I've got a 98 with the 2.5 5speed and I don't think I could kill it if I tried. And I'm about to try, I've got a 331 that's just screaming to go in there....
I had a 2009 Ranger 2.3 automatic 140000 miles and I just traded it in on a 2020 F-150XLT 2.7. I wish I could have kept it but the dealer offered $6000 on it so she had to go. Most reliable truck I had. Pulled 5000 trailer with it sometimes. Miss it.
My 4.0 explorer has 200.000k on the dot lol and it honestly runs brand new it doesn’t look the best on the outside but man she’s been reliable a gas hog though
I have a 04 3.0 Ranger with 349,000 original miles. Only thing replaced over the years has been plugs, wires, coil and routine maintenance with oil changes. Still runs and drives great to this day. I even pull a 6x12 enclosed trailer with 2 4-wheelers a lot.
Ya the 3.0L Vulcan is pretty much a bullet proof engine. However it will not tolerate being overheated. Overheating a 3.0L is a sure fire way to end up with a cracked head. So NO the 3.0L is NOT prone to cracking heads if they are not overheated.
@@bayloc88I have had a 99’ 3.0L manual since 06’. I am pretty burned out from driving manual but It is a lot more reliable than the automatic. If it makes you feel better it is super annoying to drive after a while.
I have a 03 2.3 Mazda B2300 with 99,000 miles. Only thing replaced over the years has been ball joints, struts, u joints, tie rods, coolant reservoir, coolant hoses, O2 sensor, the catalytic converter, batteries, oil changes, and some transmission work. lol At least I’ve learned a lot through it. The trucks been shaking since the day I got it 2018. Shakes at 70-80MPH. No alignment has fixed it. Maybe the transmission mount? Any ideas? The shake is beneath the floor board
@@drumyogi9281 Especially in a 20 mile long traffic tie-up on I-81. My left foot was worn out from pushing the clutch in and out. The upside is you don't have to change the transmission fluid and replacing the clutch and the flywheel is cheap comparing to replacing/rebuilding an automatic transmission. But in a traffic jam, pushing the clutch in and out 20 times a minute will drive you nuts.
my first car was my dads 2010 chevy colorado with 230k on it. 5 cylinder auto transmission 4wd. it sort of ate oil and you had to be nice on the transmission but other than that, it had ice cold ac, drove smooth as butter, good power and looked good. it was a crew cab with the cool wheels, ended up being totaled from my brother spinning it into a guardrail in the snow. My dad ended up buying another one with the insurance money lol. that one also has over 200k on it, 4 cylinder. I loved that truck, solid as a brick and sounded great too. scotty kilmer said it himself
And a big part of that is who is willing to ship/sell trucks in those parts of the world. Not a ton of big 3 dealerships pushing there, and not a ton of big 3 trucks are even shipped outside the states at all. Some cars and trucks are more prevalent globally simply because they were intentionally shipped to every continent (Toyota, Mercedes)
The obummer admin sent Toyota’s over during cash for clunkers. I remember seeing an article where a plumber in Texas I believe got harassed as the tb still had the plumbers business name and phone number on the side. His secret service code name was “renegade” for a reason. Just look up the word in a dictionary
@@djfreake Definitely not. The engines were required to be destroyed in the C4C program. In the story you are referring to the plumber traded in his truck at a dealership and it went to wholesale auction and was purchased and then exported.
Have you noticed the solution to this is to offer 6-8 year finance terms? My solution? Wait until it has 75k miles. Let the new truck buyer go into debt so your taxes can offer them bankruptcy buyouts later. Wait...
I had a 2000 nissan frontier with the 3.3 v6. I sold it with 350k miles on it a year ago, and I still see it rolling around town every once in a while.
My 2008 3L Ranger had rough idling until I changed the plug wires and water pump leaks but nut serious, only when it's cold! 240,000 Kilometers, bought 8 years ago! Love it!
I’m glad that it looks like small trucks are going to make a comeback soon. Plenty of people just don’t have the workload or finances to warrant having a full size or even mid size truck. A two door truck with a small bed that I could throw my fishing gear in would be great!
i have an old 97 nissan hardbody 4x4 w/ a 5 speed. She's a rough riding girl and ain't got shit for power, but god damn do I love that truck. I don't need some monstrosity that can haul half a dozen people or tow a house behind it. Just give me a cheap and reliable 2 door and an extended cab with a bed, 4x4, and a manual transmission and it covers 99.9% of my needs.
I agree that the 2nd Gen Dakotas overall are great with the 4 cylinder engines, but the 318 V8 you could get in them was reliable, powerful enough and cheap enough, that they were worth squeezing around the sides of them to work on. I've seen some with over 250k- they are great when paired with the Aisin manual transmissions as well. 1st or 2nd gen Dakotas were both fine with the 4 or 8 cylinders and manual transmissions
Yeah, and the 4.7 isn’t bad either. Just wait 10 damn minutes for the engine to warm up. I have a Manual 5.2 club cab, 320,000. And there is 5.2 and 5.9s everywhere for good price ti the point where I wouldn’t even think about rebuilding one
I have a 93 Dakota 3.9 v6 with a 5 speed 4x4 with 336,000 and the cylinders still push over 150 psi out of them and it still runs amazing, I run it everyday with out a hitch. And it does anything I ask it to, I pull with it everyday so I am not sure if I got a gem in the rough but I love my v6.
Rust isn’t an issue here in the southern south but I’ve seen some pick ups from up north that are complete rust buckets to the point that bolts are completely seized and panels have huge holes on them
Yea, in 2008 Toyota recalled 1995-2004 trucks for that if memory serves. Not sure what made them more prone to rot then other trucks though. But hey, as bad as those where, it could be worse: Ford Windstar's rear axle rot problems - it's scary to see those snapped in half from corrosion. :-O
my dads old tundra (2001) had frame rust issues also to the point of getting rid of it since it would be too dangerous to drive but toyota refused to replace under a recall. i could never recommend an older toyota truck anywhere near the rustbelt.
My Dad has an '07 Dodge Dakota with a 4.7 V8 that 253k miles. It has never blown a head gasket. He has only replaced the water pump and just recently replaced some sort-of sensors. The truck was almost totaled just after it was bought, luckily they we able to save it. The truck has served our family very well.
My salvage yard uses an 06 with the 3.7 as a part runner. Got it with a blown tranny and replaced it 100k miles ago. It has just over 200k on it now. My personal Jeep Grand Cherokee also has the same 3.7 and it has 175k miles on it and the only issues have been small cooling issues. (Knock on wood)
I live in the midwest and I know multiple farmers who own an 04-12 Colorado (which is really an Isuzu) with over 250k miles. Mine has 150k right now. The 5 cylinder is a great motor, and overall the trucks work great. Easy to work on as well. No data on HVAC issues here (A/C works in all the trucks I'm around)
I had a 98 Chevy s10, 4cylinder 5 speed. I payed 300$ for it and drove the living hell out of it for 2 years! I abused it like crazy, doing burnouts, hauling full size trailers, attempting to drift it Haha, but it never let me down! It had over 250k and was a complete rust bucket, rustiest vehicle I've ever owned, but so dependable! The guy I sold it to is still driving it around today and he has had it for 2 years now
I have an 05 Ranger FX4 with 160,000 on it. Not gonna lie I’ve got a lot of money into it but it’s better than new. Original dark shadow great metallic paint shines like new. No rust. Awesome truck. Love it.
I agree with you about the Ranger except that you didn’t mention the 4.0 SOHC which is a terrible engine that blows up a lot. The 4.0L pushrod engine is a fantastic and durable engine.
mine ran well, sold it at 230k miles and the person down the street is still driving it. i am religious on the maintenance though, oil, pcv, tensioners you name it got replaced when they said it should and i’m not out beating my shit either. so maybe that was it, i did replace and alternator and did fix the front timing chain guide. but not that bad really. decent power and mileage.
You know what Wizard, I love these videos. Thank you for sharing the mechanic's viewpoint on these trucks. I feel like people just buy whatever truck/car looks best or is cheapest and it's really nice of you to let us in on the problems you have seen so that we can avoid them.
Tacoma has terrible ergonomics imo. 2020 and not sure if they have power seats yet.... I used to have a 2015 taco double cab trd off-road, test drove and was ok. But on anything longer than 15-20mins it gave me terrible knee/leg pain. I am healthy and was 20 at the time, thin and 6ft tall. Everything else about the truck I liked, except the touchy brakes and radio volume didn’t go high enough. I like toyota in general but sometimes they are too lazy with designs like the tacoma, the seat on mine wasn’t even height adjustable. The steering wheel height to seat height relationship is terrible, and the seat height is very low too. Maybe if you’re 5ft tall it’s fine... My opinion get the Tundra instead, way nicer truck, comfortable, million mile capable. There is a popular video on RUclips if a million mile tundra that toyota bought back, original drivetrain, reverse had an issue that was repaired at 700k something miles. With the gas savings with the Tacoma it can go towards knee surgery!
The full box frame design would have water build up in it. Not really as big of an issue where I live, though. Central California is pretty dry most of the year. And no salted roads.
I have a 2002 extended cab 3-liter v6. I have 325,000 miles on it. It’s a work truck. I’ve been towing trailers, carrying heavy loads all the time. Engine is perfect. Change oil every 3-months. No problems with motor. I have had 3-new clutches in and had to replace 1st and 2nd gears along with their respective synchronizers. Two times. Including brakes several times. Still using it. It has now became a science project. Oh yah, bushings and bearings for the chassis.
As you call me, a “hillbilly” yes we do take S-10’s and rangers off road. If FAR more numbers than any Toyota and they come back home usually. But I will say I’ve never seen an abandoned taco but I have seen a few abandoned S-10’s in the woods.
The '97 - '04 Dodge Dakota can really punch above it's weight if you get one with the optional 5.9L magnum. It's the same V8 used in the late 90s Rams and has 250hp with 350lb-ft of torque! Supposedly it's pretty robust too.
