Best Overall Half-Ton

Summary

Group3560

We're immensely thankful to all the involved manufacturers for their support putting this event together; any aid aside, you’ll still be doing yourself a favor if you consider their products when shopping for your next truck or accessory. We'd also like to thank the team from Ricardo Inc. who instrumented all the trucks and certified our quarter-mile, hill climb, autocross and brake tests.

And, of course, we're very thankful to you, our readers. We do this for you.

Some are likely to be disappointed with the results because their favorite truck didn’t finish where they expected. Our test is only a snapshot of how these specific trucks performed in a week-long test under rigorously controlled conditions; it’s not a comparison of manufacturers’ half-ton lineups. The results could have been dramatically different had we included other engines or different cab configurations.

To determine the best overall half-ton in our comparison, we created a scoring system that measured the trucks subjectively and analytically. We believe our scoring system reflects how core truck buyers drive and evaluate their half-ton pickups during everyday use. Tests involved moderate to difficult towing situations, and considered towing confidence and safety to be the factors worth scoring, not cupholder size.

The maximum number of points a single truck could have scored was 99 — if it had performed better than every other truck in every test. Analytical scores (power, pulling and fuel economy) and subjective scores (driving impressions and features) were given nearly equal weight: empirical data accounted for 48 points (48.48 percent of a truck’s final score) and impressions were worth 51 points (51.52 percent).

The first component of our ratings was points assigned for driving impressions. Impressions were split into three categories: driving empty, pulling a trailer and performance over an offroad obstacle course. For each category, we gave the best-driving truck six points and the least-comfortable truck one point. The rest either drove similarly or had pluses or minuses that canceled out any advantages or disadvantages, so we scored them all with three points. The maximum a truck could have earned for this component was 18 points.

The second component awarded points based on the trucks’ power and pulling capabilities. Points were earned according to where the trucks finished in various time, distance and suspension-travel tests, with the top finisher getting six points and the bottom finisher getting one. The maximum a truck could have earned was 42 points.

The third component awarded points for key features that we think are important in determining how usable a truck is and how confident it makes its driver feel when working the truck hard. Unlike the other components, where points were assigned according to where the trucks ranked relative to each other, each truck could have potentially earned the maximum three points available for each feature. The only feature worth more was storage, which we assigned a maximum of six points because we thought the new RamBox deserved extra merit. For a truck to earn the maximum points available for each feature, the feature had to be both available and well-executed. We compiled a list of 10 important features, meaning a maximum of 33 points was available in this category. Each truck earned points according to availability and execution of each feature.

The fourth and final component ranked the trucks — assigning six points for the best-performing truck and one for the worst-performing — according to how well they did in our fuel economy test.

Bestoverall560

With 61 points (out of the maximum 99 possible), the Ford F-150 earned the title of 2008 PickupTrucks.com Shootout Best Overall Half-Ton Pickup. The only thing this truck is missing is a powerful V-8 — it finished last in two of the three pure-power towing tests — but the rest of its performance and packaging was excellent. It took top spots in both our timed ride-and-handling test and our fuel economy test, and it offers value and features the other trucks couldn’t compete with — like trailer-sway control, which can manage the trailer’s brakes, and excellent road manners when towing.

The Chevrolet Silverado ranked right behind the Ford, with 58 points. It so tremendously dominated the power and pulling tests that it only barely lost to the better-equipped, better-riding F-150. If the Silverado’s fuel economy performance had been even in the middle of the pack rather than last, it would have won this contest.

One interesting side note: The Ford F-150 and Chevy Silverado were the only trucks we tested that didn’t have fancy navigation screens.

The Toyota Tundra, with 56 points, took third. If we catch any flak over this Shootout, it will be because the Tundra jumped ahead of the all-new 2009 Dodge Ram 1500 and the GMC Sierra. Like the Silverado, the Tundra had excellent power and performance numbers. While it couldn’t beat the Silverado in that category, it beat the Sierra by nine points and bested the Ram by 14 points in those tests. That was enough to push its score up to the third spot. It did very well in the brake and traction-control tests, even though its stability control performance in the autocross was poor. Its lack of towing-support features also lowered its score.

