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  • William Maley
    William Maley

    Quick Drive: 2020 Toyota Tundra TRD Pro CrewMax

      It is old, but still has some tricks.

    The Toyota Tundra holds the title of being the oldest full-size truck, coming in at thirteen years without any sort of redesign. On one hand, this makes the Tundra a very reliable and dependable truck. On the other hand, the Tundra isn’t able to fully compete with the likes GM, Ram, or Ford with their more modern designs and hardware. But there is one exception to this where the Tundra can be a good alternative to the Detroit Three, and it comes in the form of the TRD Pro.

    • Color can do a lot to a vehicle such as making an older model look modern or highlighting some of the polarizing elements of a design. This Army Green paint, which is new on all TRD Pros for 2020 makes the Tundra look younger and a bit more aggressive. 
    • Inside, you can tell that the Tundra is getting up there in age. The design hasn’t changed much and material quality cannot even compare to the likes of GM and Ram’s trucks. But I like the large buttons and knobs for various controls. Not only does it make it easier to find, but it means you can have a set of gloves on and easily control various aspects.
    • One key improvement for 2020 is Apple CarPlay and Android Auto being added to the Tundra’s Entune system, which gives drivers another choice in their infotainment choices.
    • The Crewmax model seen here is huge. Step into the back seat and you might think you entered a limo with an endless amount of head and legroom on offer. I do wish the seats had a little bit more padding.
    • Only one engine is available on the 2020 Tundra; a 5.7L V8 with 381 horsepower and 401 pound-feet of torque. This is teamed with a six-speed automatic and four-wheel drive.
    • This engine provides plenty of thrust and provides an engine burble that you might expect from one of the Detroit three’s V8 trucks. The automatic is very smooth when changing gear and seems to where it needs to be in any situation.
    • The downside to this V8 is fuel economy. The EPA says TRD Pro CrewMax will return 13 City/17 Highway/14 Combined. I saw an average of 14.2 mpg during my week of a 60/40 mix of highway and city driving. Maybe a couple more gears for the automatic could improve this.
    • Toyota has kitted the Tundra TRD Pro with some serious off-road chops; Fox internal bypass dampers for all four corners, TRD springs that increase wheel travel, and a set of Michelin LTX off-road tires. Unfortunately, I didn’t get a chance to try it off-road. But other reviewers who have taken it off the beaten path report the TRD Pro is very capable. 
    • What I can report is the changes to the suspension makes for a surprisingly comfortable ride.
    • This suspension does mean you will experience a fair amount of body roll when cornering, but that is to be expected with a truck like this.
    • My Tundra TRD Pro CrewMax starts at $52,780. With some accessories and destination, the price climbs $55,020.
    • The Tundra is getting long in the tooth as evidenced by the interior and poor fuel economy from the V8 engine. But the TRD Pro helps freshen the Tundra a bit and makes a compelling option for those who plan on spending more time off the beaten path.

    Disclaimer: Toyota Provided the Tundra, Insurance, and One Tank of Gas

    Year: 2020
    Make: Toyota
    Model: Tundra
    Trim: TRD Pro CrewMax
    Engine: 5.7L DOHC 32-Valve i-FORCE V8
    Driveline: Six-Speed Automatic, Four-Wheel Drive
    Horsepower @ RPM: 381 @ 5,600
    Torque @ RPM: 401 @ 3,600
    Fuel Economy: City/Highway/Combined - 13/17/14
    Curb Weight: N/A
    Location of Manufacture: San Antonio, TX 
    Base Price: $52,780
    As Tested Price: $55,020 (Includes $1,495.00 Destination Charge)

    Options:
    Chrome Tube Steps - $535.00
    Stainless Steel Door Edge Guard - $140.00
    Door Sill Protector - $70.00


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    5 hours ago, Robert Hall said:

    Back on topic, how about the 2020 TRD Pro?

    2020?

    Im still flabbergasted  with the 2012 Tundra towing the Space Shuttle...  I STILL cant contain myself.      :rolleyes:

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    50 minutes ago, oldshurst442 said:

    2020?

    Im still flabbergasted  with the 2012 Tundra towing the Space Shuttle...  I STILL cant contain myself.      :rolleyes:

    Thought that was the 1912 Tundra towing it? 🤔 The truck is just so dated! :P 

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    19 hours ago, Robert Hall said:

    Back on topic, how about the 2020 TRD Pro?   I like the shade of green and how the model name is embossed on the rear fenders rather than a decal... I like the front end, simple and relative clean, not as busy and overwrought as many trucks are today. 

    I like the simplicity.  Definitely will take it over this mess of the front end

    2020-chevrolet-silverado-1500-3-0-liter-

    I do like the looks of the RAM the most though

    Black1.jpg?resize=768,520&ssl=1

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    On 7/25/2020 at 1:08 PM, balthazar said:

    in 2019, the 'coma outsold the GM mid-size pickups by about 93K units.
    It's like the.... corolla of the mid-size truck segment. Doesn't seem to matter how mediocre it is (49 recalls, with a couple years earning a recall about every 3.5 weeks), it keeps finding buyers.

    Not disagreeing with your post but that was not reason for my reply to riviera. They made the statement that Tacoma sales were garbage like the Tundras when they are not, so much so that they sold double the number of Colorado’s last year despite the Colorado being the overall better truck. Brand loyalty 101, much like the F-150 and Silverado outselling RAM even when RAM has had the better truck at times. 
     

