruise at a lower speed than I typically do.
Back when GM seats were actually really comfortable. I miss those.
I miss those plush, deep cushioned seats so much. My work has a 2020 Suburban and the seats are excruciating. Flat bottom that has absolutely no plushness or comfort and the back is rock hard. My muscles are screaming after riding in that thing for more than an hour.
@@ThePioneerSpiritI know what you mean... '97 Silverado 2500, and '97 Suburban 2500 SLT.
I love them too. The only downside is the wear fast. Hard to find an old GM vehicle with a good drivers seat.
@@haroldbeauchamp3770agreed! Our 2018 Tahoe seats suck! Our 2011 is much better.
Currently own a 95 8 lug 3/4 ton. And some how it rides way better than any of the half tons of the same year somehow.
The Tahoe has stood the test of time the best because it’s the closest to having the features of today’s vehicles that everyone wants. So Chevy was definitely ahead of the curve in that regard.
Also Andre and Nathan need a lesson in opening an envelope 😂.
Love to watch these guys be friends. You can tell they are more than colleagues.
Man that Tahoe is mont mint. You dont see thwse that clean anymore. 118k mi on that 350 means it just got broken in. The TBI 350s that came before them are even more simple and reliable but these Vortecs are pretty damn stout on the reliability front.
My 1997 Tahoe 2 door mirrors Andre's results. Plus it has 270,000 miles and we still take ~1,500 mile trips in it. Just got back from beating on it for 3 hours at Hot Springs Off Road Park where it owned the mountain! Best value ever in a used truck.
Agreed! I love my 1997 2 door Tahoe LT Z71. Drove it off the showroom floor! Best looking SUV ever made imho.
Unfortunately no vehicles are made so sturdy and reliable anymore, my neighbors growing up would tow a catamaran boat with their Tahoe.
I love Those 2 door Tahoes
@@imkwuzn i have a 2000 z71 love it
Millennials know what a manual antenna is. We're 40. My first vehicle was a 1990 Isuzu.
Some millennials are still in their 20s
34 y/o millennial checking in first vehicle was an 87 F-250. The vehicle my mother drove around in when I was young was a banged up 1961 chevy pickup, followed by an early 80's chevy celebrity. Roman seems like one more boomer that doesn't know what year millennials stopped being born so applies the term into the 2000's.
im gen x. I'm a couple years too old to be a millennial. Considering I was born in 1980 it's weird to be in the same group as people born in the late 60s
@@canyonero2050I’m the last year of millennials and I turned 30 this year
As a 41 year old millennial I'm annoyed by the constant references to my generation as if we are still teenagers.... can't they reference another group?
I had a 95 Landcruiser, with the locking diffs. Most versatile SUV I ever owned. But it was a GAS HOG
@@rocketj7449 what would you say was your mpg more or less ,
What would you say your mpg was more or less ,
I still Rock a 95 Chevy with the TBI 350 everyday. Truck just won't die
Those “gas guzzlers”;don’t get much worse mileage than a later generation Tacoma V6 that all the RUclipsrs wet their pants over.
My 03 Yukon XL averaged 18.2 mpg on my last trip from Michigan to Georgia. That's with fuel calculations at the pump rather than the vehicle tracker
My last road trip, I went 437 miles, filled up, put 7.282 gallons in it, which with the calculator came out to 60 MPG. I've very happy with my little car. Not quite as luxury as a big SUV, but still nice enough to feel good at the end of a long trip. (:
My single mom bought a new 2002 Tahoe v8
Which was passed down to me last year 20+ years later.
It has never been in the shop except for routine maintenance oil, brakes , spark plugs battery. That's it.
It needs new rear shocks and I think it needs a ball joint on the driver's side.
Still running strong. 188k on the dash, and I'd have no fear to drive it to Colorado and back.
In town mpg is crap at 10-12 mpg.
But out in the country.
I live in a very hilly area of East Texas.
I can manage 16-17mpg.