Grandtotaltable560

Comments

my 1999 4.2L has 303,000 kms i mean more than that haha.

who cares what the gas hog big trucks do i'll take my v-6 tacoma and whip em all . and still get 21 mpg overall ,over 25 on the hwy. except when i go to the tx. motorplex & make a few runs at 14.93 at 92.3 stock.

People that buy trucks based on horsepower are idiots. 400 horsepower at 5500 rpm means nothing while towing. I towed my 8000 lb trailer with a 2004 Dodge hemi and it was horrible. It pulled like hell while accelerating but could not maintain 60 mph on flat level ground without constantly shifting down so the engine could run at 4000+ rpm where the torque peak is. Low RPM torque is what moves loads, but this comes at the cost of big hp numbers. Ford engineers know this and continue do the right thing for people that use trucks as trucks. The high horsepower marketing wars are used to sucker in the uneducated infantile idiots that need to have the most of everything. That being said, the best truck won.

the GMC and CHEVY are very different. with the all terrian package the tires on the GMC are gonna be much harder compound then the Chevy=less grip more slip on road the stiff shocks DONT allow as much weight transfer again the tires come into play spinning the rear tires., and braking same thing stiffer shocks dont allow the front to dive as much to put extra weight on to help the tires grip, it really is amazing what different tires can do for a TRUCK. and no this was not a DENALI truck

So,
the Dodge needs a better trans
the Ford a bigger engine
the GM's better fuel economy
the Nissan a bit more of all the above, but mute soon to be reBadged Dodge
the Toyota a new interior?
But all acceptable Trucks, and if you don't like it this year's model, they will improve a bit next year or be left out.
And Ford , Dodge and GM will offer Diesels for 2010 (all 5.0L and less) w/ 300+ hp and 500+ ft/lbs torque.
Expect similar accel #'s and better pullin and economy.
Thus the story continues to change....

Yu guys dont no crap an it shows in ur teligence. The part that makes a truc ride good is if it haz springs.... plus shox.

Sorry...I..I just couldn't go away and leave the impression I was actually that dumb. I apologize! I like the Dodge. Mine's an '07,and kinda wish it had the more refined '09s suspension,but I still love the truck.

From what I've seen here, The GM trucks and the Tundra are the best of the breeed.

And I'm disappointed in the Ram, which didn't really distinstinguish itself.

The GM trucks and Toyota all were the fastest and best at towing a load quickly and easily. Ford says they have the most tow capacity, but I want the load to get there TODAY!

The Ford wins in feul economy, but is by far the slowest truck, under ALL circumstances except the Autocross, so that's a wash. You get 2 MPG, but everyone kicks sand in your face.

Some of these tests are A LOT more valuable than others.

Why is rear seat comfort/space worth 3 points at the most, while wheel travel is worth 6? How often will I have three wheels on the ground? How often will I put large things in the back seat?

Why is tailgate broken into two categories? It's a tailgate!

Don't ALL of the trucks have available tow mirrors? Why penalize a truck because you didn't get one with the tow mirror? They shouldn't be standard. They should be optional

For ride and interior, get the GM.
For room, safety features and power, get the 'Yota.
The Ford needs more power to be considered a top truck. I'm sorry

DrFill

Ok, so you tested a few trucks driving the crap out of them. When do you plan on driving them like a normal person does. Knowone starts pulling a trailer up a hill from a dead stop with the accelerator floored. Not only is that wrong, its bad on drivetrain components.

The fuel economy ratings are from the window stickers. Try driving the new Tundra truck normally and I bet you'll get mid 20's on the highway, and 17-18mpg in the city. I know that for a fact cause I average 17mpg city/24-26mpg highway.