    And sorry Balth, but I’m more than happy to show the sheer pile of twenty year old S-10s and first gen Colorado’s that turned to pure $h! since you seem to think that only the Tacoma should face that level of criticisms. Like them or not, they have earned their reputation for being solid trucks with a pretty healthy record in the reliability department. Their high resale values over the years back this up. 

    Edited by surreal1272
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    On 7/24/2020 at 4:57 PM, riviera74 said:

    Sales of Tundras and Tacomas are also SAD compared to the domestics.  Remember that too.

    BTW: Do modern Tacomas have that frame damage issue that 10-20 year old ones do?

    Tacomas lead the sales of the mid-size trucks...by a pretty good margin. As of Q2, they sold 51k Tacomas and the next closest was the Ranger with 25k units. 

    Q2 Sales.JPG

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    31 minutes ago, surreal1272 said:

    Not disagreeing with your post but that was not reason for my reply to riviera. They made the statement that Tacoma sales were garbage like the Tundras when they are not, so much so that they sold double the number of Colorado’s last year despite the Colorado being the overall better truck.
    And sorry Balth, but I’m more than happy to show the sheer pile of twenty year old S-10s and first gen Colorado’s that turned to pure $h! since you seem to think that only the Tacoma should face that level of criticisms. Like them or not, they have earned their reputation for being solid trucks with a pretty healthy record in the reliability department.

    No; we agreed : 'coma sales are not poor- they lead the segment. That's inarguable.

    As far as being 'healthy & reliable' - the recalls not only are frequent to the point of sheer annoyance, too many are of a serious nature spilling over into 'unprecedented' territory. The reputation has not yet been tempered by recent reality, but that's a common occurrence.

    My point was not to at all imply the Chevrolet's were better, as much as it was to point out that the toyoters AREN"T. That's the picture that needs adjustment.

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    31 minutes ago, surreal1272 said:

    How “exciting” does a pick up need to be? It’s a damn pick up. 

    Here : it's boring compared to the other 'unexciting' pickups.

    Look, it's sedans that are unexciting. Cramped, limited capabilities, no advantages over trucks other than parking ability in tight lots.
    Damned pick-ups are overtaking the industry, obviously consumers frequently find them exciting.

    Imagine 2 sedans; one has more power, more cargo & load capacity, towing ability if you need it, the same level of finish & amenities, more levels of individualizing, better crash protection, better vision, stronger built, better resale.... some difference in pricing (but less so than comparing a average sedan to an average EV sedan).... so far which one has you more interested?

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    24 minutes ago, balthazar said:

    No; we agreed : 'coma sales are not poor- they lead the segment. That's inarguable.

    As far as being 'healthy & reliable' - the recalls not only are frequent to the point of sheer annoyance, too many are of a serious nature spilling over into 'unprecedented' territory. The reputation has not yet been tempered by recent reality, but that's a common occurrence.

    My point was not to at all imply the Chevrolet's were better, as much as it was to point out that the toyoters AREN"T. That's the picture that needs adjustment.

    You misread what I said when I mentioned “disagreed”. You also know, as well I do, that recalls do not mean a car or truck is unreliable. Now, specific mechanical or powertrain failures or issues are one thing but thats not what is going on with the Tacoma. 

     

    Your point is still flawed in that even when the average Toyota “isn’t”, it is still more reliable than most of the competition. The average buyer is loyal but not so loyal that they will continue to buy a product if its a pile of $h!.

     

    Just saying, I get that you don’t like Toyota but lets keep this grounded in reality, since the rest of this thread clearly went off into a black hole of historical nonsense.

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    40 minutes ago, balthazar said:

    Here : it's boring compared to the other 'unexciting' pickups.

    Look, it's sedans that are unexciting. Cramped, limited capabilities, no advantages over trucks other than parking ability in tight lots.
    Damned pick-ups are overtaking the industry, obviously consumers frequently find them exciting.

    Imagine 2 sedans; one has more power, more cargo & load capacity, towing ability if you need it, the same level of finish & amenities, more levels of individualizing, better crash protection, better vision, stronger built, better resale.... some difference in pricing (but less so than comparing a average sedan to an average EV sedan).... so far which one has you more interested?

    Fair point but my point is that most trucks are being sold on “sizzle” Instead of function, something the Tundra does not excel at since it hasn’t changed in eons. Now having said that, lets look at some those factors, starting with resale. According to KBB, the Tundra is tops there.

    https://www.kten.com/story/41657657/5-used-trucks-with-the-highest-resale-value

     

    Reliability? You can’t even begging to say that the Tundra isn’t reliable.

     

    As yes, it lags in power because it only offers two engine choices, which is dumb on Toyotas part. However, that 5.7L has more HP than the 5.3L which is a selling point for some buyers. 

     

    The point is, that its not as bad as you think. Yes, it is dated, inside I and out. Yes, it needs more engine choices. However, it is still just a pick up truck, the same as the rest and would perform 100% of the time for 99% of the pick up buyers out there that don’t need a heavy duty truck. As this point though, Toyota either needs to get serious about the Tundra (if it wants it to survive) or just pull the plug and focus solely on the Tacoma. Just my two cents.

     

    Since you brought up recalls earlier though, here’s a comparison for you. 2020 Tundra vs 2020 F-150. Does it still matter?