Can confirm, albeit with very different vehicles of the same era. 2002 Avalanche Z71, my grandpa bought it new. He got about 17-18 with it, I couldn’t keep 16 because I like v8 noises. Still runs great, minimal maintenance. I just acquired an 01 gmc sierra 1500hd, 4x4 6.0L, and I believe I get about 13-15 mpg on 285/75/17s.
My in laws have an Expedition with the same drivetrain. Pushing 400k miles on the original engine and trans. Runs flawlessly and sounds great. Never needed any major repairs. Just the basic things over the last 27 years such as coil packs, plugs, belts, basic sensors and an alternator. Very reliable vehicles with simple maintenance.
We were one of the first to get the expedition in 97. It was a beige XLT on steel wheels. The looks and compliments I used to get driving it. Mind you I was 17 (it was my dad's). It was a great truck. We then got a 99 with sold it at 240,000 miles. Not a hiccup and we used it to tow a boat often. They just aren't made like that anymore. It's a shame.
I inherited my uncle's 04 Expedition Eddie Bauer that he bought brand new. I drove it to 338K while still using it for Lyft and would regularly get complements on it. It ran like new, had ice cold AC, and all the bells and whistles worked like new. Over those 338K; it only needed an ignition coil. It's still the favorite vehicle I've ever had and regret trading it in. CarMax was amazed when they seen how many miles it had on it and how good of shape it was in. It handled very well thanks to the long travel IRS and was also quite capable off road with some AT tires.
The first and second gen Expeditions with the 2V Modular engines are some of the best vehicles on the road.
@OhPhuckYou Did those have the 4.6 or 5.4? We had a 97 F150 and drove that thing 240k miles before selling it. It was such a sharp looking truck. People regularly complimented it when that body style first came out.
And of course he shows the engine after I ask that LOL. 5.4 triton it is then. I'm sure they've said it before I just wasn't paying attention.
@@TheMeanmarine13 The second gen Expedition had both the 4.6 and 5.4 Triton. 03 and 04 had the 2 Valve Triton. 05 and later had the 3 Valve variants of the Triton.
@@TheMeanmarine13the original Expedition came standard with the 4.6 but optional 5.4. I don’t think there were too many 4.6s.
The GM400 series were the best production vehicles made.period.
I have a newer Tahoe and even if you baby it you barely get 20mpg highway… these older vehicles get pretty much the same mpg as todays “ultra technologically advanced” vehicles
Uhhhhh I’d blame the EPA for that 😂
Id say if the epa would leave em alone they could focus on making more efficient vehicles not worrying about different exhaust systems to collect the carbon outputs.
And the money you don't spend on a new vehicle will buy a LOT of gasoline.
@@om617yota7 It's getting increasingly difficult to find the old fullsive SUV's like the ones in this test that haven't been ruined or have succumbed to rust. I haven't seen a 90's Landcruiser in over 15 years. Most people that have a Tahoe from this era know what they have and won't sell, and the ones that are for sale were neglected to the point you'll be spending tens of thousands to try and save it from the crusher.
Compare the curb weights and crash testing scores and you'll know why.
I have owned many brands of trucks. Believe it or not, the least costly maintenance wise was the chevy half ton with that darned 350 and EFI. Well, over 400k maintenence free miles. But the paint flaked, and the brakes were lacking. But that mid ninety Z 71 regular cab 8 foot bed regularly got about 18.5 mpgs, tooling down the highway at a good clip with 3.73s. Amazing.
Brake lines was usually the the weak point. Nobody changes their brake fluid and causes them to corrode from the inside out.
@@karlschauff7989happened to my '03 silverado. Bad fuel filler too, everything connected to the fuel tank is broken. Give me a ford body with a dodge interior and a chevy engine!
GM and Chevy offered a tailgate on their 2 door, 4 door and suburban models all the way up to 99. I have a 94 two door and love my tailgate.
the obs pre 2000 chevy tahoe...probably nicest looking truck out there...plus comfortable and reliable and simple...i have a 2000 tahoe z71 in the dark blue and i love it
Go big and the OG crew. TFL, more of this please!!! This is amazing
Probably the peak of SUV. That Tahoe was not cheap back in the day. Andre said $37K sticker price which today amounts to $71,000. During the high gas prices of the mid/late 2000s these things were about being given away. I'm assuming many were destroyed with cash for clunkers program.