Until you auto testing companies learn to drive a vehicle like a normal person does don't bother doing any tests.

I don't care if a vehicle accelerates from 0-60 in 5 seconds.

I want to know how a vehicle when driven normally responds, what the fuel economy is, how it drives and handles in all weather conditions, the comfort and features of the vehicle etc.

the scoring system turned out to be a croque,,, they are afraid to tell americans that for once the import market took over a built a better truck. i was a domestic truck owner and toyota has done great things for us vertically challenged drivers that others haven't without paying the price, toyota my hat is off to you ... great job can't wait for a DUALLY ....
KEEP LOOKING AT MY LIGHTS ,,, IM OUT

WOW!!!!!!! I have never seen a bigger bunch of WHINERS in my life!!!! They rated them as they saw them. I for one can believe the difference in performance between the 2 GM products because I have seen it before.........with GM and with Ford. Face it, this does seem to fall in line with other evals that either place the Ford or Chevy in top spot with the other second...........and the GMC farther down the line. Kinda sucks cause I like the GMC and the Dodge as well. Bottom line, go drive em all and buy what you like............I'm planning on a new pickup next year and I will drive them all and but the one I like the best..............all of the rest of the data equals spliiting hairs in everyday use

First, congrats to pickuptrucks.com for conducting the review and using as unbiased results as possible. No matter your decision on a winner, there will always be those that complain because their make/model of choice was not #1. No matter the scoring system you use, there will be those that complain, simply to complain.
****
Now after trying to read all the comments, I find it quite amusing that the people complaining about their truck of choice losing are the two quickest trucks, whether loaded/unloaded or what not. Fact is this review was to determine the best "overall" truck, not who had the quickest times. Just because a truck is quicker, doesn't mean it's overall better than another.
****
Personally, with experience towing in many different environments, I'd much rather take the trailer sway control and integrated trail brake that the F150 offers over shaving a few seconds off my loaded 0-60 time. Then again, just my opinion and preference.
****
And to whoever stated just to buy an aftermarket trailer brake control, which are nice, they don't work as effectively as the F150s version. The aftermarket version works soley on its own. The Ford controller is connected to the truck’s hydraulic brakes, so the trailer braking is proportional to the truck’s braking. Makes a huge difference in how smoothly the truck/trailer combination stops. The trailer brakes are also integrated into the Ford’s stability control and ABS systems, allowing the individual braking of any truck wheel, or the trailer wheels in order to prevent trailer sway from occuring. Those are items an aftermarket unit won't do.
****
But with any of these trucks you can't go wrong. All have their goods and bads, just need to decide what's most important to each individual. Pickuptruck.com has their conclusion, others may vary. You truly will never know though, unless you yourself go test each of these trucks for yourself.

A lot of you guys crack me up. I'd first hand like to say that I'm a loyal Ford fan for all of my life. Having said that, I own an 03 hemi ram, and love Dodge's too. Before I continue, I have to say I'm a hardcore HP and power fan..that's why I bought the hemi ram (couldn't do better in 03 for power) I've got a 66 mustang, an 86 mustang, and a 72 maverick, and all are highly modified for power and 1/4 mile racing.

HOWEVER those of you who seem to think that HP matters more than anything else are severly lacking any real intellect on the subject or experience. I drive a work truck for a living, and have been through the big three. I've driven silverado's, ford's and Dodge's. Those of you who keep thinking it's all about power are flat out wrong. the ford has 315 horse. This is more horsepower than nearly every generation of truck over the history of trucks. We don't buy "work trucks" to race down the 1/4 mile. These are work trucks folks, (and family commuters in some cases)...the ford easily wins in all around..why?? Because the VAST majority of people don't give a HOOT about power. I bought an 07 toyota sienna minivan because of it's class leading 278 HP, and it's FAST for a minivan. Know what my wife says?? "oh, I didn't even notice". That's how it is folks. The ford is a fantastic truck. The new Dodge is also a fantastic truck. I went to the LA auto show, and the Tundra easily has the most dated and boring interior over both the Ram and F150..