I’m considering a Dodge Dakota of that era to replace my Ford Explorer Sport Trac once it gets time to move that on. I think I’m going to go for a 5.9. I’d avoid the 4.7 just because of the head gasket problems
@@kingjlinza avoid the 4.7 at all cost. Oil issues also. Have had 3 4.7's. on a 5.9 now and won't look back. I still have a 4.7 rango and enjoy it but not as reliable. Both have over 200k on them.
I have a 2006 nissan frontier with the 6 speed manual and the 4.0 v6. we had to do the timing chain work on it but it was pretty low on miles and now it has been fantastic. the manuel doesn't have the same problems as the automatic and the v6 has incredible power
My manual 02 4.0 Ranger was probably the best vehicle I’ve owned thus far. I put over 80k on it to where it’s sitting now at 200k and it’s still going strong, I just ended up giving it to my younger brother. Only things I ever did were U Joints and a clutch, it’s just been an all around fantastic truck. There’s a reason you see so many still running around, they don’t die
JEEPNATION I know someone who had there’s replaced for free and it was a sequoia. Hey they might have messed up but at least they owned up to it and fixed it for free. The sad thing is most everything else on those vehicle are unkillable.
I have a 91 s10 with the 4.3 and it still runs perfect. Can’t say the same for the body, and that GM paint. I’m convinced it’ll rust out from under me before anything happens to the motor. I love it.
The Dakotas/Rams pretty much are solid. I've owned all three of the Magnums 5.9/5.2/3.9. they are solid motors and will run without issue 90% of the time. Most issue I've seen with them is the water pumps fail (replaced 2) but other than that they don't give many issues
My 2004 Colorado 2.8 five speed has been insanely great to me..no valve issues so far since I've put 30,000 miles on it. The HVAC issues are summed up to poor grounds. I fixed mine easy. Some pass lock issues but I've never had any.
The Toyota truck from the eighties to early nineties with the 2.4 natural aspiration diesel was one of the best Toyota vehicles ever. I have personally heard about people driving them with 500k to 600k miles on them without any engine issues of any kind.
I have a friend that had a 1 ton Toyota Hi-Lux (like you’re talking about). He owns a farm and worked that Toyota HARD. He replaced the Diesel engine at 725K miles. After the new engine was installed, he changed it into a flat bed.
My Canyon has 348K on it and I have done semiregular maintenance and put in seven sensors, that qualifies it for Wizard statis wouldn't you agree. It's a 4.2 straight six
The 05-07 Frontiers also suffered from frame rot. A buddy of mine had a Pathfinder on the same frame and his mechanic pushed a philips screwdriver thru the frame rail like butter
If you want a V6 in your ranger, get a 2005 or later 4.0. Got that instead of a 4 cylinder because that's what the lot had. 2004 and earlier had issues with the timing chain.
My best friend has one with 26,000 miles, same year. It was his grandfathers who didn’t drive it much. I had the chance to drive it. Really smooth truck.
I disagree on the Dakota, my 97 5.2 V8 has been great for 18 years! Been taken care of in that time frame to avoid serious trouble. The 2.5 is solid but the 3.9 is also alright and the 5.2/5.9 are lots of fun. I agree to the 4.7 and 3.7 being not worthwhile.
I agree , I have/had a 97 Dakota 5.2 liter , It's absolutely bulletproof ,.. still running strong with inexpensive maintenance,, cheap parts. easy to fix..
@@thomvogan3397 lots of the early S-trucks had the Iron Duke and were 4x4, but when CAFE numbers became an issue, the downgraded to a bare bones 4 cylinder 2wd only. As the Wizard mentions, that 2.2 I4 is reliable as can be, but once the 2.2 took over for the Duke, the 4x4 became a 4.3 V6 option only...
I have a 1995 Ford Ranger XL Regular Cab Long Bed with a 2.3 I4 mated to an M5OD (manual transmission) and BG 13-54 (manual-transfer case) with manual-locking hubs and a 4.10 differential; they certainly exist, albeit they are exceptionally hard to find.
Currently have a 2000 Nissan Frontier 4 cylinder (KA24DE) with the 5 speed manual and 4WD and I can confirm that the engine is solid. Only thing to look out for is bad knock sensors. Getting mine replaced right now but it’s definitely a solid truck.
Never had or knew anybody with a 3.0 Ranger, but I can tell you the 4.0 is a great reliable motor. I used to tow trailers way heavier than I should with a 4.0 5 speed and it never caused me a minutes trouble. Actually a friend of mine towed a backhoe with his... Stopping was a bigger issue than pulling LOL
My friend found a D21 in a field that had been there for at least 20 years. He put in a new battery, new gas, and changed all the fluids and daily drove it until his wife crashed it head-on. It still runs fine, but the frame is bent enough that he only offroads it now. They really are bulletproof.
I've got a 2000 4.7L v8 magnum dakota. And I love it. Keep up with common matenace and its been super reliable for me. I've got 350***km on it so of course it has some issues at this age. But overall it's been a very reliable truck and relatively easy to work on the V8 aswell once you understand the layout of the engine.
Have a '99 XLT Ranger with the 3.0V6 and I know from experience, the cooling systems need extra care. I swapped the factory radiator and belt driven fan for a 2 row, all aluminum radiator and electric fan. The heads are prone to warp and chew headgaskets as a result. These are good engines, gutless with little to no power, but can be reliable but require some extra care. Most people with these models don't care enough to maintain them; these are cheap little trucks that are just meant to be driven until the wheels fall off. The cracked head issue seems to be common amongst every company I think, because the manufacturers switched to Aluminum heads with little to no change to the cooling systems. On top of that, owners mistreating them and not maintaining them well enough, that could be one of the reasons.
2.2 S10 with a 5 speed. The truck so good, I bought it 2x. Literally, mine is my 3rd and sixth vehicle. My brother in law thought he totally killed it. I bought it back from him and fixed the no start. She runs like a champ eveb after 18 years.
Me too. My first was a '97, and I swore I'd never buy another one because it wasn't fast, but it grew on me, and bought 2001. That one has 192k on it, no engine repairs except a water pump at 147k, starter at 157k. As for the truck, just did front end work at 183k. Good ride, good reliability, COLD a/c, and great on gas.
I'm glad you mentioned it Wizard. I have an 03 Tacoma and love it, ill never sell my 1st gen, the key is watching for ball joints and getting the frame checked and painted. I have a California truck and will be painting my frame despite it having almost no rust, mechanical throttle, and solid fuel injection with a non interference V6. Good truck.
Yes they are very reliable if you check out the frame and watch for the ball joints . Other than that you can keep on trucking. I love my 1st generation Toyota Tacoma TRD with TRD supercharger 4door.
Had an '87 Ranger 4x4, ex-cab, 2.9L auto. Loved that truck. Wasn't fast or a powerhouse but outside of a transmission I toasted towing a 22' cuddy cabin boat it was a great truck.
I've got a 3.7 Dakota, and it's a tank; the 4.7s had overheating problems, but the 3.7 was the same drivetrain as the old Jeep Libertys, and they just went forever.
Got a 2010 Tacoma for my plumbing apprenticship in 2017 all I've done is oil changes and put gas in it THATS IT, it isn't very fast but it's never left me stranded all my other friends (plumber apprentices) who bought their Rams or dodges have all broken down at some point and it's usually me to pick em up and car pool them to work absolutely love my Toyota
Toyota and Ford are the only trucks worth buying. My dad had the 99 GMC Sonoma 4x4 with a 5 speed trans, it was a good truck but he started having an issue with the fuel injection around the 11 year mark, so he sold it, it was the V6 Vortex engine, looks like he made a good decisions
You’re right about the 4.3. I drove a 2005 silverado with the 4.3 and it had constant injector issues. Usually ran on 5 cylinders. It was a company truck and they never wanted to fix the issue, so I drove it like that for 10000 miles.
I agree about Toyota , I have a 2005 Land cruiser with same 4.7 V8 in the tundra, and I have 283,000 miles and never had any issues at all. It’s been flawless since new. My dad had a 2003 GMC Sierra 2500 Duramax crewcab long bed , he has 255,000 miles and he’s had a couple little issues here and there but nothing serious. Allison trans with the rest of the power train is very reliable.
I have a 2008 Tundra with almost 300,000 miles. It has never had any serious issues, it's never broken down on me for the time I owned it, never broke down on my uncle who I bought it from either. He's a contractor so he put most of the miles on the truck. I now have a 2022 Toyota Tacoma and I love it. It is the same size of a first gen Tundra which was my first truck, also another reliable truck with the 4.7L V8 engine. I just love Toyota trucks.
I have two 3.0L Rangers, one has 26000 on the clock, the other has 195000. So far no major problems other than the usual squeaky Cam synchro or burned out sensor. I suspect the 3.0s with cracked heads had overheating issues. The cooling system on the 3.0 needs to burp for it to work properly. If you change a radiator hoses, thermostat or anything else on the cooling system and do not properly fill and burp the system, it will overheat. But before that it will chew up the water pump impellor due to cavitation. So if you do crack a head, make sure to change the water pump. The top hose on the 3.0 is above the engine, it will develops an air pocket in that hose. If you don't clear that air pocket you will have problems. I'm surprised "the Wizard" didn't know about this. If you do swap heads and don't replace the water pump, it will only happen again. The 3.0L is a strong reliable pushrod engine if maintained property. Lastly, if your 3.0L is down on power, check to see that your throttle cable hasn't stretched. If it has, a couple of zip ties at the throttle peddle side to take up the slack might solve the problem. And yes, I am a common sense mechanic.
I have a 96 ford ranger with the 2.3l its very reliable for me so far despite it being owned by people who did not take care of it very well before and with almost 280k miles although alot of those are highway miles from the previous owner. The spark plugs are little bit hard to get to on the intake side (There are 8 spark plugs for at least my model year). Its slow but reliable.