     

    E345EE23-B1CF-40E3-9A6E-FA0A13CBE1EA.png

    6307F983-6D52-493B-BD9E-983CA70C2863.png

    Edited by surreal1272
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    31 minutes ago, surreal1272 said:

    As yes, it lags in power because it only offers two engine choices, which is dumb on Toyotas part. However, that 5.7L has more HP than the 5.3L which is a selling point for some buyers

    There's actually only one engine available. There's no V6. 

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    "Unreliable" is an variably-defined term.

    If the OEM is sending me a letter once a month, telling me I need to repeatedly bring/leave my truck at the dealer for -let's call it- "attention", and it's therefore not waiting in my driveway for me, is it still "reliable"?

    - - - - -
    A recall for a 'missing paragraph in the owner's manual' is less than nothing and zero reflection on the product itself. So (IMO) are recalls centered around aftermarket hood scoops, lamp assemblies, rims/lug nuts. Tho those parts should be tested/passed by the OEM, I acknowledge a degree of risk on any part not directly under OEM manufacturing supervision. Likewise with dealer-level alterations.

    However, I cannot define leaking rears, loss of brakes, broken valve springs, cracking driveshafts, cracking bodywork, seat heater fires, window switch fires, separating ball joints, unintended cruise acceleration, failure of air bags to deploy, broken leaf springs puncturing the fuel tank, etc etc etc as the vehicle still being 'reliable'.

    IMO, "reliable" encompasses [actual reliability of operating condition, breakage of components, and the number/severity of recalls / TSBs] that put my vehicle out of service. There is also a 'comfortable degree of confidence' that's an amorphous component of consumer satisfaction.

    - - - - -
    I only remember 2 recall notices for my 2500HD in the 16 years I've had it; one for the center rear child seat anchor (not applicable to me + my rear seat is totally removed), and the instrument cluster glitch. A SINGLE OCCURRENCE ONLY: I pulled out of a convenience store lot and all gauges went to 0. I shut the truck off & coasted to the side, immediately thinking of oil pressure. Thought about it a moment, decided it was an instrument thing, started the truck & all was fine. That was about 8 years back - never happened again. To me, that's still 100% 'reliability' because there was no operational detriment and no downtime for service.

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    1 hour ago, ccap41 said:

    There's actually only one engine available. There's no V6. 

    You are correct on the V6 but they were offering the 4.6L on the entry level until very recently apparently. They haven’t offered the V6 in years. 

    47 minutes ago, balthazar said:

    "Unreliable" is an variably-defined term.

    If the OEM is sending me a letter once a month, telling me I need to repeatedly bring/leave my truck at the dealer for -let's call it- "attention", and it's therefore not waiting in my driveway for me, is it still "reliable"?

    - - - - -
    A recall for a 'missing paragraph in the owner's manual' is less than nothing and zero reflection on the product itself. So (IMO) are recalls centered around aftermarket hood scoops, lamp assemblies, rims/lug nuts. Tho those parts should be tested/passed by the OEM, I acknowledge a degree of risk on any part not directly under OEM manufacturing supervision. Likewise with dealer-level alterations.

    However, I cannot define leaking rears, loss of brakes, broken valve springs, cracking driveshafts, cracking bodywork, seat heater fires, window switch fires, separating ball joints, unintended cruise acceleration, failure of air bags to deploy, broken leaf springs puncturing the fuel tank, etc etc etc as the vehicle still being 'reliable'.

    IMO, "reliable" encompasses [actual reliability of operating condition, breakage of components, and the number/severity of recalls / TSBs] that put my vehicle out of service. There is also a 'comfortable degree of confidence' that's an amorphous component of consumer satisfaction.

    - - - - -
    I only remember 2 recall notices for my 2500HD in the 16 years I've had it; one for the center rear child seat anchor (not applicable to me + my rear seat is totally removed), and the instrument cluster glitch. A SINGLE OCCURRENCE ONLY: I pulled out of a convenience store lot and all gauges went to 0. I shut the truck off & coasted to the side, immediately thinking of oil pressure. Thought about it a moment, decided it was an instrument thing, started the truck & all was fine. That was about 8 years back - never happened again. To me, that's still 100% 'reliability' because there was no operational detriment and no downtime for service.

    For YOUR truck. Doesn’t mean there weren’t others depending on the VIN. Still doesn’t change what I have said and I stand by it. Overall, both Toyota’s are reliable, end of story. Your one off anecdotal story about your one truck doesn’t change that. 

    Edited by surreal1272
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    • I wasn't comparing my truck to toyoters, just giving an example of my definition of reliable.

    • Loaner trucks don't happen to work for me- I work out of my truck; all my tools are in there. Not only can't I work, I also have to offload most of my tools for peace-of-mind reasons/security when at the dealer, then reload when it comes back. That s huge inconvenience. Plus, my truck is 150K miles out of warranty, so something breaks it's not covered. I've only had it in for service maybe a half dozen times tho (maintenance work I do myself).

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    Every Truck can break down, some just do it in splendid fashion more than others.

    image.png

    Other just make me wonder how the hell did they get tabs for the dangerous auto to be on the road?

    image.png

    I would for sure NOT buy a used truck from the east coast, midwest or Canada. The amount of salt on the frame makes me nervous of not if but when it will snap.

    image.png

    image.png

    image.png

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    11 hours ago, David said:

    Every Truck can break down, some just do it in splendid fashion more than others.