For all of you guys who can't stop thinking HP is the ONLY factor that matters, shut up and go buy a challenger/mustang/camaro. Then we can start debating that subject matter.

Great Job with the testing. I would have like the Tundra on top but that's because I own one. I think the important thing to note is that stiff competition is making all of these trucks better. This will be better for all of us truck people in the long run regardless of which tag is on it.

Thanks for being unbiased in your testing.

I cant believe the ford won it was last in almost everything. Who cares about trailer sway control the dodge has the best ride out of all great traction looks better than any and has great storage abilities. This tes is a load of crap, yes you used technical testing but were you pulling numbers out of a hat when you rated this. The tundra is quick but it faired poorly in the course part were most driving occurs... i mean how often do you only go in a straight line. I liked how ford gets points for its trailer sway yet dodge gets none. Also can GM's identical trucks not be somewhat close the GMC should have done better with the more agressive shocks. I drive dodge and love it and I also drive a chevy suburban close to a truck and the ride differences in the 2 is horrible and every ford i ride in has no power. Isnt a truck all about being able to tow a lot quickly the only reason a ford can tow is because its geared for it so what you can tow the most I will be unloading it by the time you get there. Once again nice way of testing but you threw it all out the window and glad to see some beefed up GM numbers for using there track that there own trucks cant even accomplish first ever hear of home field advantage. Dodge for life

The Titan gets no credit whatsoever. Take away all the subjective opinions and the Titan is equal with the rest of them,in fact it beats the Ford in both 1/4 mile pulls ,the off road ,and stopped quicker. What more do you want from a truck?

want to see how great you import piece of junk is..... check ths out...The Toyota is about as tough as a flip flop!!!http://www.fordvehicles.com/2009F150

I personally agree that you shouldn't base a truck on specs or on other peoples opinions, however, it was a bit strange to be seeing the Nissan Titan ranked 6/6. A VERY poor rank for a very good truck. We own a 2008 Nissan Titan LE 4x4 Long Box Crew Cab. The price was about average for a fully loaded truck, around the $47,000 mark. The truck is powerful, rides wayy better than any chevy I have ridden, handles like a decent luxery car, tow/hauls good, great interior yet "simple"(doesn't have 1000 buttons everywhere and still has all the bells and whistles you'll ever need), and looks good. I don't know why some other articules I have read said the Titan has a reputation for poor reliability, that is BS. I have met a lot of people and all but one said the truck was EXCELLENT. The one out of ten or more who didn't, had very minor issues such as her heater and sun roof. All I ask is that the reviewers of www.pickuptrucks.com should be giving the Titan a better chance. You guys who think that the Titan is shitty because it got sixth place, then maybe should give a test run.

Hey Mike Levine!

Wow. Had a hard time finding the 2008 (or is it 2009?) pick-up truck test off the main page! I guess the "Top Eight Hitch Accessories" was a better read than this steaming-pant-load you call a "fair comparison"

Negative comments got you down? The WWW is a wonderful thing, bullshit has been called by the readers.

Hey Samscleaner!

Thanks for your valuable feedback. It's much appreciated.

- Mike Levine

Why does GM saddle the Silverado/Sierra 6.2L with a 3.42 rear end? It seems that 4.10's would have made the GM trucks accelerate and haul even better. Huh? What?

that ford is junk

Truck owners are very passionate about their vehicles, and brand loyalty is strong. I'm a loyal Chevy guy.

As far as the Chevy/GMC debate here, note that the Chevy tested was an LTZ, which is the top-of-the-line equipped Silverado...