Me too. In fact its my first car. Bought it at 157k miles on Dec 28th. Owner gave it to her niece and her boyfriend did not give it proper maintenance and messing up installing parts. It has a transmission issue but its stil reliable.
Favorite truck so far was my 93 Nissan hardbodies. I had 2 of them. First one was amazing. 215,000 miles. Never gave me a single problem, got 25-28mpg. Super slow with no power but it was still the best.
My 1887 has even less power with the z24i engine. Its not fast in a drag race, but has enough torque to pull any load i date to put in the bed, up to a ton, and it pulls any highway grade without a downshift. It's like a mini version of an old straight six, not for drag racing, but a workhorse.
Bought my Toyota T100 SR5 extra cab used almost 27 years ago. (Paid $18,000) It's never failed me. It's comfy, looks great, and runs like it will never stop. 180,000K During the Covid hiatus I got bored & put a Pioneer audio system and back up camera in it. I then reupholstered the door panels myself. Totally cool and very up to date with Apple Play, Sirius radio, USB hook-ups, and more. I upgraded every exterior light on the truck, then did the same for the dash and all interior lights to LEDs. Minimal cost. What a difference! Headlights 100% improvement. I just had to put the obligatory colorful "TRD SPORT" stickers on the rear bed. Many people think it's a new truck. It will do anything a new truck will do and maybe even more. The styling is excellent. Been paid off for 25 years. Repairs, few and far between, are simple, inexpensive and easy. $250 per year insurance and $125 license fees. Maintenance is the key. Thank you Mr. Toyota.....
I’ve never heard about the cylinder head issue on the Ford 3.0L V6. I currently have a Ranger with the 3.0 and 245k. I also had a Taurus with the same motor that had 190k before a family member totaled it. I’ve had zero problems with the engine. Rangers are pretty tough regardless of which engine it has.
The post-'98? Vulcan 3.0l got a redesign to the oil pump; the '96-'98 version has this annoying tendency to blow the oil pump & eat the engine. [DAMHIK] Unfortunately, I only found out about this *after* my engine ate itself getting onto the freeway [this also somewhat explains why later Rangers are all still on the road, after they fixed that issue! The Vulcan was a good little donk...]
My friend has a ranger with the 3.0 vulcan with 200k that had a timing cover leak, he lost all of the coolant and it OVERHEATED, he let it cool down and still made it home, replaced the timing cover gaskets and the thing still runs, iron heads and block didn't warp but I don't know how that thing survived. So I don't agree with Wizard on the vulcan.
I love your style of speaking no big words and super tech language it reminds me of Saturday morning kids educational entertainment shows Although I am a tech I feel there's no need to talk to clients like that thanks again Wizard 👍
Yeah don't get me wrong I'd bet money that your 5.2 has cracked heads. But honestly the magnum series of engines don't really care if they have cracked heads. That and the heads don't crack in a drastic way.
All the metal on the 5.2 and 5.9 is thick as hell. They can crack and never care. When Chrysler switched to the new Hemi, with its dual shaft rockers and huge aluminum heads and extra-high cam tunnel and Y-block and monster cross-bolt mains, it was still CHEAPER to make than the 5.9 Magnum. The old iron horse is just a thicc vintage chonk. That said, never put stock heads back on. Aftermarket iron heads can be had for pretty cheap, and add serious performance (in addition to not cracking).
I've got the 4.7L magnum in my 2000 dakota. Same idea. Almost deals bullet proof. With 350000km its got the common rust issue and the heater core went on me around 330000km. But over all shes been a beauty
No regrets. Last week I bought (over paid) for a 2021 brand new Tacoma. With a SIX SPEED YES! Finally I can drive a clutch again thank god. As a former auto tech and now work on heavy truck. Yep. Never found anything wrong with yotas USUALLY. Rare occasion would a yota need some pricey work. Love my new truck most of all because I live in the north I needed 4 wheel drive and good god. It’s a REAL treat too drive daily.
I got a 94, 6cyl, c1500 short bed stepside manual. Going on 275k. Runs like a champ. Replaced water pump and other common things myself, super easy to work on. Got it maybe 6 yrs ago for 900 with a bad clutch. Was another 1000 or so for new clutch. Couldn't be happier with it.
Don’t know Wizard, I have a 2007 Colorado with the I5 and it’s been pretty reliable. Conversely, my 2000 S10 with the 2.2 was just god awful. Luckily it was a lease and the dealer had to fix it each time but I was happy when I turned it in.
I've got a '99 Ford Ranger, V6 automatic with 119,000 miles on it. It's been in my family since new and we've never had a problem with it. I kind of want a full size truck but I can't justify getting rid of my Ranger.
My ‘03 Ranger with 3.0 has been faultless for 220k, and I’d drive it cross country tomorrow. I’ve done a fuel pump and a radiator, both super easy, and that’s about it. That little truck has actually opened my mind to Ford as a brand, just can’t say enough good about it.
Same here except an 02 3.0V6 5 speed Edge-I had fuel pump replaced and 1 rocker arm here's the deal only 77k ! No bs i dont drive it far to work and use work truck, thrush muffler after cat tortion bars cranked to accomadate bigger tires-I have drove up and down curbs with it,dirt driving. i can easily chirp 2nd lol but at 60 i cruise it now and giving it too my son next year.. i change oil alot and again dont take it on longer than 200 mole drives-room for 2 unless a small child or my dog wants to sit on back jump seats and its a stiff ride but I like it for short hauls..
The older Dodge Dakota 3.9s and 5.2s(318) and 5.9s(360) are awesome engines and run for a long time. My 98 5.2 Dakota has 153K miles and doesn’t burn oil and I change it every 3K miles
Everyone sleeping on the 1st gen Ridgeline. Best truck I’ve ever had. So many storage areas I had places for all my tools that my bed was always empty and ready to go.
Does your s10 recommendation stretch to Astro vans as well? I'd love to see a Buy This Not That on older Conversion Vans and standard vans like that. G series, Econolines, Eurovans, etc.
@@KeliBaB I'll keep that in mind, I just picked up a 2000 Explorer conversion Astro, lots of love and care was put into it by the PO and I've given it a 5k mile shakedown in the past month without any major issues. Little updates here and there all done within 30 minutes in my driveway, getting into the German stuff first as a kid has its benefits lol
My dad had a 1990 Safari for a few years. Only problems I can think of were changing the spark plugs and the power window wiring failing in the front doors. And the inevitable rust. His dad has it now, and I've driven it a few times, and I absolutely hate it.
I still drive a 97 Astro van at work. 447 thousand miles. Original engine, second transmission. Loaded down with service tools and equipment running mountain roads all its life. Biggest issue was the intake gasket leaked and took a few lifters with it. Love than van and I dread the day I have to replace it.
Thought you might find this interesting, in Australia the two most popular "utes" (pick ups) are the Toyota Hilux and the Ford Ranger. I personally have owned two Ford Ranger's both 3.2 litre 5 Cylinder diesels and my advice would be in the Ford's around the 2013 - 2014 range pre DPF (Diesel Particulate Filter) but still the newer Rangers are a very reliable and capable vehicle, in the Toyota pre 2015 is probably the best bet. In Australia we generally only drive a diesel ute, whereas it seems to me in the US you prefer petrol (gas). Both the Hilux and the Ranger are very reliable, earlier Ranger's did suffer from transmission issues but that doesn't seem to affect the newer models. In Australia these are considered large vehicles, we can buy the Ford Ranger, Toyota Hilux, VW Amarock , Mazda BT50 (based on the ranger platform), Isuzu D-Max, Nissan Navara, Jeep's and even the Chinese Great Wall and SAIC LDV T60. I know personally I would love an F150 or F250 but the price of them here puts them out of the range of the average buyer ($150 - $190000) and they are not "officially" supported by Ford, the only true factory backed large US truck available in Australia is the RAM 1500 or 2500 which are converted to right hand drive and sold by RAM Trucks Australia (still over $100K).
I had an 07 ranger 2.3 5 speed 2wd with crank down windows and manual door locks as my first truck. You would think it would be bullet proof but I had nothing but random intermittent electrical problems. Sometimes when driving the speedometer, tachometer and coolant gauge would go to 0, the odometer would go to all dashes, and every light would come on. Tried turning it off but it wouldn’t start (wouldn’t even crank). Other times it would be working fine for several months then you would go out to start it to go home from school and it wouldn’t start (or even attempt to start). Had electrical power but wouldn’t even attempt to crank. Brought it to the dealer 4 times and to a very good independent shop another 2 times and nobody could fix it. PCM and instrument cluster were replaced, they reprogrammed the keys, the independent shop though they found a connection in the harness that was bad and replaced all the pins. Finally the indepent shop recommended replacing the entire wiring harness and I threw in the towel and just sold it. Spent $4k and needed to spend god knows how much to replace a wiring harness. I must have gotten a lemon because I know a lot of people with rangers over 300k miles with the 4 cylinder. It was too bad as it was super rust free, only had 110k miles and was a great truck otherwise. I think I just got unlucky.
I had a 1994 Ram with a 318 V8 and 5spd. That truck never had a single problem and it started on the first crank no matter how cold it was. I live in a northern state.
My 98 S10/2.2/5spd has been an absolute beast. I got it from my dad with 250k miles, it now has 490k and is still plugging away as my daily driver. The 2.2 is lacking in the power department, but it does the job mile after mile after mile. I'm excited to hit half a million miles, soon!
I got a 2004 dodge Dakota as a hand me down as my first car with the 3.7 V6 and the 4 speed auto and I can tell you it’s been a joy to drive great truck still my daily driver with 183k on the odometer no engine problems yet and the transmission is still shifting decently so all in all a great little truck
@@garychandler4296 I could get an average of about 20 mpg if I was driving on the interstate/highway driving but I do more city driving so it’s more like 12-14 mpg.