    Exactly.  Yet every time there is review of Toyota truck, you LOVE posting these old pictures of broken Tacomas.  I live in North East and as I previously mentioned my co-worker had to get rid of his old SIlverado because it was too rusted, he got brand new F-150 and had numerous electrical problems.  My boss had Expedition that he had to get rid of just few weeks ago because it got too rusted to pass inspection and repair was too expensive.

    Tundra might be by far not the best truck compared to others but I heard many times from my co-workers who are "truck people" that they are more reliable in general. 

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    I've never seen a truck with a snapped frame in person.

    My '04 SIlverado has lived it's life in NJ, frame has no major scale, nevermind rot. Should turn 200K miles this week. My 80-yr old Ford spent it's life in NJ and it's frame is excellent- no rot or weak spots, but I have no idea how many miles are on it. It worked a good 35 years tho.

    A buddy scrapped a Chevy pickup maybe 5 years ago when it was too rotted, but it was a 1990 that spent YEARS plowing & salting every winter.

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    16 hours ago, David said:

    Every Truck can break down, some just do it in splendid fashion more than others.

     

    Other just make me wonder how the hell did they get tabs for the dangerous auto to be on the road?

     

    Some salty states have annual inspections---like Pennsylvania.  Others, like Ohio, have no inspections.  So lots of rusty chud on the roads here.

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    Does Ohio inspect frames annually? I doubt it.

    Jersey had annuals, they never checked the frames here. Cat converter in place is it, underneath.
    But NJ stopped safety inspections some years ago, except for emissions. (Diesels exempt).
    - - - - -
    Was just eyeballin a late '80s Chevy pickup sitting at my buddy's shop. Frame has mild surface rust but no heavy rust or rot showing thru either wheelwell.

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    1 minute ago, balthazar said:

    Does Ohio inspect frames annually? I doubt it.

    Jersey had annuals, they never checked the frames here. Cat converter in place is it, underneath.
    But NJ stopped safety inspections some years ago, except for emissions. (Diesels exempt).
    - - - - -
    Was just eyeballin a late '80s Chevy pickup sitting at my buddy's shop. Frame has mild surface rust but no heavy rust or rot showing thru either wheelwell.

    No, nothing like that...only emissions tests every two years for vehicles going back to '96..and mostly just a check of the codes, gas cap test.   As I said, a lot of rusty stuff still on the roads around here..I remember 40 years ago as a kid Ohio having safety inspections, but that's long gone..

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    18 minutes ago, balthazar said:

    Does Ohio inspect frames annually? I doubt it.

    Jersey had annuals, they never checked the frames here. Cat converter in place is it, underneath.
    But NJ stopped safety inspections some years ago, except for emissions. (Diesels exempt).
     

    NJ's inspection is a joke now.  Used to be much better.

    But I work in PA and it seems the inspection here is pretty strict.  It seems among other things they check for rust extensively.

    Edited by ykX
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    Jersey used to sometimes flag you for significant body panel rust, but they never checked structural.

    ykX - when did NJ stop everything but emissions - was it during the recession ‘08-09?

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    44 minutes ago, balthazar said:

    Jersey used to sometimes flag you for significant body panel rust, but they never checked structural.

    ykX - when did NJ stop everything but emissions - was it during the recession ‘08-09?

    Something around that time I believe.  My first car I owned in NJ in the early 2000s, I remember I got rejected for having bad shocks, even though I didn't feel any issues.  They used to check shocks, brakes and other main things, not sure how much they were checking for rust.  I bought new car in 2006 which had few years until the first inspection and I think they already were checking only emissions.

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    I remember Ohio back in the late 70s-early 80s having State Police checkpoints set up randomly where they would flag people over to the side of the road and check their tires, lights, wipers, etc. Had 'Inspection Stations' signs IIRC... I wonder if any states do stuff like that anymore.  I remember my goofy older brother complaining about them because he drove '60s-70s rust buckets then that always had something wrong..

    Edited by Robert Hall
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    5 hours ago, ykX said:

    But I work in PA and it seems the inspection here is pretty strict.  It seems among other things they check for rust extensively.

    Just like everywhere else though... if you "know" somebody, you can get a sticker on an absolute hoopty.

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    On 7/22/2020 at 1:19 PM, ocnblu said:

    LOL 14 MPG average?  NOPE.

    Plus it continues to irk me when I see US flags and other patriotic stickers on foreign vehicles.  Should be a white field with a red dot, not our dear old Stars & Stripes on there.

    Agree with you there. 

    On 7/27/2020 at 8:43 AM, ykX said:

    I like the simplicity.  Definitely will take it over this mess of the front end

    2020-chevrolet-silverado-1500-3-0-liter-

    I do like the looks of the RAM the most though

    Black1.jpg?resize=768,520&ssl=1

    Chevy is better looking in person. Ram is unreliable, better to look at the underside or motor bay, as that is what you will see the most of. 

    On 7/24/2020 at 6:32 PM, ocnblu said:

    Shoot, current generation Tundra bed floors rust out above the floor crossmembers... where the beds are bolted to the frame.  I've seen many of them that way here in SE PA. 

    No reason to buy a Tundra. 

    On 7/27/2020 at 9:02 AM, surreal1272 said:

    Not disagreeing with your post but that was not reason for my reply to riviera. They made the statement that Tacoma sales were garbage like the Tundras when they are not, so much so that they sold double the number of Colorado’s last year despite the Colorado being the overall better truck. Brand loyalty 101, much like the F-150 and Silverado outselling RAM even when RAM has had the better truck at times. 
     