There will always be discrepancies in these tests, and on another day, with the same conditions, the Chevy (or any other truck) could top the Ford. As for Ford, they can brag about their 11,000 towing capacity, but who the hell buys a 1/2 ton to pull that load?! Get a 250 (or 2500) already!

BTW my Silverado 2500 came with 4.10 rear end. I don't know if it's available in the 1500?

Good post John. I also have owned all the 5 brands listed here and have nothing but positives for all of them. I prefer the Tundra and Titan due to the higher resale value and better DOHC engines. Like others have said, in the end, brand loyalty wins every time.

To quote Truckin':

"The Ram is by far the hot rod of the group. In last year's test, on the same exact dyno, our '08 Hemi Ram put down only 245 hp. This year, with the same engine displacement, the '09 Ram put down a solid 300 hp. In an impromptu acceleration test between the Ram and the Tundra, the Ram easily accelerated away"

http://www.truckinweb.com/features/0902tr_2009_dodge_ram/goodyear_wrangler_tires.html

MotorTrend: Just a suggestion, break any ties you may have to this "comparison", or the author who defends it.


@Gpal55

Thanks for your feedback. You might want to check your advice to Motor Trend though. They ranked the Ram fourth in this "comparison" too.

http://www.motortrend.com/roadtests/trucks/112_0902_2009_half_ton_truck_comparison/index.html

Well its obvious this test was biased. I own a brand new F-150 crew cab and a 200.8 Nissan Titan Crew Cab. Both are equipted the same with the towing gears. My Titan even though not redesigned is far superior to the F-150. The cab has more room it smokes my F-150 towing and not towing. It is way more fun to drive and feels better built. If you dont believe me I suggest you go test drive both and let that speak for itself. When I bought my Titan I test drove all full size half tons and the F-150 was the last on my list. The only reason I have the F-150 is because my company bought it for me for work. Sorry guys but you are dead wrong on these test.

I take my advice to MT back. Results from Motor Trend depends who does them the most favors, just like this load-of-crap you call a comparison.

Motor Trend has the same photos on their site as this one. Your site was also mentioned in the text. Who's "test" is this anyway? What's going on?


this test is bull crap. its obvious that this so called ''test'' is BIASED. my opinion is that all tests are biased or at least some what biased. we will never really no what the best truck is. every body likes their brand of a truck for some reason .whether its because they grew up with that brand or they saw it pulling fourty thousand pounds on the free way we all like are brand of truck for some reason.

Gpal55,

Have you heard of research?? You may want to do some prior to posting a link. The tailgate on the Tundra is stronger than Ford, Dodge, or GM. Anyone and bust a tailgate and post pics of it on any online forum. If you read through the post, you would see of the 51 pages posted very few others had a similar problem. The collapsing tailgate was deemed user error. Toyota has since made their tailgate even stronger and if you go out and do your own test you will see the others do not compare. After Toyota did better than the rest in the majority of categories where it matters this is all you can come up with? Please go do some homework. Now I wish Nissan will withdraw from the deal with Dodge and build their own Titan.

Brattboy,

You must be the most ignorant poster to date. How dumb do you think we are? Did you think for one second I or anyone else is going to take what is posted on a FORD website as real evidence. Of course the Ford is going to win, it's their website. Toyota has a similar website showing the Tundra killing the competition, and by the test presented here, it did in many ways. I have seen videos testing frame strength where the Tundra beats the F150 and vice versa. There are many subjective test presented on the world wide web. Like Nick, I feels these test are biased. I have owned an F-150, a Tundra, a Titan, Ram and Silverado. Bar none, the Tundra is better overall in terms of resale, reliability, durability, and dependability. Also, the Titan was equally impressive. I also have high regard for GM. What it comes down to is what truck suits you the best. I like Toyota, and brand loyalty goes a long way. None of these trucks are crap, but certain ones fit certain people better. I would not be ashamed to own anyone of these vehicles.