I wonder if the 4.7 with head gasket issues was due to the hp increase from 230 to 270 (?) in mid 2000's. I bought a new 2000 Dakota with the 4.7 (230 hp) and 5 spd manual. It was like the terminator. It wouldn't quit. 17mpg to my workplace, and 21 on the highway. I put a clutch in at 218,000 miles, alternator somewhere around 150,000, and retired it in 2016 with 314,000 miles, still running, but the frame shot. At that point it was smoking at idle, and downhill off throttle, so valve seals at least were shot. It was a little tough on ball joints in later years. It also had a weak AC core that only lasted about 5 years. I didn't replace it. In the 200,000+ mile range I was towing a Newholland TC30 tractor backhoe up and down PA mountains to my farm and back.
We are on our 4th Ford Ranger. Our current Ranger is a 2011 XLT super cab 4X4. It has a 4.0L with a 5spd automatic transmission, LSD, tow pkg, skid plates. I added a Line-X spray in bed liner, adjustable rear air shocks, K&N air intake, 3” FlowMaster exhaust, running boards (to kick off the mud or snow), custom wheels, custom 2 tone paint, custom interior (I HATE grey or black interior). Since we use the truck for work around our property I had Cooper Discoverer A/T tires. After installing the K&N intake and exhaust, we now consistently get 25mpg on the freeway with the cruise set on 75mph. It’s almost 12 years old and it only has 35K original miles. At my wife’s and my age, our Ranger will probably be in our estate for kids to fight over LOL.
My 2006 Nissan Frontier has been rock solid since the day I bought it new. A few minor repairs and modifications to avoid known issues have been inexpensive and easy to do. I like the mid-size segment because it is so much easier to park in a garage without any adjustments, and with crew cab models, plenty of room for the whole family AND a cargo bed with built-in tie downs and factory sprayed tough bed liner. I plan on keeping it for many more years !!
Had a 98’ S-10 2.2 (first year of the upgraded head gaskets) with a 5-speed. It was an endless money pit (electrical mostly) along the way, but I managed to trade it in with 168k miles and still got $2750 for it back in 2007. I drove a 2007 Mazda B-2300 5-speed to 100k miles and replaced the ignition coil and a battery. Bullet Proof! Wizard is right it rode terrible though even with slightly bigger tires and Monroe shocks!
Toyota's aren't perfect only vehicle that has ever left me stranded on the side of the road was a Toyota Corolla. Do I hate Toyotas for this reason? No. Just saying bad things happen to all cars regardless of brand.
I have a 94 Toyota Pickup. I were to put it into to words, it would be bulletproof but gutless. It takes a lot of abuse being used as a work truck being treated like a full size pickup and it keeps on going. It refuses to die. When I got it, it was overheating like mad and it survived without blowing a gasket or warping anything. I’ve only had minor issues due to its age, all of which were cheap and easy to work on. It has never left me stranded. That truck takes a serious beating and keeps on going. It has impressed me how rugged and tough those old Toyota are. They weren’t lying when they say the old Toyota’s are tough old truck that don’t take no shit. Mine has the 4-cylinder 22RE engine with a 5-speed. The engine while reliable and tough are underpowered for a truck application. However it does have good low end torque and its capable of towing and hauling a surprisingly amount of weight. I use mine as a work truck and I treat it as if it was a full size pickup, hauling tractors, lawn equipment, lumber and firewood, stone, mulch, bricks and concrete, and scrap metal. It is also surprisingly nimble and handles well on turns for a pickup truck.
As a truck driver I delivered a load of engines to a ( Ford) truck plant. The forklifts unloaded each engine and ran them to 1 of 2 side by side production lines. Rangers on one and Mazdas on the other. They are literally the same truck except the badges an grills.
My little 2001 Ranger 2.3 5 speed has over 250k miles. Can sit for 2 months, fires right up. Starter install took an hour. Love it.
I've got a 98 with the 2.5 5speed and I don't think I could kill it if I tried. And I'm about to try, I've got a 331 that's just screaming to go in there....
I had a 2009 Ranger 2.3 automatic 140000 miles and I just traded it in on a 2020 F-150XLT 2.7. I wish I could have kept it but the dealer offered $6000 on it so she had to go. Most reliable truck I had. Pulled 5000 trailer with it sometimes. Miss it.
There’s no reason it couldn’t sit for 2 months and not start up 😂🤣
Soooo it had a starter problem
Dan Stray it only lasted 250k miles.
Had a manual ranger 4.0 6 and put nearly 300k miles on it still running to this day. Super motor and reliable truck.
The OHV 4.0’s are great engines, however the SOHC 4.0 is known for timing chain issues.
Had a 3.0 6, but crashed it and totaled it back in January. Still am pissed to this day. I loved that thing. I’m driving an Accord now.
My 4.0 explorer has 200.000k on the dot lol and it honestly runs brand new it doesn’t look the best on the outside but man she’s been reliable a gas hog though
I have 2001v6 with over 200k glad I did check with wizard when I purchased lol
I had a 4.0 6 ranger with a 5-speed. Mine also had over 300k. Sold it about 5 years ago and regret ever doing so
I have a 04 3.0 Ranger with 349,000 original miles. Only thing replaced over the years has been plugs, wires, coil and routine maintenance with oil changes. Still runs and drives great to this day. I even pull a 6x12 enclosed trailer with 2 4-wheelers a lot.
automatic or manual transmission? Iv'e got a 99 3.0 auto (wish it was manual but here we are)
Ya the 3.0L Vulcan is pretty much a bullet proof engine. However it will not tolerate being overheated. Overheating a 3.0L is a sure fire way to end up with a cracked head. So NO the 3.0L is NOT prone to cracking heads if they are not overheated.
@@bayloc88I have had a 99’ 3.0L manual since 06’. I am pretty burned out from driving manual but It is a lot more reliable than the automatic. If it makes you feel better it is super annoying to drive after a while.
I have a 03 2.3 Mazda B2300 with 99,000 miles. Only thing replaced over the years has been ball joints, struts, u joints, tie rods, coolant reservoir, coolant hoses, O2 sensor, the catalytic converter, batteries, oil changes, and some transmission work.
lol At least I’ve learned a lot through it. The trucks been shaking since the day I got it 2018. Shakes at 70-80MPH. No alignment has fixed it. Maybe the transmission mount? Any ideas? The shake is beneath the floor board
@@drumyogi9281 Especially in a 20 mile long traffic tie-up on I-81. My left foot was worn out from pushing the clutch in and out. The upside is you don't have to change the transmission fluid and replacing the clutch and the flywheel is cheap comparing to replacing/rebuilding an automatic transmission. But in a traffic jam, pushing the clutch in and out 20 times a minute will drive you nuts.
Guy I work with has a colorado with over 300,000 miles, has owned it for 12 years and says he has never had a problem with it, highly recommended it
Same here lol never had a problem with mine
I have a 2011 Colorado with over 200,000 miles on it runs like a champ never had any issues
Me too
I have a 2007 Chevy Colorado with the 3.7L inline 5cylinder and over 200,000 miles. It is very reliable and hasn't given me any major problems.
Just bought a 2011 l5 with 93k miles hopefully I get those miles too
my first car was my dads 2010 chevy colorado with 230k on it. 5 cylinder auto transmission 4wd. it sort of ate oil and you had to be nice on the transmission but other than that, it had ice cold ac, drove smooth as butter, good power and looked good. it was a crew cab with the cool wheels, ended up being totaled from my brother spinning it into a guardrail in the snow. My dad ended up buying another one with the insurance money lol. that one also has over 200k on it, 4 cylinder. I loved that truck, solid as a brick and sounded great too. scotty kilmer said it himself
Just ask the Taliban and similar forces around the world about the Toyota truck. All you need to know.
I'll ask them on our next zoom meeting
And a big part of that is who is willing to ship/sell trucks in those parts of the world. Not a ton of big 3 dealerships pushing there, and not a ton of big 3 trucks are even shipped outside the states at all. Some cars and trucks are more prevalent globally simply because they were intentionally shipped to every continent (Toyota, Mercedes)
The obummer admin sent Toyota’s over during cash for clunkers. I remember seeing an article where a plumber in Texas I believe got harassed as the tb still had the plumbers business name and phone number on the side. His secret service code name was “renegade” for a reason. Just look up the word in a dictionary
I mean yeah, there's a literal war named after the freaking company cause of the truck.
@@djfreake Definitely not. The engines were required to be destroyed in the C4C program.
In the story you are referring to the plumber traded in his truck at a dealership and it went to wholesale auction and was purchased and then exported.
I think there is demand for smaller trucks because even mid size trucks are very expensive.
Mighty Max to the rescue!
Chicken tax
yup Trucks in general are going for high $
Also, new trucks have gotten so large and tall they're hard to us for actual utility purposes.
Have you noticed the solution to this is to offer 6-8 year finance terms? My solution? Wait until it has 75k miles. Let the new truck buyer go into debt so your taxes can offer them bankruptcy buyouts later. Wait...
I had a 2000 nissan frontier with the 3.3 v6. I sold it with 350k miles on it a year ago, and I still see it rolling around town every once in a while.
I still miss my 97 S-10. Got T-boned two weeks after reporting to Ft Hood. I also cry thinking about it. I loved that truck
My 2008 3L Ranger had rough idling until I changed the plug wires and water pump leaks but nut serious, only when it's cold! 240,000 Kilometers, bought 8 years ago! Love it!
WIZARD!!! You know you messed up when you said that you took a call and made the video. That's letting the people know that you have a request line!
Lol
Yup, that's going to eat into his time now.
The Wizard's voice is super soothing like Mr. Rogers. 🥱
Can you use that word in a sentance?
I’m glad that it looks like small trucks are going to make a comeback soon. Plenty of people just don’t have the workload or finances to warrant having a full size or even mid size truck. A two door truck with a small bed that I could throw my fishing gear in would be great!