    And sorry Balth, but I’m more than happy to show the sheer pile of twenty year old S-10s and first gen Colorado’s that turned to pure $h! since you seem to think that only the Tacoma should face that level of criticisms. Like them or not, they have earned their reputation for being solid trucks with a pretty healthy record in the reliability department. Their high resale values over the years back this up. 

    I actually really like the Tacoma, would consider buying one. Yes, S-10 and Colorados ahve gone south here in Ohio, but 97-2006 Wranglers and Rams seem to be the majro candidates here for actual frame rot. 

    On 7/24/2020 at 6:35 PM, David said:

    This is an interesting site. Toyota Tundra has a total of 51 recalls from the last 20 years of it's production. Not too bad. There are 7 issues under investigation with 2004 model year having 5 issues under investigation for brakes, suspension issues, airbags and seatbelts. 

    The final big thing is the TSBs, 788 in total with the 2014 Model year having the most at 282 TSBs.

    http://www.toyotaproblems.com/models/tundra/recalls/

    Worst year is 2010, Major electrical problems, engine and transmission problems along with wheel and frame issue for not supporting stated loads.

    This I do find very interesting, all the open cases that Toyota has yet to resolve around the following issues:

    See through rusted out frame assemblies, melting dashboards, Engine Sludge, Soy wire coating that rodents love to chew, oil consumption lawsuit, and so much more.

    http://www.toyotaproblems.com/problems/

    Tundra is Baby Boomer tech, but clearly has a sludge of problems which really makes one question the reliability of the product.

    In regards to the service men and woman who buy Asian or European name plated auto's. Yes you have given to your country, yes democracy allows you to pick your product you want to spend your own hard earned coin on.

    The question to be asked is how do you changed American companies to build better products if you will not support them and give them the feedback to improve their products?

    On top of this, if your going to go around and preach about supporting your own country, how does that work when your money goes out in profits to other country based companies supporting another country over your own?

    Just saying, do you support your own US based Companies that pay taxes into the US Government and supports these companies or do you let it go over seas and support a foreign country?

    Food for thought!

    Good thought. 

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    On 7/24/2020 at 6:36 PM, ocnblu said:

    485FE1F5-6646-4F51-B672-40C18E6B9ED5.jpg

    images.jpg

    20171230_115155.jpg

    Hell this could be a two year old truck in  Ohio....I have seen Chevy, Ford, Ram,  Tacoma, Tundra, Ridgeline, Nissan Frontier all rust like this. I think the trucks are feeling sympathy for the ships sunk at Midway, and turning to rust in an act of self sacrifce to show respect for those brave machines that fought in 1942. 

    On 7/24/2020 at 10:02 PM, oldshurst442 said:

    It seems to me that you are making excuses for yourself to feel better about it...

    BTW...GM's problems were 20 years and OLDER too...

    Yet...for some reason, you only hold GM accountable...  

    Like I said. I dont care what you buy. Your pocket, not mine.  Just stop with the bullshyte excuses.  

    And I never said fOreIGn trUCk BaD 

    I said...its STUPID to think and give pride to FOREIGN owned products made in America any value...and to blast American owned product for problems they had and to IGNORE foreign owned product problems...

    You got a problem with American companies building their products elsewhere BUT the USA....talk to Wallstreet about that...

    Change your POLITICAL environment, change YOUR OWN mindset and not ONLY be ready to pay  a lot more money for your American owned American built products, but thinking you have NO CHOICE BUT to pay a lot more  for your American owned American built products TO TRULY SUPPORT YOUR FELLOW AMERICAN.

    AMERICAN WORKERS AND SERVICE PEOPLE DESERVE A LOT MORE MONEY THAN THEY ARE PAID NOW...

    You see...

    THAT IS AN EMPTY PHOQUING ARGUMENT...   YOU WANT TO BE A GOOD AMERICAN...THEN FORCE YOUR POLITICIANS AND YOUR COUNTRYMEN TO ACCEPT THAT CONSUMER GOODS BUILT IN AMERICA WILL BE MORE EXPENSIVE DUE TO THE FACT THAT AMERICAN WORKERS DESERVE A BETTER PAY, BUT FACTORIES WILL BE RETURNING BACK TO THE USA...AND AMERICAN PEOPLE WILL HAVE JOBS TO PAY FOR AMERICAN BUILT PRODUCTS...

    LIKE USUAL....FOLK LIKE YOU ALWAYS BARK UP THE WRONG TREE. BELIEVE IN SOME WEIRD PHOQUING LIE, AND STUPIDLY LIVE BY A CODE THAT ONLY DOES YOU HARM...

    ANOTHER EXAMPLE:   THE FREEDOM OF NOT WEARING A MASK DURING A PHOQUING PANDEMIC...

    WAVE FLAGGING, FREEDOM CRYING NONSENSE...

    But yeah...buy your trouble free Toyoter to your heart's content...  Like I said...I dont give a shyte.  Your life. Not mine.  Your money, not mine.  Just STOP with the bullshyte arguments...

     

     

    Says the man who bought an acura, a Japanese car built in America. 

    On 7/25/2020 at 10:30 AM, surreal1272 said:

    Tundra sales are garbage and always have been. The Tacoma, however, continues to outsell the domestics. Not sure where you got the notion that Tacoma sales are bad. 

    And good grief! What the hell happened on this thread? Sounds like a few folks need a bed and med check. 

