Any recommendations on small size SUV type vehicles as far as long life and
reliable? (4runner, Escape, Pathfinder, ...)
Thanks!
RogerN
My wife likes everything but the gas mileage on her '02 ('03?) Isuzu Rodeo
Sport . Two door , sits up enough for good vision , and IIRC it's a clone of
one of the Honda offerings . Passport maybe ? And it's in the price range
you've quoted .
It has the V-6 , and only gets around 20 mpg , otherwise she loves it .
BTW , hers is the 2WD offering , it's also available in 4WD .
--
Snag
"90 FLHTCU "Strider"
'39 WLDD "PopCycle"
BS 132/SENS/DOF
-------------------------------------
RogerN wrote:
> Thanks!
> RogerN
jeep cherokee (not grand cherokee), the things are tanks, the only real
down
side to them is that they are unibody but after seeing a fair amount of
after
crash pics of them and hearing what was all damaged its not a big deal.
they do
only have a listed safety of 3 and 4 star ratings but its be cause of
"limited
leg room" realistically you would have to get in a really really bad crash
that
would trap you in any vehicle. the I6 is a freaking rock, 100k is
basically
just broken in on them and plenty of people i know of are running them
well over
200k and have heard of people breaking 500k with them on the original
motor.
only thing to look for is the 00-01s sometimes have an issue with cracked
heads
but usually if you hit 100k with out issues then it will be fine from what
i
have seen from other experiences.
cheap, easy to fix, you can find a lot of them in junk yards to pull parts
off
of and it can fit in a small parking space but still haul a lot
-matt
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If you are looking for something on the smallish side and want
something sturdy and reliable what about a Chevy Tracker 1999 -2004.
Before 1999 it was know as the Geo Tracker.
It may be too spartan and unrefined for some but to me this is a plus.
The Chevy Tracker is the same platform and engine as the Suzuki Vitara
and was built alongside in the California plant that was shared with
Toyota/Geo. You should be able to get a Chevy for a significant
discount vs. the Suzuki badge vehicle.
The 2.0 inline four is as simple as it gets and will go forever but
watch the front seal for leaking. Also available with a V6 which I am
unfamiliar with. Both auto and manual 5 speed versions have manual
shift on the fly 4WD transfer case with vacuum locking front hubs.
Make sure they engage. Body on frame construction and very capable off
road even in stock form.
You should be able to get low mileage (<60K) in your price range and
something with a 144K for a lot less.
I bought a two door fixer upper on somewhat of a whim and I liked it
so much I bought another one (4DR) for my wife and she has fallen in
love with it too. Everyone that I've met that has owned one thought
highly of the car.
Steve P.
>Any recommendations on small size SUV type vehicles as far as long life and
>reliable? (4runner, Escape, Pathfinder, ...)
Why a suv? Do you live in the rust belt? I'm talking where cars rot away before the
powertrain dies.
Wes
--
"Additionally as a security officer, I carry a gun to protect
government officials but my life isn't worth protecting at home
in their eyes." Dick Anthony Heller
We live in the deer belt, I once hit 3 deer at one time, they darted in
front of me, one got ran over, one knocked in the ditch and another just
barely hit. I think they all got up and ran off but I think the one I ran
over was injured, I couldn't see much in the mirror. A mini SUV offers
enough height so the deer hits the grill and not the window I hope. I just
figure my wife would have less tendency to try to dodge small animals and a
better chance of not being injured if she hits a deer.
RogerN
I agree. We recently bought a 2004 Honda Passport (same as Isuzu
Ranger?) and think it is great. Cost around $ 4200, dunno what the
MPG is.
technomaNge
--
Due to anticipated high turnout in 2010's election,
the Electorial College has scheduled:
Nov. 1, 2010 All Independents vote.
Nov. 2, 2010 All Republicans vote.
Nov. 3, 2010 All Democrats vote.
I showed my wife some of the military vehicles on eBay motors, she gave me
"The Look" !
RogerN
>We live in the deer belt, I once hit 3 deer at one time, they darted in
>front of me, one got ran over, one knocked in the ditch and another just
>barely hit. I think they all got up and ran off but I think the one I ran
>over was injured, I couldn't see much in the mirror. A mini SUV offers
>enough height so the deer hits the grill and not the window I hope. I just
>figure my wife would have less tendency to try to dodge small animals and a
>better chance of not being injured if she hits a deer.
You need to tell her, hit the brakes, steer straight, hope for the best. Her life is more
important than the deers. In my state, you call it in and get to keep the deer for your
troubles after the authorities come out.