Today's small truck is as big as a 1/2 truck from 30 years ago. Today's small trucks are not very small.
Jesus loves you alot trust in His death 4 salvation and be saved from eternal hell
No one is making small trucks anymore, Mid Size has replaced them
And the price they want for "small" new trucks are still widely unaffordable and as much as big truck s
i have an old 97 nissan hardbody 4x4 w/ a 5 speed. She's a rough riding girl and ain't got shit for power, but god damn do I love that truck. I don't need some monstrosity that can haul half a dozen people or tow a house behind it. Just give me a cheap and reliable 2 door and an extended cab with a bed, 4x4, and a manual transmission and it covers 99.9% of my needs.
I agree that the 2nd Gen Dakotas overall are great with the 4 cylinder engines, but the 318 V8 you could get in them was reliable, powerful enough and cheap enough, that they were worth squeezing around the sides of them to work on. I've seen some with over 250k- they are great when paired with the Aisin manual transmissions as well. 1st or 2nd gen Dakotas were both fine with the 4 or 8 cylinders and manual transmissions
I currently have an 91 dakota sport 4.7 and love it. 175k and still drives down road like a Cadillac and power for days.
Yeah, and the 4.7 isn’t bad either. Just wait 10 damn minutes for the engine to warm up. I have a Manual 5.2 club cab, 320,000. And there is 5.2 and 5.9s everywhere for good price ti the point where I wouldn’t even think about rebuilding one
I have a 93 Dakota 3.9 v6 with a 5 speed 4x4 with 336,000 and the cylinders still push over 150 psi out of them and it still runs amazing, I run it everyday with out a hitch. And it does anything I ask it to, I pull with it everyday so I am not sure if I got a gem in the rough but I love my v6.
Older tacomas also have serious frame rot issues, to the point that they recalled many but some were too late
He has ignored this in each of the truck videos.
well toyota had a buyback program for that exact issue. they're not having problems now bc they switched from box to a C frame
Rust isn’t an issue here in the southern south but I’ve seen some pick ups from up north that are complete rust buckets to the point that bolts are completely seized and panels have huge holes on them
Yea, in 2008 Toyota recalled 1995-2004 trucks for that if memory serves. Not sure what made them more prone to rot then other trucks though. But hey, as bad as those where, it could be worse: Ford Windstar's rear axle rot problems - it's scary to see those snapped in half from corrosion. :-O
my dads old tundra (2001) had frame rust issues also to the point of getting rid of it since it would be too dangerous to drive but toyota refused to replace under a recall. i could never recommend an older toyota truck anywhere near the rustbelt.
I have a 1988 Dakota LE V6 2wd 5 speed with 120k miles. Fully restored. Good and reliable. Owned it for 8 years as a summer ride.
Have 2 auto 1st gen Dakotas with the 5.2 with 260k on one and 280k before they gave up
If your truck is an 88 it's a la stile motor wizard was referring to the magnum
@@onewheelpeelproductionzdan2000 both the dakotas I mentioned were magnum motors also have a 5.2 mag in my 1500 with 130k~ with no issues.
My Dad has an '07 Dodge Dakota with a 4.7 V8 that 253k miles. It has never blown a head gasket. He has only replaced the water pump and just recently replaced some sort-of sensors. The truck was almost totaled just after it was bought, luckily they we able to save it. The truck has served our family very well.
My salvage yard uses an 06 with the 3.7 as a part runner. Got it with a blown tranny and replaced it 100k miles ago. It has just over 200k on it now. My personal Jeep Grand Cherokee also has the same 3.7 and it has 175k miles on it and the only issues have been small cooling issues. (Knock on wood)
@@alexhill828 i know this is old, but I have the exact same truck except it's a V6 club cab. Extremely smooth and amazing truck.
I live in the midwest and I know multiple farmers who own an 04-12 Colorado (which is really an Isuzu) with over 250k miles. Mine has 150k right now. The 5 cylinder is a great motor, and overall the trucks work great. Easy to work on as well. No data on HVAC issues here (A/C works in all the trucks I'm around)
I was pretty relieved when you said my 08 Tacoma would continue to never have problems haha.
I had a 98 Chevy s10, 4cylinder 5 speed. I payed 300$ for it and drove the living hell out of it for 2 years! I abused it like crazy, doing burnouts, hauling full size trailers, attempting to drift it Haha, but it never let me down! It had over 250k and was a complete rust bucket, rustiest vehicle I've ever owned, but so dependable! The guy I sold it to is still driving it around today and he has had it for 2 years now
I have a 2008 Ford ranger 4.0 4x4 manual with 218,000 miles. Still tow almost everyday and never had an issue with that truck.
It's an OK engine and an OK truck
Had a 2007 Ranger 4.0 Automatic. Whole transmission needed to be replaced at 60k miles. Manual is the way to go.
I have an 05 Ranger FX4 with 160,000 on it. Not gonna lie I’ve got a lot of money into it but it’s better than new. Original dark shadow great metallic paint shines like new. No rust. Awesome truck. Love it.
I get confused. Today's midsized truck seems to be the same size as my 79 GMC.
Indeed. My 2016 Colorado is the same size as my coworkers '98 Silverado
And yesterdays midsize truck is the same size as a 39 GMC
@Chris Kelly What if you aren't trying to compensate for something???
My 08 Ranger longbed actually has a larger bed than my buddy's full size 2017 Ram. Not as wide, of course, but by sheer volume it beats it.
Everything seems to be growing.
My uncle had his 96 ranger for 22 years before he bought a new truck had 1,100,00 km on it great truck
I agree with you about the Ranger except that you didn’t mention the 4.0 SOHC which is a terrible engine that blows up a lot. The 4.0L pushrod engine is a fantastic and durable engine.
mine ran well, sold it at 230k miles and the person down the street is still driving it.
i am religious on the maintenance though, oil, pcv, tensioners you name it got replaced when they said it should and i’m not out beating my shit either. so maybe that was it, i did replace and alternator and did fix the front timing chain guide.
but not that bad really.
decent power and mileage.
I got over 400,000 miles on the original 4.0 SOHC in my 2001 Ranger 4X4. The body rusted away before the engine died. Just kept up on maintenance.
@@kevind3185 SOHC or SOHV . I’ve heard the same thing about the SOHC timing guide but I’ve heard the SOHV was good
He talks about Toyotas while wearing a baby yoda t-shirt
@Joe Smith love my 1st gen taco and 3rd gen runner
This is the way
@Joe Smith I got a 1st gen, got it from some jerk off who never took the frame in. 1400 bucks for a nice welding project, I aint mad im a welder.
Yoda and Toyota are not related. We don't need a Star Wars treatment on every damn thing in existence.
@@ryanlangan1060 No but the founder of Toyota last name is Toyoda.
You know what Wizard, I love these videos. Thank you for sharing the mechanic's viewpoint on these trucks. I feel like people just buy whatever truck/car looks best or is cheapest and it's really nice of you to let us in on the problems you have seen so that we can avoid them.
Tacoma also had a huge problem with frames rusting out. Was handled under warranty for a lot of them
Great video wizzard
Seeing that on RCR was such a facepalm. How do you make the AC pipe dump condensation directly onto a main frame part...
Tacoma has terrible ergonomics imo. 2020 and not sure if they have power seats yet.... I used to have a 2015 taco double cab trd off-road, test drove and was ok. But on anything longer than 15-20mins it gave me terrible knee/leg pain. I am healthy and was 20 at the time, thin and 6ft tall. Everything else about the truck I liked, except the touchy brakes and radio volume didn’t go high enough. I like toyota in general but sometimes they are too lazy with designs like the tacoma, the seat on mine wasn’t even height adjustable. The steering wheel height to seat height relationship is terrible, and the seat height is very low too. Maybe if you’re 5ft tall it’s fine... My opinion get the Tundra instead, way nicer truck, comfortable, million mile capable. There is a popular video on RUclips if a million mile tundra that toyota bought back, original drivetrain, reverse had an issue that was repaired at 700k something miles. With the gas savings with the Tacoma it can go towards knee surgery!
Connor Ashburn the brakes are stupid touchy on the new ones.
Connor Ashburn I’m 5’7, 215lbs, Tacoma is absolutely perfect for me. My friend who’s 6’3 loves my truck as well, says seats are super comfy
The full box frame design would have water build up in it. Not really as big of an issue where I live, though. Central California is pretty dry most of the year. And no salted roads.
I have a 2002 extended cab 3-liter v6. I have 325,000 miles on it. It’s a work truck. I’ve been towing trailers, carrying heavy loads all the time. Engine is perfect. Change oil every 3-months. No problems with motor. I have had 3-new clutches in and had to replace 1st and 2nd gears along with their respective synchronizers. Two times. Including brakes several times. Still using it. It has now became a science project. Oh yah, bushings and bearings for the chassis.
As you call me, a “hillbilly” yes we do take S-10’s and rangers off road. If FAR more numbers than any Toyota and they come back home usually. But I will say I’ve never seen an abandoned taco but I have seen a few abandoned S-10’s in the woods.
The '97 - '04 Dodge Dakota can really punch above it's weight if you get one with the optional 5.9L magnum. It's the same V8 used in the late 90s Rams and has 250hp with 350lb-ft of torque! Supposedly it's pretty robust too.
To bad its detuned.
@paleolithictech how many transmissions you go through?
@paleolithictech had a 94 v6, never had engine problems. Picked up at 140k miles sold at 220k miles. Also got 22 mpg .
@@cleonituk got a dakota i bought new in 98, 5.2 356,000 on it original transmission, still have original starter and alternator on it,
Would a 92 Dakota with 168000 be worth looking into. 5.2 engine
Spot on again Wizard. I had a 2001 Dakota with the V6, the engine went BAD at 64k miles....
Jesus...