Toyota is the best!! Nissan and GM are great also

In the performances tests, the hill climb and loaded drag races are said the be what truckers are interested in. If that is true, then you lost focus of your own test. The F-150 placed second to last and last, respectively! I thought the best all around truck would be able to at least perform better that half of its competitors. I mean who really cares about the fuel economy of an unloaded truck when you are pulling 10,000 lbs? Its a shame that the trucks that PERFORMED in the top three of almost every test didn't win. And the one with the fancy little foot step did.

chevy is the best the ford got wouped seriously it did

the reason why the chevy and gmc score diferently is because of the suspension differences

Steve,

You report from KBB doesn’t even work. As for resale value, Toyota Tundra is the top truck. Consumerreports.com shows the Tundra as having the best resale value. I cannot post the link unless you subscribe to CR.

However, here’s a link from Edmunds, showing the Tundra on the list of trucks with the best resale value. Many HD models from the big 3 made the list. Funny it takes a diesel to hold value for American made trucks. The Tacoma was the top truck overall. The Tundra is not even the same category as the HD trucks offered by the big 3.
http://www.edmunds.com/reviews/list/top10/126889/article.html
The list below shows 2008 trucks with the worst resale value and surprise, surprise, F150, Dodge Ram 1500/2500, Ford Ranger, Cadillac Escalade EXT, and the Nissan Titan (Which I love).
http://www.edmunds.com/reviews/list/top10/129026/article.html

Once again, a little research goes a long way. Sounded ignorant makes you seem less intelligent than you are.

I don't own a pickup. I did own a Ford once and put in a rebuilt motor myself. Fun but exausting. However, I do depent on older folks (I'm 64) who do use their trucks. and for what purpose they use them. In Montana, the farmers I've delt with as well as general small town folks, they have told me for years that if I want a truck to ride smoothly down the road and get better gas millage, buy a Chevy. But if I need a truck to haul hay to the rail road a couple hundred miles down the track, or to get me out of tight spots, buy a Ford.

I have to agree with the one person, do a year long test and see which brand spends most of its time in the shop.

Hey I just purchased a new Dodge, it looks just like the one tested. I love it!! It is a daily driver for me and it is just simply the nicest, funest, coolest vehicle I have ever owned. And yes, I do love the heated steering wheel!! It is great in the morning. By the time I get to the end of the block the wheel is warm, and my hand is warm. I do a little towing and need a truck bed for work once in a while and at home when ever I tackle a home improvement project. The ride and power sold me over the F-150. The look and interior sold me over the Tundra and Titan and the GM. I got a Laramie with the shifter on the floor, it is as nice as any Cadillac or town car I have been in. I wanted one for months and finally got my wife to go for a ride, she was sold at the end of one test ride!! No begging or pleading required!

It's all who the publisher wants to win based off of either brand preference, advertising $'s or what not.....Truck Trends Jan/Feb 09....did a shootout based off of this exact test (it's referenced in their article)...and the Chevy won.....same data, diff ranking priority...

I own a 2006 13sec, 18mpg, 3/4 ton Dodge CTD, so I'm not in the market for a 1/2 ton....that being said, if i was, i wouldnt get the one with a 80hp disadvanatage...based purely upon numerical data and my personal preference on what matters, i'd get (and i'm being honest, i'm a dodge fan, but pure brand loyality is for fools):

Chevy - dont care about mileage, balanced truck with some ba!!s)
Tundra - would be a close second (could move to first as they now offer a TRD supercharger w/ factory warranty - 505hp / 550lbs...that woiuld be a riot)
Dodge - not with the crapy 5 spd auto, like the look/storage
Ford - put a competative motor in it and it's looking great, but with the 5.4l turd (had one in my expedition)...no way.
Nissan - outdated and disappearing

Hey Mike Levine!