    What's new with C and G? It's been that way since I joined in 2007. Every few months guys with white jackets come in and haul people off in Vintage Studebaker pick up trucks, supposedly taking them to vehicular valhalla.  I think Balthazars posting up vintage pics is a futile attempt to pacify and placate these evil goblins of the automotive dark world. 

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    On 7/25/2020 at 1:08 PM, balthazar said:

    in 2019, the 'coma outsold the GM mid-size pickups by about 93K units.
    It's like the.... corolla of the mid-size truck segment. Doesn't seem to matter how mediocre it is (49 recalls, with a couple years earning a recall about every 3.5 weeks), it keeps finding buyers.

    It's actually a good truck but getting dated. I would consider one. But I think (and yes I have changed my mind, don't faint, please!) the Ranger is the peach of the crop.  

    On 7/25/2020 at 8:25 PM, ykX said:

    Profits go to CEOs and shareholders while actual jobs for average people are going to Mexico, China and Canada.  I would rather give my money to the company that gives jobs to American workers than to the bean counters and upper management.

    I don't own a Toyota and unlikely will, but my wife drives MDX that was designed and build in US.  And I would rather give money to Honda that provides thousands of jobs in Ohio and Alabama, than to GM that outsorces more than 50% of the product to foreign countries.

    Unlike most people on this forum I work in manufacturing.  I happen to work for an American company but I have seen many American companies outsorce manufacturing overseas.  I have sern thousands of people loose jobs because of that, while the tip brass sits here getting richer.  So excuse if I care more about American jobs than CEOs and shareholders.

    Don't faint, going to give props to Ford, they employ more Americans in America thatn anyone IIRC. 

    On 7/25/2020 at 9:11 PM, balthazar said:

    Why are 'shareholders' lumped in with 'CEOs'?
    Is the assumption here that shareholders are all millionaires lounging on their yachts? Instead of millions of everyday people with pensions & 401Ks, hoping to be able to retire before age 85?

     


    honda & toyota's profits also go to CEOs, upper management & shareholders (tho that last one- not in the U.S.).

    Ford built nearly 2,000,000 vehicles in the US in 2019, honda built 1.2 million. Ford employs 85,000 in the U.S., honda employs 31,000.
    Between these 2 examples, it is Ford who is giving jobs to American workers, not Honda. And that number used to be much higher, but once you slice a pizza into 80 slices, everyone gets less pizza.

     

    BTW, honda also has 2 plants in Mexico, one just opened in 2014. That would be, quite arguably, 'taking jobs away from American workers', no?

    See my remark about Ford above. 

    On 7/25/2020 at 10:12 PM, balthazar said:

    • "stupid decisions" :: Sure- look at so many of toyoter's corporate decisions.

    • Most people don't buy equities out-of-pocket; their 401Ks are invested in them without their direct input. That's 100 million people, which is a LOT of John & Jane Q Publics.
     


    Obviously with vendor outsourcing and increased robotics, numbers will change. But GM used to employ 600,000. I'm not aware the cumulative investment in the U.S. there has ever been attempted to be calculated.

    In all fairness to GM look at how many Robots are not used to build vehicles. 

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    On 7/26/2020 at 12:18 AM, oldshurst442 said:

    But dont forget though, after WW2, the US was the ONLY one left standing with factories still standing and running and producing all kinds of stuff that the world consumed.  

    Its like Ford, GM, Coca-Cola etc...benefited from all the one-sidedness and that spilled over to the American  people?    I guess that is the price we paid for with our  Rock-N-Roll and milkshakes and chrome and drive-in movie theatres in the 1950s and 1960s I guess...

    Truth

    On 7/26/2020 at 12:18 AM, oldshurst442 said:

    I may need a bed with my meds...but there is a reason I write my posts the way I do...

    A broken clock is right twice a day....

    On 7/26/2020 at 2:26 PM, balthazar said:

    Pretty boring and very 2010.

    Should blend in well with the average parking lot full of uninspired vehicles here in the USA. Reason, or one of the reasons, I don't post much here any more. 

    On 7/26/2020 at 12:18 AM, oldshurst442 said:

    Maybe the US is too damned generous with their openness with foreign factories in their homeland?

    No doubt about this at all. Not a fan at all of Trump, but at least he tried to take care of American workers. He did feel a bit of responsibility to the folks in Michigan who elected him. We now return you to your ranting and spiteful Stang/Horse/Horse's ass....

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    On 7/26/2020 at 1:09 AM, oldshurst442 said:

      Im saying...that GM owned Opel when Hitler was voted in power. Hitler became a dictator and undoubtedly had many many "business" meetings with GM brass (Opel or Detroit brass)  about  cars...and about the upcoming war effort...

    Italeri Kfz. 305 Opel Blitz in 1:35 (#216) Afrika Korps | iModeler

    Sensitive ties to Hitler...   

    And NOBODY could deny that. Well, one could deny it...

     

    By this logic I shouldn't do business with any German company....time to get rid of my festool woodworking tools, and other quality German items. 

    On 7/27/2020 at 9:08 AM, surreal1272 said:

    How “exciting” does a pick up need to be? It’s a damn pick up. 

    Actually I really like Pick up trucks, thank you very much. 

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    2 hours ago, A Horse With No Name said:

    By this logic I shouldn't do business with any German company....time to get rid of my festool woodworking tools, and other quality German items. 

    Actually I really like Pick up trucks, thank you very much. 

    Your “liking” them does not change my statement. Again, it is a pick up truck, where function should trump whether or not it has a panoramic sunroof or an 50” screen on the center stack.