I have a coworker that hit two deer. One went though the windshield. That wasn't pretty,
deer was still alive and a bit p*ss*d. He got a bit of a beating. The second one was
found later by a deputy that brought it to him a few hours later, laying across the hood
of the cruiser. You might be a redneck if...
Fwiw, I'm dead eye dick when it comes to deer (always managed to brake and avoid) but a
bunny rabbit or a kitty that can't hurt me seems to get under my pre-planned defensive
strategy.
I've had one major strike on wildlife. A hen turkey. 700+ damage, only took out a
fender. A few more inches, fender, hood, windshield. Someone got rich off of that
encounter. Those plastic fenders on Saturns do shatter if hit hard enough.
I live in the deer, turkey, and rust belt.
She needs a duece & a half. Just hose off the blood, and keep
driving it. :)
--
Greed is the root of all eBay.
I drove one in Germany, an M109 like this:
http://www.tacticaltruck.com/images_other/m109a3.jpg
Flat out they'd do 60, which wasn't unreasonable for trucks in the
slow lane of the Autobahn. The terrorist threat was high enough that
we carried loaded M-16s or .45s, We felt invincible until we saw the
Polizei setting up sandbagged machine gun nests at interchanges.
There was a legend that one had once crushed a VW without even
noticing it.
I found that having rifles in the cab was a constant reminder to drive
carefully and politely to avoid incidents, benevolence is easy when
you're the king. But we were soldiers who had learned to work well
together and perform complex tasks. Have you noticed that the faction
that opposes guns is the one that floods this group with hate-filled
attempts to aggravate strangers, then denies responsibility and blames
anyone who disagrees with them? Considering their disgruntled attitude
I agree, they shouldn't own anything dangerous including scissors.
jsw
Thanks you all for the recommendations, it gave me ideas of what to look
for. This was the only thing that came up in the area with the best price,
year, NADA value, mileage.
RogerN
I never drove one, but I have ridden in the back of one with full
field gear and my M16.
> Flat out they'd do 60, which wasn't unreasonable for trucks in the
> slow lane of the Autobahn. The terrorist threat was high enough that
> we carried loaded M-16s or .45s, We felt invincible until we saw the
> Polizei setting up sandbagged machine gun nests at interchanges.
I drove a Chevy step van with a Union City body for years, which is a
heavy truck built on a chassis similar to a school bus. It was 6150
pounds empty, and I have hauled 9,000 pounds in it (With non commercial
tags).
> There was a legend that one had once crushed a VW without even
> noticing it.
Only if they were asleep. It would knock their cup of coffee over.
;-)
> I found that having rifles in the cab was a constant reminder to drive
> carefully and politely to avoid incidents, benevolence is easy when
> you're the king. But we were soldiers who had learned to work well
> together and perform complex tasks. Have you noticed that the faction
> that opposes guns is the one that floods this group with hate-filled
> attempts to aggravate strangers, then denies responsibility and blames
> anyone who disagrees with them? Considering their disgruntled attitude
> I agree, they shouldn't own anything dangerous including scissors.
Yes and the only clothes they should own are coats with very long
sleeves. :(
Sounds like it's working for you.
That's really all that matters...
Richard
--
Richard Lamb
http://www.home.earthlink.net/~cavelamb/
Was it the Versa-Mill attachment described in the Army Machine Tool
Manual?
http://www.metalwebnews.com/machine-tools/ch9.pdf
I bought a laminate trimmer to mount on the slide to imitate those,
but haven't needed to set it up yet. How useful was it?
I never saw Army machine tools, or even the tool kits for most of the
vehicles. Vietnam had priority and they took everything. We had to buy
wiper blades locally and the jeeps were full of J C Whitney parts,
making them too fast to drive safely. Jeeps do NOT corner like the
BMWs that winding German back roads are perfect for. The motor pool
dumped the wrecks back in their assigned parking spots as a reminder.
I only needed that truck to lock the crypto in its safe.
jsw
Bwahahahaha! Jeeps aren't very much worse than those overrated pieces
of German crap (beemers), Jim.
--
"Just think of the tragedy of teaching children not to doubt."
-- Clarence Darrow
I was in earlier, when "computer" meant a fold-out trailer full of
Burroughs racks and several full-time engineers to keep it running,
well paid I'm sure. It had a 14" hard disk drive under a bronzed plexi
dome in the center of the trailer that looked like some sacred heathen
temple idol from an Indiana Jones film.
jsw
Ouch.
My first homebrew computer booted that miserable way until I acquired
some sample 6116 CMOS memory (2Kx8) that held data with NiCads. Then
it would hibernate, what an improvement!
jsw