@@ThePioneerSpiritfilms?
I like your "mileage loop" tests. I've been doing these on my vehicles since I've bought my first Geo Metro,3/5. I now own an '04 & '06 Toy Cor. and a 91 Blazer FULL SIZE. I do mileage loops whenever I do any major maintenance. It helps me know when things are beginning to go/ something is needing some care. Good Job , Fellas!
This series is some of if not the best you’ve done on this channel.
Had a black fully loaded 99 Tahoe back in the day. That is one of the few vehicles I have ever owned that I truly miss. Just a great vehicle all around.
Not the biggest GM fan of there modern stuff, but these old trucks are bullet proof to say the least!!
Love the work you guys do and I hope you guys continue these even with Nathan moving to L.A.!!!
Keep up the incredible work!👍
I haven't seen those vehicles on the road for years in Canada and down there they look like they just rolled off the lot, crazy
This 3 guys are probably my favorite youtubers 😂 they just have so much fun doing their videos🤌🏽
I give props to Nathan for his mpgs in the Expedition. Even with bigger tires than Andre and no cruise control in the heaviest vehicle, he was 2 mpg shy of the Tahoe. I think he could've closed that gap more with cruise control
Unless the road is always flat cruise control gets worst mpg cause it’s can’t see the hill your about to climb so once it sees the mph drop it’s to late and it floors it instead of a person seeing it and giving it a little more gas before the hill and keeping a lower throttle percentage through out the hill
All three were great vehicles back in the day and even today they would be great. Simple engines, simple 4x4, no complex electronics to break. What does Andre always say? Everything you need and nothing you don't. ( Outside of cruise control). Perfect Sunday morning fun video. I need to correct myself here
It is Roman with the "everything you need and nothing you don't"
My bad 😬
I don’t know I’d call expeditions all that reliable. I’ve only owned 1, but it was a handful. Compressor for the air ride always going out, constantly chasing a misfire no mechanic in my area was ever able to find, windshields leak causing a computer under the dash to fry twice before the windshields was pulled to reseal. Did I mention it was a dog trying to tow anything?
@@AdvantureRoad
What year was yours? How many miles on it? How much weight were you towing? They are simple engines, not sure why they couldn't fix a miss.
'i say 23!'
*very distant andre: 'wHaT?!?'
lmao
19:30 my 8.1 gets the same fuel as my 6.0 Chevy got. Also- changing tire sizes on my 08 tundra was detrimental to fuel economy but I went from stock on my 8.1 Yukon to 255/85r16 and increased by 12% fuel economy (accounting for odometer difference).
Funny those trucks have better mpg than my 24 trd pro tundra
Just proves all that technology just weighs the vehicle down in a new one lol
You don’t think you can get the same or better fuel economy on a similar drive cycle? Also having the comfort, features and over double the torque has its advantages.
True manufacturers keep making vehicles bigger and heavier due to the epa and emissions the epa thinks big vehicles can have lots of emissions compared to smaller vehicles, however with the right tuning and gearing you can get great mileage with a modern engine and drivetrain in older vehicles
Heavier due to safety
In the v6? Curious as to what your real-world mpg is. Google says your to be 18 city / 20 hwy.
I have a 1998 k1500 sierra pup that has 230,602 miles and climbing. It has the 305cu vortec that's never been opened too my knowledge, although that might change within the next year or so and still probably gets around what the yukon got for fuel economy I haven't done the math recently. I'd buy it again, it's been a great vehicle for me.
Shoot, my 03 Tahoe gets like 13.5 on highway. 14.5 if I really baby it. But, it's got a small lift with very aggressive 33s, spare on the roof strapped to a roof basket that is 8 about 10 inches tall, with lights on the roof as well and a homemade winch mounting system... and tow mirrors.... and 4.56 gear ratio in the axles. The 4.56 gears really brought the mpg up. I was getting 9.5-10 in the city and about 11 highway, even driving like a grandma. Currently get about 12-12.5 city and up to 14.5 highway.
