Originally Posted By: georgemiller
I haul some light items one or 2 days a week and occasional home depot runs. I now have a Dodge Conversion van that I removed the rear seat and use that. The van only gets 13 mpg. and is getting old.
I don't need to drive around kids as they are older now.
I want to cut my fuel bill down. I was thinking either a small 4 cylinder pickup or Toyota Camry, Honda Accord and putting trailer hitch on and getting small utility type trailer for use when I need it.
Any thoughts?
I'd say light hauling one or two days a week is enough to justify a pickup truck. A basic, full-size pickup truck. One of those basic small pickups ought to be about the same price as the most basic sedan sold by the same car company. They aren't. They are considerably more expensive. They are also obsolescent. I admit my F-150 XL with the 3.7L is waaay more truck than I will ever need and a bit ungainly in town. There are worse criticisms.
The tricked out cowboy cadillac configurations receive all the attention, but the trucks in basic trim have all you need for daily use: AT air, radio, cloth seats. Dodge sells them with the really excellent Pentastar for just a little over 20K. A Tacoma is a bit over $17 K and you have to row your own gears. No hardship in my book, but still.
http://www.truecar.com/prices-new/toyota/tacoma-pricing/2014/AB586862/
Toy gets 21 mpg city with 4 cylinders and manual trans. Ram gets 18 mpg with the AT.
Yeah you can get by with a trailer. But its a PITA. twice a week you fold it and unfold it. You have to spend a few minutes lining it up when you leave. You have to take special care on the road. Sure, your car might be "rated" to tow X number of pounds, but be advised that unless its a newly introduced SAE rating, its really a made up number. Honda Civics weren't designed to tow things, at least not on a regular basis.
Reading the thread again, I have to admit that getting things in and out of the bed is a pain. Just part of the overkill mentality of American truck manufacturers. For one or two days a week, I'd live with it.