I have a 3.9 with 298k
They rusted out here before they had the chance to reach that mileage
I’m considering a Dodge Dakota of that era to replace my Ford Explorer Sport Trac once it gets time to move that on. I think I’m going to go for a 5.9. I’d avoid the 4.7 just because of the head gasket problems
@@kingjlinza avoid the 4.7 at all cost. Oil issues also. Have had 3 4.7's. on a 5.9 now and won't look back. I still have a 4.7 rango and enjoy it but not as reliable. Both have over 200k on them.
I love my 2013 Tacoma 4X4! Bought it with 20,000 miles 3 years ago. I now have 130,000 miles on it. Great truck! No issues so far!
Those Tacomas can go strong. Except the 2016-2019 Tacoma's with transmission issues.
@@az7378 so is 2020 and up Tacomas good? I’m looking to get rid of my 04 Colorado
I have a 2006 nissan frontier with the 6 speed manual and the 4.0 v6. we had to do the timing chain work on it but it was pretty low on miles and now it has been fantastic. the manuel doesn't have the same problems as the automatic and the v6 has incredible power
Weird I have had two 3.0 Rangers with no problems. First one I sold at 286k, current one is about to turn 200k. Change your fluids people.
I had a 97 3.0...The Vulcan Engine was great. I had mine up to 170K and there wasn't an issue with it.
I had a 2002 Dakota 2wd with the 3.9 that i used as a concrete work truck for a few years and I absolutely loved the thing
Love my gen 2 dakota. Dropping a 5.9 in it. Wouldn’t trade if for the world.
That's awesome! Exact same truck as well. It did a good job for the time I had it. Wish I had a v8 in it. Did yours tick a lot?
looking to buy one here soon
My manual 02 4.0 Ranger was probably the best vehicle I’ve owned thus far. I put over 80k on it to where it’s sitting now at 200k and it’s still going strong, I just ended up giving it to my younger brother. Only things I ever did were U Joints and a clutch, it’s just been an all around fantastic truck. There’s a reason you see so many still running around, they don’t die
i have a buddy who had the recall toyota, they replace the entire frame. its like new now
I had a friend in high school who had a Tundra. His frame completely rotted out.
@@kingjlinza did he get compensated? bc Wasn't there a Toyota buyback program bc frame problems
Yeah, I know two people who had the frame replaced on their Tacomas.
JEEPNATION I know someone who had there’s replaced for free and it was a sequoia. Hey they might have messed up but at least they owned up to it and fixed it for free. The sad thing is most everything else on those vehicle are unkillable.
ryding with ryan they had to fix it as there was a class action law suit. So either they fixed it or the pay for it. So they fixed it.
I have a 91 s10 with the 4.3 and it still runs perfect. Can’t say the same for the body, and that GM paint. I’m convinced it’ll rust out from under me before anything happens to the motor. I love it.
The Dakotas/Rams pretty much are solid. I've owned all three of the Magnums 5.9/5.2/3.9. they are solid motors and will run without issue 90% of the time. Most issue I've seen with them is the water pumps fail (replaced 2) but other than that they don't give many issues
@paleolithictech what was the cause of the timing chain issues? Replaced mine when we were doing the water pump.
My 2004 Colorado 2.8 five speed has been insanely great to me..no valve issues so far since I've put 30,000 miles on it. The HVAC issues are summed up to poor grounds. I fixed mine easy. Some pass lock issues but I've never had any.
The Toyota truck from the eighties to early nineties with the 2.4 natural aspiration diesel was one of the best Toyota vehicles ever. I have personally heard about people driving them with 500k to 600k miles on them without any engine issues of any kind.
I have a friend that had a 1 ton Toyota Hi-Lux (like you’re talking about). He owns a farm and worked that Toyota HARD.
He replaced the Diesel engine at 725K miles.
After the new engine was installed, he changed it into a flat bed.
My Canyon has 348K on it and I have done semiregular maintenance and put in seven sensors, that qualifies it for Wizard statis wouldn't you agree. It's a 4.2 straight six
I had a 94 Dakota. V6 with the 5 speed. Still my favorite vehicle of all time. I had more fun in that truck than any other vehicle I've had.
I had one too, was my first vehicle. Mine was teal green with a purple tape stripe lol very 90s
The price of fuel is always reflected what size vehicles gain in popularity. It is necessity as prices climb.
The 05-07 Frontiers also suffered from frame rot. A buddy of mine had a Pathfinder on the same frame and his mechanic pushed a philips screwdriver thru the frame rail like butter
Sadly a lot of really nice 90’s and 00’s trucks have died to rust.
If you want a V6 in your ranger, get a 2005 or later 4.0. Got that instead of a 4 cylinder because that's what the lot had. 2004 and earlier had issues with the timing chain.
correct
Or get a full size truck with the 300 inline 6
I got a 2005 chevy colorado with 428,000 miles on it right now.
They're good trucks. I've got a 2007 with no problems.
My best friend has one with 26,000 miles, same year. It was his grandfathers who didn’t drive it much. I had the chance to drive it. Really smooth truck.
I own an 06 with 283k miles,
How it still runs is still a mystery
Even a blind squirrel can find a nut sometimes
I love my 06 Colorado ...with 155k still has lots of life left in it
I disagree on the Dakota, my 97 5.2 V8 has been great for 18 years! Been taken care of in that time frame to avoid serious trouble. The 2.5 is solid but the 3.9 is also alright and the 5.2/5.9 are lots of fun. I agree to the 4.7 and 3.7 being not worthwhile.
I agree , I have/had a 97 Dakota 5.2 liter , It's absolutely bulletproof ,.. still running strong with inexpensive maintenance,, cheap parts. easy to fix..
I again agree. 5.2 and 5.9 are bullet proof 300k engines.
Keep in mind, the S10 and Ranger weren't available as a 4 Cylinder 4WD, 4WD was only available with the optional V6.
80s ranger 4cylider had 4x4 option don’t know why they dropped it in 90s
That's strange because I had a 1985 S10 with a 2.5 4 cyl. 4X4
@@thomvogan3397 They probably did have 4Cyl 4WDs in the earlier model years, but I'm referring to 94ish up S10s. Sameish timeframe on the Rangers.
@@thomvogan3397 lots of the early S-trucks had the Iron Duke and were 4x4, but when CAFE numbers became an issue, the downgraded to a bare bones 4 cylinder 2wd only. As the Wizard mentions, that 2.2 I4 is reliable as can be, but once the 2.2 took over for the Duke, the 4x4 became a 4.3 V6 option only...
I have a 1995 Ford Ranger XL Regular Cab Long Bed with a 2.3 I4 mated to an M5OD (manual transmission) and BG 13-54 (manual-transfer case) with manual-locking hubs and a 4.10 differential; they certainly exist, albeit they are exceptionally hard to find.
Currently have a 2000 Nissan Frontier 4 cylinder (KA24DE) with the 5 speed manual and 4WD and I can confirm that the engine is solid. Only thing to look out for is bad knock sensors. Getting mine replaced right now but it’s definitely a solid truck.
Never had or knew anybody with a 3.0 Ranger, but I can tell you the 4.0 is a great reliable motor. I used to tow trailers way heavier than I should with a 4.0 5 speed and it never caused me a minutes trouble. Actually a friend of mine towed a backhoe with his... Stopping was a bigger issue than pulling LOL
My 93 with 3.0 has 370,000 on it. They are bullet proof but lack power.
@@raytycker1656 is that a 6?
@@garychandler4296 yes its a small v6.
My friend found a D21 in a field that had been there for at least 20 years. He put in a new battery, new gas, and changed all the fluids and daily drove it until his wife crashed it head-on. It still runs fine, but the frame is bent enough that he only offroads it now. They really are bulletproof.
I've got a 2000 4.7L v8 magnum dakota. And I love it. Keep up with common matenace and its been super reliable for me. I've got 350***km on it so of course it has some issues at this age. But overall it's been a very reliable truck and relatively easy to work on the V8 aswell once you understand the layout of the engine.
Love my 4.7s in both my jeep and Dakota
Have a '99 XLT Ranger with the 3.0V6 and I know from experience, the cooling systems need extra care. I swapped the factory radiator and belt driven fan for a 2 row, all aluminum radiator and electric fan. The heads are prone to warp and chew headgaskets as a result. These are good engines, gutless with little to no power, but can be reliable but require some extra care. Most people with these models don't care enough to maintain them; these are cheap little trucks that are just meant to be driven until the wheels fall off. The cracked head issue seems to be common amongst every company I think, because the manufacturers switched to Aluminum heads with little to no change to the cooling systems. On top of that, owners mistreating them and not maintaining them well enough, that could be one of the reasons.
2.2 S10 with a 5 speed. The truck so good, I bought it 2x. Literally, mine is my 3rd and sixth vehicle. My brother in law thought he totally killed it. I bought it back from him and fixed the no start. She runs like a champ eveb after 18 years.
Me too. My first was a '97, and I swore I'd never buy another one because it wasn't fast, but it grew on me, and bought 2001. That one has 192k on it, no engine repairs except a water pump at 147k, starter at 157k. As for the truck, just did front end work at 183k. Good ride, good reliability, COLD a/c, and great on gas.
I'm glad you mentioned it Wizard. I have an 03 Tacoma and love it, ill never sell my 1st gen, the key is watching for ball joints and getting the frame checked and painted. I have a California truck and will be painting my frame despite it having almost no rust, mechanical throttle, and solid fuel injection with a non interference V6. Good truck.
Yes they are very reliable if you check out the frame and watch for the ball joints . Other than that you can keep on trucking. I love my 1st generation Toyota Tacoma TRD with TRD supercharger 4door.
I have a 2006 Tacoma with the 4.0 it has 374k miles on it.
Great trucks
Barely broken in.
I still drive it everyday.
How’s the frame
Had an '87 Ranger 4x4, ex-cab, 2.9L auto. Loved that truck. Wasn't fast or a powerhouse but outside of a transmission I toasted towing a 22' cuddy cabin boat it was a great truck.