The Expedition is awesome on long road trips. My ‘02 has gotten me from Delaware to San Antonio with no issues. Twice. So smooth and comfortable 💪 and ya know, when you’re having fun, nobody pays attention to gas mileage 😅
My dad had a 1999 GMC Suburban equipped like the Tahoe. The only difference was that it was a 2WD version and it regularly got over 16 MPG combined.
Roman, Millennials understand the power antenna, we were kids in the 90’s. It’s Gen Z that’s probably shocked by the mighty power antenna.
People tend to forget that we grew up with corded home phones, VHS an Cassette tapes, and were lucky to have dial up internet. Were the last generation to live pre technology revolution.
Thank you! I remember a time before cellphones and internet were household items at 32 years old
I think “millennial” is the default term that pre-Millennials go to when they’re talking about those younger than they are. I’m technically a “millennial,” and I’m 41 years old. I assume Raunchy Roman is only in his 50’s, so he really ain’t that much older than I am.
I was thinking the same thing. I'm a young Gen x, my slightly younger brother is a millennial and he's 41 and his first car was a 1987 Chevy.
Us GenX named you millennials while we were in high school in the 90s, it means kids that would remember almost nothing but the new millennium. Millennials were born 90-08 according to long documented factual documented generational years, not the fake years so popular by millennials lately. Stop stealing half my generation with your bogus made up years.
The Chevrolet and Toyota both have gas cap holders built into the fuel door. No need to let the cap dangle or be placed on the gas pump.
I still think American cars are inferior to Japanese but the Americans got it right with that Tahoe. Also the panther platform, 3.6 gm v6 found in old Buicks to name a few.
Nathan's in his element... Given him to lead this segment..
Not bad at all. Great job Tahoe.
I knew the Tahoe would win. In the early 2000's I had a '96 Yukon with the 350 and would frequently break 20 MPG if I kept it under 60. Under 70 I would pull 19.
LOVE these classic SUV comparisons. These are what's still affordable for the majority of Americans, and speaking as somebody who is looking to upgrade to a bigger, solid axle vehicle soon, it is super valuable
Living on the east coast with the rolling country roads and no traffic I find i can top cruise control by about 2mpg using my foot so the speed increases going down hill and decreases going uphill instead of constantly downshifting. I have a '97 suburban family hauler 2" lift 265/75-16 3:73 that averages mid 19's, a '97 expedition 5.4 tow rig with 2" lift 265/75-16 3:74 that averages mid 17's when not towing and a 2000 expedition xlt 5.4 performance improved engine with 2" air bag lift 265/75-16 3:55 that averages high 17's when not towing. The 97' Eddie Bauer has the extreme tow/4x4 option and can out tow the burban while being exceptional to park even with a trailer due to length and turning radius.
All around 300k miles with no major services and only regular maintenance might I add. But they all did start out with the cream of the crop drivetrains
Placing bets - Ford: 16. Chevy: 17. Toyota - 13.5.
EDIT having watched it: Impressive for the Toyota. I remember getting a big highway MPG boost when I had 33's on stock gears. My current long term average with 33's and 4.56 gears, according to my always running Torque app (yes Andre, the Land Cruiser was OBDII compliant before it was required in 1995), is 12 mpg. Mostly city. On the highway I've seen as high as 17, but usually around 13.5
Dad had one about 15 yrs ago. A 2000 expedition Eddie Bauer with the 5.4L. thing was a beast and could tow just about anything. Had a 2000 explorer Eddie Bauer 4.0L afterwards.
Miss both of em.
This was fun, guys. Thanks for doing it. Until last year I had a 2002 5.4L F150 King Ranch. It performed similarly to the Expedition Nathan drove - 15-16 mpg. I sold mine last year after 22 years of reliable service. for $10,000. It's still running strong - saw it on the highway the other day.