Car and Driver got it right, check it out!

http://www.caranddriver.com/reviews/comparison_test/pickups/dodge_ram_vs_ford_f_150_and_chevy_silverado_comparison_test

WOW sounds like were in a political debate here!! haha well personally im a dodge man. but this was a neat test. man i think this should be put on tv hahaha whos truck is better wow talk about the ratings they would be super high. i love that we can all come together and argue about whos truck is better i love it!

by the way go dodge!!

Why is no one worried about the axle wrap in the Ford. This is not the only review that has mentioned this problem. One of the 4 wheel drive publications had issues also. I was already to buy except this issue worries me.

I would like to take the best of all the trucks and make one good one. For example, Tundra's have excellent transmission and pulling power, Chevy's ride nice, and Ford has the best frame/overall strength. Don't know much about Dodge's new design, but wouldn't want to buy one if they go bankrupt soon which looks like it might just happen and Nissan is not much to look at neither looks or power. I think each mfg. should take a good hard look at each of their design flaws and get back to the drawing board to correct them and only until then will there be a clear winner overall. To say Ford is better than Chevy or Toyota overall is ridiculous. Each mfg. has their downfalls and they all should be ashamed of them and correct them ASAP!

Boy, I would have a hard time picking ford over GM or Toyota merely because the Ford truck sucks at pulling and performance. For me, that is very important in picking the right truck to do truck stuff like pulling heavy loads and not constantly fighting to keep the speed constant. Gas mileage is probably the least important since 1-2 mpg difference between all the trucks in not much to worry about. Besides towing, the next feature I would look for is creature comforts inside and how it sits and rides and storage capacity both inside the cabin and bed usefulness. Ford should be no better than #2, but most likely #3 or #4 behind Chevy and Toyota for sure. But, numbers of trucks sold in the US do not lie. More people buy Ford trucks than any other brand, just not me.

I would have to say that this test is one of great failure. It's hard to compare any number of vehicles when everyone has their own opinion on which truck is the best. To crown the F 150 as the best is just one man's opinion. The next guy that comes through might believe the Silverado is the best, or the Ram. It depends on who the person is, what they look for in their truck, and also what they grew up around.

Personally, I think the Tundra is an all around great truck. Toyota's are known for their reliability and great resale value. Also, with Toyota still somewhat fresh in the full-size truck industry (compared the Big 3 that have been doing it for years), they are making their mark on competing with the Big 3.

It took a lot of gut to "show up" the top competitors with the Tundra, and for this reason, I believe that Toyota should have at least some honor.

I Wish we could build our own truck, take the tundra engine, the dodge interior and ram boxes (genius!) Titans off road capabilites, Ford grip, you get the picture, then you get a truck that would be built by Volkswagen!

My problem is that you guys used different packages in all of the trucks. You used a Z71 (off road pckg), SR5(not off rd. pckg), Prox4 (offrd pckg), Ram 1500 (not the TRX), and a Ford 4x4 (not the FX4). This is crap, you literally put luxary vehicles against off raod vehicles and expected a fair shootout. Everyone knows that 4x4 these days without the offroad packages are useless until you do some type of suspension lift. Further more you mentiodes that you used the 6.2 liter engine in the chevy and GMC, well the fact is most people only get that engine in the 2500. Next time why don't you get the one with the 5.3 which is what uaually comes standard in the Z71. Also, why don't you mention that that locking rear differential you talked crap on is a very expensive aftermarket part that most offroaders put their vehicles because it kicks butt in muddy,rocky, and just plain nasty situations. Oh, and by the way the Nissan and Chevy aren't the only ones that come with locking rearss, the fx4 and trx also come with them.

Keep rationalizing guys. Ford was also motortrend's truck of the year. Do they also have a jacked up scoring system? When it comes right down to it you should drive what you want. If you know the tests are jacked up then go buy a tundra or ram or whatever. If you want you can dry your tears on my ford's air conditioned leather seats. Get over it crybabies.

I think you guys did a good job with your testing process. although i would like to see a test comparison with the same trucks with the mid grade engines.



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