    On 7/22/2020 at 1:19 PM, ocnblu said:

    LOL 14 MPG average?  NOPE.

    Plus it continues to irk me when I see US flags and other patriotic stickers on foreign vehicles.  Should be a white field with a red dot, not our dear old Stars & Stripes on there.

    Oh give it a rest homer. The great thing about this country is that people can buy whatever they want and adorn them with whatever stickers they want. Example, you used to own an “American” car that was made in Mexico by a company based in Italy. I’m assuming you had some Mexican and Italian flag stickers on that Compass, going by your “logic”.

     

     

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    1 hour ago, surreal1272 said:

    Your “liking” them does not change my statement. Again, it is a pick up truck, where function should trump whether or not it has a panoramic sunroof or an 50” screen on the center stack.

    Oh give it a rest homer. The great thing about this country is that people can buy whatever they want and adorn them with whatever stickers they want. Example, you used to own an “American” car that was made in Mexico by a company based in Italy. I’m assuming you had some Mexican and Italian flag stickers on that Compass, going by your “logic”.

     

     

    Except that I do think Aesthetics should matter on a truck. That was my whole point. 

    Daughter of a co worker is having a hell of a great career in the air force serving her country, 20 years old, just bought a new Tacoma 4 door 4 wheel drive. She has American falgs all over the thing. Hardly think that she hates her country.  But would like to see her maybe buy an American vehicle. My ideas about them are changing. 

    2 hours ago, Robert Hall said:

     I've never really had a need for a truck, but I understand why so many people buy them. 

    I could really use one, thinking hard about buying one. 

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    2 hours ago, surreal1272 said:

    Again, it is a pick up truck, where function should trump whether or not it has a panoramic sunroof or an 50” screen on the center stack.

    Once upon a time, trucks were totally about function.
    Then they took everything that cars had, added it to their functionality, gave buyers a cornucopia of trims & options and accessories, and the car slipped further into it's open grave. Yep, that included big screens & sunroofs.

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    2 hours ago, balthazar said:

    Once upon a time, trucks were totally about function.
    Then they took everything that cars had, added it to their functionality, gave buyers a cornucopia of trims & options and accessories, and the car slipped further into it's open grave. Yep, that included big screens & sunroofs.

    I am kinda falling in love with the midsize pickup segment when it comes to new cars, Tacoma, Ranger, Colorado, Gladiator. Some interesting vehicles in that group. The Tundra that started this thread, not so much. 

    All the truck you really need....I love it...

    Gn9gbVU.jpg

     

     

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    3 hours ago, A Horse With No Name said:

    I could really use one, thinking hard about buying one. 

    Crew Cab trucks with a bed truly make a very usable family auto for hauling around folks, plus being able to throw stuff into the bed that you would normally not want inside an SUV.

    I know I will once the EVs are out, be getting another truck as the wife really misses not having it when she goes to Home Depot for her gardening stuff.

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    41 minutes ago, David said:

    Crew Cab trucks with a bed truly make a very usable family auto for hauling around folks, plus being able to throw stuff into the bed that you would normally not want inside an SUV.

    I know I will once the EVs are out, be getting another truck as the wife really misses not having it when she goes to Home Depot for her gardening stuff.

    Yeah, unsure of what I want to do. Local dealer ahs a clean used VW alltrack ins tock but would rather ahve a truck. 

     

     

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    13 hours ago, ocnblu said:

    Why thank you, dummy!

    136518.jpg

    Yeah, you wish you had that much culture. Given your disdain for anything that doesn’t conform to your narrow world view though, its more like...

     

    158893ED-4CD9-46DE-B8A3-0E4599D88C7D.png

     

    Of course, you had no logical counter for the fact that your initial post was pure hypocrisy and just general false patriotic whining but hey, that’s just par for the course.

     

    Same as it ever was.

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    On 7/29/2020 at 8:35 AM, A Horse With No Name said:

    Says the man who bought an acura, a Japanese car built in America. 

    I didnt do it for America though.  Nor because it was Japanese and therefore more reliable than American...

    I bought it because it was my actual freedom of choice that I bought a better product for myself and my family's needs...

    I dont do the shyte argument that was presented to me here.  I NEVER heard the, I bought it because it was a better product for me. Fits my needs better..

    I got the toot toot toot ,  freedom of choice by using veterans as an excuse and criteria.  I got the reliability card too. 

    I pointed out the hypocrisy, the idiocy, the fallacy of that argument. 

    Some of us got it. Some of us dint.

    On 7/27/2020 at 9:39 AM, balthazar said:

    My point was not to at all imply the Chevrolet's were better, as much as it was to point out that the toyoters AREN"T. That's the picture that needs adjustment.

    ALL OF US IGNORED THAT MESSAGE AND STATEMENT...  

    We still POUND the reliability aspect.  FALSE FALSE FALSE . We IGNORE Japanese and German reliability problems... 

    I said that older veterans had the OPPOSITE opinion.  (Got a downvote because "historical nonsense" and that WW2 is...old.)

    Some of us pointed out that some of these protected vehicles have problems, RECENT problems but some of us were told that that is in the past. Yet those people defending these more recent problem plagued vehicles STILL want to hold onto grudges from the American brands....while they flag wave about freedom, yet WW2 was about freedom too. But that was tooo far back into the past. But not far enough for their own biased views for  American products...   All over the phoquing place...