My Dad's daily driver is a 2000 Tahoe, I might be off a year, but driving back and forth from Ohio and Florida pulling a cargo trailer. He tells me he gets around 14 mph pulling the cargo trailer, 18 without towing.
Parents brand new 1992 k1500 blazer with 5.7L tbi engine got 18mpg without ethanol between 92-01 when they traded it in on 01 Silverado that got...... 12
Gm V8's are pretty efficient engines!!
I love the Tahoe because my aunt had one when I was a kid carried us every where.
They were a really clean design too. When maintained and a detailed, they look great even today.
that tahoe is the only one of those that could pull off the red color
As much as I like the Land Cruiser and am more of a Ford guy emotionally, I have to say that in this class of cars the Chevrolet is the best all arounder. As for the powertrains, I think it’s a bit of a wash, because all three guys presented their engines in a positive way, and rightfully so. Perhaps, the Chevrolet wins by a small margin because it has the largest displacement and is the least stressed one at producing its power.
Roman, I have a 95 80 Series as well, but I have 35” tires, drawer system, expedition rack, and I only achieve about 10-12 mpg’s on the highway. You did really well!!
I would love to get one of that generation Tahoe or Suburban sometime.
Andre', You might want to check on that rear end ratio. Most Tahoes that year came with a 3.42 rear ratio! The Z71Tahoe had the 3.73. Old Marine and owner of a 1997 Z71.
Makes me miss my 98 Suburban. Except when filling up the 44gal fuel tank.
154,000 is probably a lot for a land cruiser i boght a 97 yukon with like 300,000 miles and it drove fine i hade to fix the ac and stuff because texas but i drove it for a couple years and sold it running
These trucks are a blast! I have a 99 expedition with a ton of stuff done to it and I love it super cool truck and very capable lifted on 35s gets about 10 to the gallon on the triton v8 but that’s just the price you pay for a big loud and fun gas guzzler!
im only about 30 seconds into this video, but we used to have a 1996 Toyota Landcruiser and it got less mpg's than a 1997 GMC Suburban that we had in our fleet at the time. Just wanted to say it in advance :)
GMT400 is the best looking even with the barn doors, I prefer the tailgate option.
In Oklahoma, I avoid Sinclair because of their slow pumps and dirty filters. Great to know that they're consistent across the country!
Guys if you look on the inside of the fuel flap you will find the spot where to put the fuel caps
That’s actually pretty good for the Landcruiser. I’ve got a 92’ LC and it used to get 12mpg regularly with the 4.0L I-6 running 33” tires. I swapped a 6.0LS and 4L80 into it around 5 years ago, 3” OME Lift and 35” tires, gets around 16mpg now. My 15’ Tundra 4wd usually only averages around 14mpg.
Here in Yuma, Az, before they added the alcohol to the fuel, I was able to get 14.1 city, and 21.4 on the freeway loop,(going into California), some 60 miles round trip, @ 68 MPH. Since we've had that nasty Ethanol, it's like 11 city, and 15 hwy, same route. Give us our GASOLENE BACK!!!!!
That suburban is clean
@Mark_Asreadu don’t have to be a nerd to know this bud it says Tahoe in the thumbnail
5.4 is a legend for spark plug launcher😂
300,000 miles on mine never had a problem 🤣 🤡
Gm vehicles have kinda always gotten better mpg than every other vehicle........ not surprised at all.... I'm really surprised the toyota got that good, everyone I know that had those only gotten 14 tops
TFL classic right here.
Before watching this video I am going to make a prediction that the Tahoe is going to get the best fuel economy. For me it's a real toss-up between the Land Cruiser and the Expedition as to which one will come in second. I'm going to toss a coin here and say the Land Cruiser will just barely edged out the expedition. But I really don't expect that I'll be right because I feel like that's a 50/50. Of course because I'm doing this before watching the video, I could be completely wrong entirely. This is just my educated guess.
I would love to have that Tahoe.
I love Expeditions but I must say that Tahoe is pristine.