I've got a 3.7 Dakota, and it's a tank; the 4.7s had overheating problems, but the 3.7 was the same drivetrain as the old Jeep Libertys, and they just went forever.
Got a 2010 Tacoma for my plumbing apprenticship in 2017 all I've done is oil changes and put gas in it THATS IT, it isn't very fast but it's never left me stranded all my other friends (plumber apprentices) who bought their Rams or dodges have all broken down at some point and it's usually me to pick em up and car pool them to work absolutely love my Toyota
Lol
Honda Ridgeline- the non truck that is really what most people need.
Ha ha ha ha ha ha..ha..ha ......ha. (pause). Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha
No
The pilot with a bed
I concur
Correct.
Toyota and Ford are the only trucks worth buying. My dad had the 99 GMC Sonoma 4x4 with a 5 speed trans, it was a good truck but he started having an issue with the fuel injection around the 11 year mark, so he sold it, it was the V6 Vortex engine, looks like he made a good decisions
You’re right about the 4.3. I drove a 2005 silverado with the 4.3 and it had constant injector issues. Usually ran on 5 cylinders. It was a company truck and they never wanted to fix the issue, so I drove it like that for 10000 miles.
I agree about Toyota , I have a 2005 Land cruiser with same 4.7 V8 in the tundra, and I have 283,000 miles and never had any issues at all. It’s been flawless since new. My dad had a 2003 GMC Sierra 2500 Duramax crewcab long bed , he has 255,000 miles and he’s had a couple little issues here and there but nothing serious. Allison trans with the rest of the power train is very reliable.
'99chevy Silverado with over 400k
I have a 2008 Tundra with almost 300,000 miles. It has never had any serious issues, it's never broken down on me for the time I owned it, never broke down on my uncle who I bought it from either. He's a contractor so he put most of the miles on the truck. I now have a 2022 Toyota Tacoma and I love it. It is the same size of a first gen Tundra which was my first truck, also another reliable truck with the 4.7L V8 engine. I just love Toyota trucks.
I have two 3.0L Rangers, one has 26000 on the clock, the other has 195000. So far no major problems other than the usual squeaky Cam synchro or burned out sensor. I suspect the 3.0s with cracked heads had overheating issues. The cooling system on the 3.0 needs to burp for it to work properly. If you change a radiator hoses, thermostat or anything else on the cooling system and do not properly fill and burp the system, it will overheat. But before that it will chew up the water pump impellor due to cavitation. So if you do crack a head, make sure to change the water pump. The top hose on the 3.0 is above the engine, it will develops an air pocket in that hose. If you don't clear that air pocket you will have problems. I'm surprised "the Wizard" didn't know about this. If you do swap heads and don't replace the water pump, it will only happen again. The 3.0L is a strong reliable pushrod engine if maintained property. Lastly, if your 3.0L is down on power, check to see that your throttle cable hasn't stretched. If it has, a couple of zip ties at the throttle peddle side to take up the slack might solve the problem. And yes, I am a common sense mechanic.
I have a 96 ford ranger with the 2.3l its very reliable for me so far despite it being owned by people who did not take care of it very well before and with almost 280k miles although alot of those are highway miles from the previous owner. The spark plugs are little bit hard to get to on the intake side (There are 8 spark plugs for at least my model year). Its slow but reliable.
Me too. In fact its my first car. Bought it at 157k miles on Dec 28th. Owner gave it to her niece and her boyfriend did not give it proper maintenance and messing up installing parts. It has a transmission issue but its stil reliable.
My 02 S10 has the 4.3 with 330,00 miles, still drive it everyday.
Favorite truck so far was my 93 Nissan hardbodies. I had 2 of them. First one was amazing. 215,000 miles. Never gave me a single problem, got 25-28mpg. Super slow with no power but it was still the best.
My 1887 has even less power with the z24i engine. Its not fast in a drag race, but has enough torque to pull any load i date to put in the bed, up to a ton, and it pulls any highway grade without a downshift. It's like a mini version of an old straight six, not for drag racing, but a workhorse.
Bought my Toyota T100 SR5 extra cab used almost 27 years ago. (Paid $18,000) It's never failed me. It's comfy, looks great, and runs like it will never stop. 180,000K During the Covid hiatus I got bored & put a Pioneer audio system and back up camera in it. I then reupholstered the door panels myself. Totally cool and very up to date with Apple Play, Sirius radio, USB hook-ups, and more. I upgraded every exterior light on the truck, then did the same for the dash and all interior lights to LEDs. Minimal cost. What a difference! Headlights 100% improvement. I just had to put the obligatory colorful "TRD SPORT" stickers on the rear bed. Many people think it's a new truck. It will do anything a new truck will do and maybe even more. The styling is excellent. Been paid off for 25 years. Repairs, few and far between, are simple, inexpensive and easy. $250 per year insurance and $125 license fees. Maintenance is the key. Thank you Mr. Toyota.....
I'm just glad that chevy is talking about brining the avalanche back!! Absolutely loved that truck.
I’ve never heard about the cylinder head issue on the Ford 3.0L V6. I currently have a Ranger with the 3.0 and 245k. I also had a Taurus with the same motor that had 190k before a family member totaled it. I’ve had zero problems with the engine. Rangers are pretty tough regardless of which engine it has.
FunkyShaf lol I owned one with 200k v6
The post-'98? Vulcan 3.0l got a redesign to the oil pump; the '96-'98 version has this annoying tendency to blow the oil pump & eat the engine. [DAMHIK] Unfortunately, I only found out about this *after* my engine ate itself getting onto the freeway [this also somewhat explains why later Rangers are all still on the road, after they fixed that issue! The Vulcan was a good little donk...]
Same here, that 3.0 is solid, or the 5.2 or 3.9 magnums. They're all good engines. 😒
The Ford 3.0 V6 is one of the most reliable engines I've encountered. Take care of it, and it'll run for ages.
My friend has a ranger with the 3.0 vulcan with 200k that had a timing cover leak, he lost all of the coolant and it OVERHEATED, he let it cool down and still made it home, replaced the timing cover gaskets and the thing still runs, iron heads and block didn't warp but I don't know how that thing survived. So I don't agree with Wizard on the vulcan.
I love your style of speaking no big words and super tech language it reminds me of Saturday morning kids educational entertainment shows
Although I am a tech I feel there's no need to talk to clients like that thanks again Wizard 👍
01 Toyota Tacoma with over 300k and the wife will not let it go. I guess we will keep driving it till it has 500k
my 1999 Dakota 5.2l V8 has 263,000 miles. It has been abused and neglected for he 15 years I have owned it. It just keeps going and going.
5.2l rocks
Yeah don't get me wrong I'd bet money that your 5.2 has cracked heads. But honestly the magnum series of engines don't really care if they have cracked heads. That and the heads don't crack in a drastic way.
Yes I just put 5.9l Heads on it that's what I did never had a problem
All the metal on the 5.2 and 5.9 is thick as hell. They can crack and never care. When Chrysler switched to the new Hemi, with its dual shaft rockers and huge aluminum heads and extra-high cam tunnel and Y-block and monster cross-bolt mains, it was still CHEAPER to make than the 5.9 Magnum. The old iron horse is just a thicc vintage chonk. That said, never put stock heads back on. Aftermarket iron heads can be had for pretty cheap, and add serious performance (in addition to not cracking).
I've got the 4.7L magnum in my 2000 dakota. Same idea. Almost deals bullet proof. With 350000km its got the common rust issue and the heater core went on me around 330000km. But over all shes been a beauty
No regrets. Last week I bought (over paid) for a 2021 brand new Tacoma. With a SIX SPEED YES! Finally I can drive a clutch again thank god. As a former auto tech and now work on heavy truck. Yep. Never found anything wrong with yotas USUALLY. Rare occasion would a yota need some pricey work. Love my new truck most of all because I live in the north I needed 4 wheel drive and good god. It’s a REAL treat too drive daily.
I got a 94, 6cyl, c1500 short bed stepside manual. Going on 275k. Runs like a champ. Replaced water pump and other common things myself, super easy to work on. Got it maybe 6 yrs ago for 900 with a bad clutch. Was another 1000 or so for new clutch. Couldn't be happier with it.
Don’t know Wizard, I have a 2007 Colorado with the I5 and it’s been pretty reliable. Conversely, my 2000 S10 with the 2.2 was just god awful. Luckily it was a lease and the dealer had to fix it each time but I was happy when I turned it in.
The drivetrain was fine, but everything that could go wrong in an electrical system for me did. it was non stop
The only Colorado/Canyon I would recommend is the 09-12 with the 5.3 V8 and they do not have the Active Fuel Management system.
I agree! The atlas engine is awful and the new 3.6l has its issues.
I've owned two 07 and 09 Colorado 2.9ls both trucks were great
@@Spillmansgarage There is still the 2.5 L four-cylinder option.
I've got a '99 Ford Ranger, V6 automatic with 119,000 miles on it. It's been in my family since new and we've never had a problem with it. I kind of want a full size truck but I can't justify getting rid of my Ranger.
2005 Ranger 4.0 passed 320k miles before it went to the iron dream. no engine issues. What a gal!
My ‘03 Ranger with 3.0 has been faultless for 220k, and I’d drive it cross country tomorrow. I’ve done a fuel pump and a radiator, both super easy, and that’s about it. That little truck has actually opened my mind to Ford as a brand, just can’t say enough good about it.
Good to hear I’m buying one
Same here except an 02 3.0V6 5 speed Edge-I had fuel pump replaced and 1 rocker arm here's the deal only 77k ! No bs i dont drive it far to work and use work truck, thrush muffler after cat tortion bars cranked to accomadate bigger tires-I have drove up and down curbs with it,dirt driving. i can easily chirp 2nd lol but at 60 i cruise it now and giving it too my son next year.. i change oil alot and again dont take it on longer than 200 mole drives-room for 2 unless a small child or my dog wants to sit on back jump seats and its a stiff ride but I like it for short hauls..
