Originally Posted By: OVERK1LL
Originally Posted By: JHZR2
Originally Posted By: OVERK1LL
Considered an Excursion with the 7.3L PSD?
I dont buy used if I can avoid it.
That sucks, as it was the "king" of SUV's, being based on the Super Duty.
It had:
146.4 cubic feet of maximum cargo space
48.0 cubic feet of space behind the third row seat
payload capacity of up to 1,906 pounds - 1,750 pounds with the 4x4 drivetrain option.
Plus 11,000lb towing capacity in diesel and V10 trim.
One of my favourite SUV's.
The thing is, I dont need THAT much capacity.
Frankly, if there ever was a 4.5L (or smaller) diesel suburban, that would be ideal.
Im not hauling trailers, and if I ever did, it wouldnt be anything heavier than an old nissan pathfinder could haul with ease.
The key is to have the rows of seats and cargo space. IMO the suburban space is more useful, as a minival volume is much more "stacked", so everything has to be piled up on everything else.
Originally Posted By: JHZR2
Originally Posted By: OVERK1LL
Considered an Excursion with the 7.3L PSD?
I dont buy used if I can avoid it.
That sucks, as it was the "king" of SUV's, being based on the Super Duty.
It had:
146.4 cubic feet of maximum cargo space
48.0 cubic feet of space behind the third row seat
payload capacity of up to 1,906 pounds - 1,750 pounds with the 4x4 drivetrain option.
Plus 11,000lb towing capacity in diesel and V10 trim.
One of my favourite SUV's.
The thing is, I dont need THAT much capacity.
Frankly, if there ever was a 4.5L (or smaller) diesel suburban, that would be ideal.
Im not hauling trailers, and if I ever did, it wouldnt be anything heavier than an old nissan pathfinder could haul with ease.
The key is to have the rows of seats and cargo space. IMO the suburban space is more useful, as a minival volume is much more "stacked", so everything has to be piled up on everything else.