The 90's Tahoe/suburban is the best suv ever built
Andre!!!! you owe me one cup of coffee i spit all over my computer with your comment about the fuel filler cap!!! dammit!! hahahhahah
gl with the cleanup!! hopefully, he doesn't have to owe you a new keyboard or whatever
i like the split gate on my element too. its also handy for transporting couches n whatnot.
Wow , tht Tahoe looks new .
Frm Oxnard California 😎 .
2:42 Killroy is at it again. He can go anywhere, dont you know.
I had the Expedition at 16 and the Chevy at 17, I know both of those well. Can tell you right now that the chevy is taking any drag race and the Ford should win the braking.
Non rust belt trucks… I’m jealous!
Hey, just a little heads up on that gas cap on the Land Cruiser. I don’t think it should be pressurized like that. I had a 97 Silverado that did that and it caused a lot of problems mechanically. Look into it, but might want to clean the vent, leave the cap a bit loose, or get a new cap.
I've had several 80 series landcruisers in my life. It's almost unfathomable to think that they could have squeezed 16.3MPG out of that. I've never seen mileage like that ever, over the course of owning 4 of them previously. Mind you I do live in a bit more of a hilly area, but even straight highway I had a hard time cracking 12mpg on my completely stock 80 series. My lifted 97LX with 35s (same vehicle just lifted) I couldn't break 11mpg on the highway no matter what I did. My mileages were all hand calculated, using the 30 second rule too. Sheesh!!! I live at sea level though - It must be the altitude!
I swear, Nathan makes these videos 20x better, lol
Those MPGs are not bad considering your going 75MPH.
That Tahoe is beautiful
So true :( why did everyone went the other way in design sense in modern suvs
@@shashankshekhar2611 I agree. I like the way my 21 Escalade looks but there are some things i wish didn't exist and were just nice smooth lines like the hideous wheel wells for sure and maybe the lower door creases. I loved the design of my old suburban but the red looks so good on it compared to the white mine was.
Yes, if it is that slow then the filter needs changing. Happens where I work all the time, though usually for the diesel. Edit: Oh yeah, and I wrote this while in a drive-thru in a 97 2 door Tahoe with 273,985 original miles on the original engine. Still runs as quiet as new.
We had a 22 4Runner TRD Offroad for a short time, took a 6,500 mile road trip and it only got 16.2mpg for the whole trip. Sold it after the trip. Gutless and lowsy milage.
Well, as I expected, the gm offering still reigns supreme.
Just bought a Landcruiser 95 series w/TDi and Im getting 29.5 highway, 25 city with 10ply LT tires. Just depends what engine you get.
My sister had that generation Land Cruiser, I thought I really liked them until I actually drove it. It felt like something out of the '70s.
😂 ok
What and the shitbox American Land Yacht of the same time were better🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
@@darrengray2309 They drove a lot better, yes. But Toyota fanboys gonna fanboy.
@@plmn93 As if there aren't annoying Chevy and Ford fanboys, eh?
@@plmn93 Every automaker has done stupid stuffs. Toyota too. Especially, Toyota BEVs are so subpar, it hurts me.
I’m blown away that Land Cruiser got 16mpg. I was so expecting 11
My 2004 Suburban K2500 had barn doors and a rear window wiper for each door. Looked weird but it did sort of work.
My Silverado gets 9.3 mpg 😂
Damn I wish I could bring my 1998 Mitsubishi Montero to this 90s party
Wow, 6.6 gallons to go 111 miles. That is insane! My cars tank is only 9.8 gallons. When I have used 6.6, I am at 1/8 of a tank according to the gage. With my tank, I've gone up to 430 miles, and put 7.2 gallons in it. I like my 1.2L I3.
It's no SUV, but I just got back from a 650 mile trip in my 2011 TDI 6 speed wagon, 51mpg!! Diesel FTW!
It's fun to drive my 6.0 diesel, but dang it gets maybe 20mpg.
Gimme the land cruiser with the chevy drivetrain. Ill go forever