Here is what I am doing...
1) I am still considering the 89 Ranger or one similar...
2) I am aggressively looking for a new job (this is actually #1...)
3) I swallowed my pride and called my nephew in Richmond who is moving to Oregon in June and asked what he was going to do with his Civic...
David
What about finding a Ranger with a blown motor and shovel a Cummins 4BT in to it...![]()
I can agree with that.I commuted 99 miles one way for eight and a half years in snow country. Buffalo gets real snow, I've driven full size pickups, Toyota pickups, ans smaller cars.
Honestly, my 2006 Nissan Maxima with 4 Blizzak snow tires was probably the best commute vehicle. Lost 4 mpg with the snows on in the winter, but it was completely unstoppable, I too have a long gravel driveway on a hill, and I never had a problem. My vote is for the TDI with 4 good quality snow tires.
Zombie Thread alert!
I have brought this back to life because my commute has just gotten worse. I need to be in the beltway 5 days a week, approx 160 mile round trip daily.
I am NOW looking for a simple 2-door 4x4 small truck. In a couple years it will become my oldest daughter's car. Until then I will drive it MOSTLY freeway/highway back and forth.
I'm leaning towards the older Ford Rangers with the 2.9 V6, I hear they get 25-26 mpg.
My neighbor has a 1989 long bed that is solid running I tried to buy, but his nephew is using it...
My concerns are longevity, and MPG.
Speak out now or forever hold your peace!
David
aczlan said:I can agree with that.
My parents have an '02 Jetta TDI with a stick shift and over 200k miles on it. They also have a '04 Volvo V70 (wagon) with an automatic. They run snows on both cars and have no problems getting up their steep hill in the wintertime (as long as there is less than 8" of packed snow, at 8" the snow starts to pack under the car and high centers it). They have that much snow because they live out in the middle of nowhere and their town is the worst in the area at plowing snow in a timely fashion.
Personally, I have a '97 Volvo V90 (RWD, straight 6, automatic, wagon, limited slip differential) and with 4 studded Nokian Hakkapeliitta 2 snowtires on it, it will go through about 8" of packed snow as long as there is a firm base under it. My wife has an '02 Caravan and with 4 snows on it, it will go through about the same amount of snow.
My inlaws have a '97 Dodge 1500 4x4 and due to its higher ground clearance, it handles deeper snow than my car, but in less than 8" of snow (and with a non-muddy surface underneath), my car will handle better on or off road (my car also gets 19-26MPG vs 9-14MPG in the truck) and my car handles icy conditions better.
Just my $0.02
Aaron Z