    Now...these biases have plagued us unto the pick-up trucks...   First phoquing time I hear that American pickup trucks are plagued with problems...   Phoque man,  every phoquing year, 1 million F150s are sold. year after year.  Of course there will be some gremlins.    No MECHANICAL product is perfect.  Definitely not anything Japanese...  Self hating' Americans.   I dont understand it.  

    Like I said, Germans are horribly embarrassed by their Nazi past.  So much so that revisionist phoquing historians dont even wanna equate to Nazis to Germans.  Same with the Japanese. Japanese are much much embarrassed by their Empirical time during WW2. But both of these folk will NEVER buy ANYTHING BUT their home turf cars...  

    Only the Brits and Americans self hate to the point of driving their own industries to the ground...but hey...we are free to buy what the phoque we want...

    Just dont phoquing complain if eventually, there is no more American industries around... 

    Some of us all act as if the foreign conglomerate, multinational corporations are all nice and teddy bear like... They do no harm to others, the environment. Dont commit fraud of any kind. Its just the American ones that are evil...

    Stupid stupid thinking... 

     

     

     

     

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    On 7/29/2020 at 8:51 AM, A Horse With No Name said:

    By this logic I shouldn't do business with any German company....time to get rid of my festool woodworking tools, and other quality German items. 

    I dont.   Phoque German products. For many reasons.   

    I bought a Miele vacuum cleaner for my mom in the early 2000s.  2001?  Her Electrolux from the 1970s finally died on her.   So I thought, German engineering/products =  the best.  Didnt last 3 phoquing years.

    So we bought her Sears Kenmore.  2004?   She past 4 years ago, and the thing still phoquing works.  Oh...  When I got married, my wife and I also bought a Kenmore, in 2003.  That too...still phoquing works.  We got central vacuum plumbing installed in to our home from the get go. We havent bought a central vacuum. We got two great working vacuums from the early 2000s still working fine....

    I dont want ANY feedback from ANYBODY giving me shyte for this opinion. If it works for the Japanese car/American car argument....it shall work for my German vacuum argument right here right now!!!   Good for the goose, good for the gander...

    Back to WW2.  YES...back to WW2...

    Why?

    Because I said so...

    Why dont you wanna hear it?  Doesnt jive with your view and your dumbass thinking...  Tough noogies.  DEAL WITH IT!!! 

    German engineering.  (Automotive more or less)   Those awesome, fearsome Tiger 1 tanks, broke down...  The Americans didnt have to do anything with their Shermans, the few Tiger 1s they encountered were mostly broken down.  (OK...the ones that werent, wreaked havoc on the Shermans, but those were few and far between).   The Panzer 3s were not that better either.  They were effective in the Blitzkrieg, but many broke down. Its just that there were sooooo many Panzer 3s. 

    The Russian made tanks, everybody made fun of those,  yet they proved to be what won the war on the Eastern front.   The Sherman was nowhere near as deadly as the Panther and Tiger 1 and 2 tanks and the Russian T34.  But...they NEVER broke down...  Like NEVER.    The Panther was a good, reliable and deadly tank. Not enough of them were produced or utilized.  It seemed, German war logistics preferred the shyyty engineered stuff over the good stuff.

    The Kubelwagen versus the Jeep.  The Kubelwagen was very reliable but...

    The Jeep could haul more, could tow more, and could drive faster over more rougher terrain. 

    Yes...1930s and 1940s...  But all I hear is that phoquing lie about German engineering being superior, although German engineering is quite awesome sometimes,  its nowhere near as reliable as some people like to say.  Even in 2020, German cars are plagued by some of the industry's WORST results concerning reliability. 

    So why the hatred towards American products?

    American products didnt kill millions of people.  It helped the freedom of said killed people. That was then you say? 

    Phoque off I say!   America is not a perfect society and country. Many phoquing problems.  But America is STILL better than most countries.  The folk seem to be a tad self centered at times more so than other folk, but its a lovable flaw nonetheless... 

    American cars and trucks have CONSISTENTLY been the MOST reliable, TROUBLE free cars and trucks on the phoquing planet since day phoquing one!!! All the way to TODAY!!! But we choose to forget that. 

    Americans want to buy some of the world's most shytty cars.

    Anybody remember the Toyopet?

    The Honda CVCC wasnt all that reliable either. It was a rust phoquing bucket. All Japanese cars were well INTO the 1980s.

    Americans are gobbling up Hyundais like no tomorrow.   Where is the outrage for the Pony, the Excel, the Stellar, the Scoupe, the 1st gen Sonata, Santa fey, Tiburon. The Vera-phoquing-cruz?  

    Datsun/Nissan cars were always garbage.  Just because we all liked the Fairlady Z shouldnt negate the shyte that Datsun sold us...

    Audi and BMW and Mercedes Benzes....NEVER reliable.   

    The same years American cars were shyt. Mainly from the mid-1970s (some models only) into the 1990s, the Japanese were marginally better in the 1980s.   WORSE in the 1970s.  WORSE in the 1970s.   The break out was in the 1990s. But American cars were not horrid in the 1990s either.  Japanese cars were HORRID in the 1960s and in the 1970s...  HORRID

    But yeah... 

    Wave that American freedom flag by buying foreign phoquing cars while STUPIDLY believing American cars are worse than their foreign car counterparts...

    Or worse... American jobs angle bullshyte... As proven by some of us that American car makers STILL employ MORE Americans than the foreign ones do... 

     

     

     

     

     

     

     

    Edited by oldshurst442
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