Nice. 2016 Frontier with the 4L here, love the trucl. only issue was a fuel sending unit that was covered under warranty
2015 Frontier 4L here. 125,000 miles, not one single problem. Lover that truck!
@@kitdinker The ones after 2012 are updated in stuff I have a 16 with the 2.5l though
I love my Ranger, though it’s a 4.0 V6 with 61k miles that was barely driven in the past few years, so it’s no shock that it runs well.
The older Dodge Dakota 3.9s and 5.2s(318) and 5.9s(360) are awesome engines and run for a long time. My 98 5.2 Dakota has 153K miles and doesn’t burn oil and I change it every 3K miles
I have personal experience with a 2007 Toyota Tacoma v6, Excellent truck regardless of the problems listed
Everyone sleeping on the 1st gen Ridgeline. Best truck I’ve ever had. So many storage areas I had places for all my tools that my bed was always empty and ready to go.
Does your s10 recommendation stretch to Astro vans as well? I'd love to see a Buy This Not That on older Conversion Vans and standard vans like that. G series, Econolines, Eurovans, etc.
My coworker had an Astro with the 4.3 and he had problems with the spider injection assembly like the wizard said on the v6 s10.
@@KeliBaB I'll keep that in mind, I just picked up a 2000 Explorer conversion Astro, lots of love and care was put into it by the PO and I've given it a 5k mile shakedown in the past month without any major issues. Little updates here and there all done within 30 minutes in my driveway, getting into the German stuff first as a kid has its benefits lol
My dad had a 1990 Safari for a few years. Only problems I can think of were changing the spark plugs and the power window wiring failing in the front doors. And the inevitable rust. His dad has it now, and I've driven it a few times, and I absolutely hate it.
KeliBaB the more common issue is the LIM gaskets going bad. After 03, the injector issues went away with the removal of the poppet valve.
I still drive a 97 Astro van at work. 447 thousand miles. Original engine, second transmission. Loaded down with service tools and equipment running mountain roads all its life. Biggest issue was the intake gasket leaked and took a few lifters with it. Love than van and I dread the day I have to replace it.
my dad bought a nissan hardbody new back in 96 or 97. 25 years later it refuses to quit.
I have a 97 d21 I bought new.The biggest problem is rust.In over 20 years it let me down once.It was the ignition coil inside the distributor. 😊😊😊😊
Thought you might find this interesting, in Australia the two most popular "utes" (pick ups) are the Toyota Hilux and the Ford Ranger. I personally have owned two Ford Ranger's both 3.2 litre 5 Cylinder diesels and my advice would be in the Ford's around the 2013 - 2014 range pre DPF (Diesel Particulate Filter) but still the newer Rangers are a very reliable and capable vehicle, in the Toyota pre 2015 is probably the best bet. In Australia we generally only drive a diesel ute, whereas it seems to me in the US you prefer petrol (gas). Both the Hilux and the Ranger are very reliable, earlier Ranger's did suffer from transmission issues but that doesn't seem to affect the newer models. In Australia these are considered large vehicles, we can buy the Ford Ranger, Toyota Hilux, VW Amarock , Mazda BT50 (based on the ranger platform), Isuzu D-Max, Nissan Navara, Jeep's and even the Chinese Great Wall and SAIC LDV T60.
I know personally I would love an F150 or F250 but the price of them here puts them out of the range of the average buyer ($150 - $190000) and they are not "officially" supported by Ford, the only true factory backed large US truck available in Australia is the RAM 1500 or 2500 which are converted to right hand drive and sold by RAM Trucks Australia (still over $100K).
I had an 07 ranger 2.3 5 speed 2wd with crank down windows and manual door locks as my first truck. You would think it would be bullet proof but I had nothing but random intermittent electrical problems. Sometimes when driving the speedometer, tachometer and coolant gauge would go to 0, the odometer would go to all dashes, and every light would come on. Tried turning it off but it wouldn’t start (wouldn’t even crank). Other times it would be working fine for several months then you would go out to start it to go home from school and it wouldn’t start (or even attempt to start). Had electrical power but wouldn’t even attempt to crank. Brought it to the dealer 4 times and to a very good independent shop another 2 times and nobody could fix it. PCM and instrument cluster were replaced, they reprogrammed the keys, the independent shop though they found a connection in the harness that was bad and replaced all the pins. Finally the indepent shop recommended replacing the entire wiring harness and I threw in the towel and just sold it. Spent $4k and needed to spend god knows how much to replace a wiring harness. I must have gotten a lemon because I know a lot of people with rangers over 300k miles with the 4 cylinder. It was too bad as it was super rust free, only had 110k miles and was a great truck otherwise. I think I just got unlucky.
I had a 1994 Ram with a 318 V8 and 5spd. That truck never had a single problem and it started on the first crank no matter how cold it was. I live in a northern state.
Got a 98 Ranger 4.0 4WD. Still runs fine, 235,000 miles. Had to fix a few things (myself) but nothing major.
My 98 S10/2.2/5spd has been an absolute beast. I got it from my dad with 250k miles, it now has 490k and is still plugging away as my daily driver. The 2.2 is lacking in the power department, but it does the job mile after mile after mile. I'm excited to hit half a million miles, soon!
I got a 2004 dodge Dakota as a hand me down as my first car with the 3.7 V6 and the 4 speed auto and I can tell you it’s been a joy to drive great truck still my daily driver with 183k on the odometer no engine problems yet and the transmission is still shifting decently so all in all a great little truck
What kind of mileage you getting? My new truck is a copy of yours. One guy claimed 22, but I doubt it.
@@garychandler4296 I could get an average of about 20 mpg if I was driving on the interstate/highway driving but I do more city driving so it’s more like 12-14 mpg.
I wonder if the 4.7 with head gasket issues was due to the hp increase from 230 to 270 (?) in mid 2000's. I bought a new 2000 Dakota with the 4.7 (230 hp) and 5 spd manual. It was like the terminator. It wouldn't quit. 17mpg to my workplace, and 21 on the highway. I put a clutch in at 218,000 miles, alternator somewhere around 150,000, and retired it in 2016 with 314,000 miles, still running, but the frame shot. At that point it was smoking at idle, and downhill off throttle, so valve seals at least were shot. It was a little tough on ball joints in later years. It also had a weak AC core that only lasted about 5 years. I didn't replace it. In the 200,000+ mile range I was towing a Newholland TC30 tractor backhoe up and down PA mountains to my farm and back.
We are on our 4th Ford Ranger. Our current Ranger is a 2011 XLT super cab 4X4. It has a 4.0L with a 5spd automatic transmission, LSD, tow pkg, skid plates. I added a Line-X spray in bed liner, adjustable rear air shocks, K&N air intake, 3” FlowMaster exhaust, running boards (to kick off the mud or snow), custom wheels, custom 2 tone paint, custom interior (I HATE grey or black interior). Since we use the truck for work around our property I had Cooper Discoverer A/T tires.
After installing the K&N intake and exhaust, we now consistently get 25mpg on the freeway with the cruise set on 75mph.
It’s almost 12 years old and it only has 35K original miles.
At my wife’s and my age, our Ranger will probably be in our estate for kids to fight over LOL.
My 2006 Nissan Frontier has been rock solid since the day I bought it new. A few minor repairs and modifications to avoid known issues have been inexpensive and easy to do. I like the mid-size segment because it is so much easier to park in a garage without any adjustments, and with crew cab models, plenty of room for the whole family AND a cargo bed with built-in tie downs and factory sprayed tough bed liner. I plan on keeping it for many more years !!
Had a 98’ S-10 2.2 (first year of the upgraded head gaskets) with a 5-speed. It was an endless money pit (electrical mostly) along the way, but I managed to trade it in with 168k miles and still got $2750 for it back in 2007.
I drove a 2007 Mazda B-2300 5-speed to 100k miles and replaced the ignition coil and a battery. Bullet Proof!
Wizard is right it rode terrible though even with slightly bigger tires and Monroe shocks!
If GM had a recall like Toyota did, they would need a third bailout.
6 Toyotas in my Driveway... ONE recall, for a sun visor.... GM? they can't touch that...
@@gwats19577 My 1998 k1500 has zero recalls and has seen more country than all 6 of your rust boxes.
@@gwats19577 lol why do you need 6 Toyotas
Toyota's aren't perfect only vehicle that has ever left me stranded on the side of the road was a Toyota Corolla. Do I hate Toyotas for this reason? No. Just saying bad things happen to all cars regardless of brand.
Right on ! Same here with my 1997 GMC K1500.
I have a 94 Toyota Pickup. I were to put it into to words, it would be bulletproof but gutless. It takes a lot of abuse being used as a work truck being treated like a full size pickup and it keeps on going. It refuses to die. When I got it, it was overheating like mad and it survived without blowing a gasket or warping anything. I’ve only had minor issues due to its age, all of which were cheap and easy to work on. It has never left me stranded. That truck takes a serious beating and keeps on going. It has impressed me how rugged and tough those old Toyota are. They weren’t lying when they say the old Toyota’s are tough old truck that don’t take no shit. Mine has the 4-cylinder 22RE engine with a 5-speed. The engine while reliable and tough are underpowered for a truck application. However it does have good low end torque and its capable of towing and hauling a surprisingly amount of weight. I use mine as a work truck and I treat it as if it was a full size pickup, hauling tractors, lawn equipment, lumber and firewood, stone, mulch, bricks and concrete, and scrap metal. It is also surprisingly nimble and handles well on turns for a pickup truck.
As a truck driver I delivered a load of engines to a ( Ford) truck plant. The forklifts unloaded each engine and ran them to 1 of 2 side by side production lines. Rangers on one and Mazdas on the other. They are literally the same truck except the badges an grills.