Was it a Yellow Cherokee with "Matt's Offroad" on the side?a jeep pulled my GMC out
Was it a Yellow Cherokee with "Matt's Offroad" on the side?a jeep pulled my GMC out
Lol no I wasn'tWas it a Yellow Cherokee with "Matt's Offroad" on the side?
My 2013 F150 interior is not falling apart at 280k miles. My 97 Ram had cracks in the dash and pieces of the drivers seat cushion coming out at 150k or less. That and the crappy transmission I had replaced twice is why I got away from Ram. Not sure about the newer ones, but I'd be too skeptical to take a chance.I just got back from a week in South Florida. Rented a Dodge 2500 4x4 from Hertz. ..Pretty cheap rental @350.00 ish for that time. ..Anyway..it was a fairly basic Big Horn package.
PW, PL, tilt cruse, Bluetooth radio ..Thats about it.
..After a couple days in that truck..I about had enough of it. Not sure if it was the poor comfort of the seats, or the way the interior just felt cheap.. but it made me appreciate my trucks at home more than ever.
To me, the Big Horn hits a pretty nice balance of features that I want, without much that I dont.I just got back from a week in South Florida. Rented a Dodge 2500 4x4 from Hertz. ..Pretty cheap rental @350.00 ish for that time. ..Anyway..it was a fairly basic Big Horn package.
PW, PL, tilt cruse, Bluetooth radio ..Thats about it.
..After a couple days in that truck..I about had enough of it. Not sure if it was the poor comfort of the seats, or the way the interior just felt cheap.. but it made me appreciate my trucks at home more than ever.
Several of my buddies had those gen.2 (pre-Daimler) Rams, and so many of them had rear diff or transmission problems. Of course, my Chevy of the same vintage had even more breakdowns, albeit cheaper ones.My 2013 F150 interior is not falling apart at 280k miles. My 97 Ram had cracks in the dash and pieces of the drivers seat cushion coming out at 150k or less. That and the crappy transmission I had replaced twice is why I got away from Ram. Not sure about the newer ones, but I'd be too skeptical to take a chance.
I didn't like the auto AWD that was in the 2015 Big Horn, and I absolutely loathed the short (3.21:1) gears they used in the rear diffs. I went with the Outdoorsman, which has only manual traditional 4wd, and allowed me to choose a much steeper (3.92:1) rear gear. There were some other options that pushed me toward the outdoorsman, but I can't remember them all, now.To me, the Big Horn hits a pretty nice balance of features that I want, without much that I dont.
I haven't used the 4-auto on the Ram, IIRC the year I was shopping required me to give up true 4wd if 4-auto was selected, which I didn't like. But my wife's Durango has 4-auto, and it actually works great for driving on our rutted and drifted roads, where you're constantly transitioning from dry pavement to drifted-over roads, to rutted sections with dry pavement interrupted by snow. It's actually much better than 4wd for most of the on-road winter driving we get around here.So, on the Ram 4wd; I dont ever use 4w auto, and maybe I just dont understand it? I use 2wd or I engage 4wd hi or 4wd lo. I tried 4 auto once, and it certainly isn't the same as 4 hi. Im guess 4 auto means 2wd, and then it auto senses slippage and engages? I dont have any use for that. I can see Im in loose sand or mud, and engage 4 hi. Maybe its an ice/snow thing?
My 2022 F150 has something similar with "modes" but it also has a 4 hi and 4 lo button, which is how I use it.
I just dont see why you would want to drive around in 4 auto on the road?