Most Reliable 4X4 Vehicles Of All Time
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- čas přidán 27. 08. 2024
- Join Chadd as he discusses is pick for the two most reliable 4X4 vehicles ever made.
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Nuff Said
#toyota #vehicles #trucks
Cash for clunkers was done for a reason, I'd never sell my OBS Fords.
Exactly right. China wanted our scrap metal.
That was a dark day in this country.
I was a mechanic and perfectly good vehicles were destroyed 😢 because of that stupid program.
Get people to drive these modern POS. Not all that glitters is Gold.
I heard they had a very hard time killing anything with the ford 4.9 inline 6
If you want to go out into the wilderness drive a Land Rover, If you want to come back home drive a Toyota Land Cruiser.
Spoken by one who probably has owned more than one LC. I've had 3 LC80s and 3 LC100s. Totally agree!
Lol, I've had the same Series ll Land Rover in Alaska for 43 years, and I've always managed to get home in the same rig, cuz they're so dang simple. And my FJ62 and FJ80 haven't left me stranded, either. Keep up with the maintenance and they last forever.
Yep, I had an old pinky rover, very reliable, I have a 89F250 IDI 4WD very reliable an 87 FJ62 reliable and a 87 Dodge Raider that is crazy reliable believe it or not.
Lmao
Or FJ ..250K miles on mine
Toyota fanboy here from Alabama. I could make a video on the dozen yotas I’ve had over the years. In my opinion, the 22R or 22RE are the most reliable engine ever built. It’s the motor that was in the hilux. If you’ve never seen the Top Gear Hilux episode, check it out.
And you can order performance parts and upgraded parts for the older Toy's from LC Engineering.
I had my '86 4Runner 4WD with a header and intake and a Magnaflow exhaust that ended up giving me Tinnitus
My FJ cruiser has 250K on it. Super reliable.
Toyota is a city in Japan
22R is Bomb Proof change the oil , make sure there's coolant , and new plugs every now and then and they will go forever
@hanskloss1331 "last long time " .🇯🇵
Dude that OBS is the closest thing to heaven you can get on earth
I say this because I care about your soul brother, Jesus is. God bless you!
@@andrewsanchez2613 there was obvious satire in that statement. I’m born again and deep in my faith brother. But thank you for checking. Jesus is Lord! Have a blessed day
One good thing about old trucks.
There videos out there that tell you.
What might be wrong, what to check & how to fix.
There are
Yep. Free Mechanics education.
Chad. I’m 65 yr old man. In the military KISS system. Keep It Simple Stupid. Works perfectly for this application. Less is more. My friend submerged a 1970 Chevy truck in the winter ice fishing in Lake Erie by the shore left it all winter pulled out in the spring. Dried it out changed all fluids. And it ran again. Try that with today’s trucks. lol. Old school rules. Simple and can be diagnosed and repaired in the field. Most times. Enough said.
Lake Erie shout out! I grew up on the shores of Lake Erie (I'm 53 now) in the Springfield/Girard PA area. Best steelhead fishing in the world! I'm a Dodge/Mopar guy. But, same era rigs (60's/70's). The old trucks are the best. I still drive a pair of '71 Dodges to this day.
I'm a huge Land Cruiser fan but also love the OBS Fords with the 7.3. When I was working at a tire shop, I once encountered a gentleman with an OBS 7.3 F-250 and the odometer had already hit 999,999. He was a delivery driver who was towing big loads with it, usually thousands of miles a week. He estimated that it had since traveled 500,000 miles past hitting the top of the odometer and had never been rebuild/replaced and generally no significant problems. What an amazing machine!
The 7.3's are great but you need to keep an extra fuel injector harness for when that burns through. The design is a failure waiting to happen but the engine itself is far better than anything Ford has built since.
Did you ask him how many transmissions he went through?
I am guessing 7
I’ve drove my 7.3 for 4 years from Calhoun Georgia to Suffolk Virginia and everywhere in between, have not had one issue the thing will not die
Hey drove to my neck of the woods! I live in Chesapeake
Best diesel ford made, drove those commercially for years..
@@FitVenture30 working at the shipyard now, hope to be back home in sc soon
@@Billyjamess super cool man! My wife is from Charleston! Good shit. You stay safe out here.
@@Billyjamess im in va b boys
I’ve had my 76 ford 4x4 since 1985. 351 4 speed with bulldog tranny. Gets about 7-10 mpg. Wouldn’t sell it for the world
Had a bronco with the same setup. Loved it.
That’s pretty sweet, I saw a dude take a 68 or 69 charger here on CZcams, and get around 20mpg. I’m sure if you type in 69 charger 20mpg you’d see it. Just a tip!
Sir, I have a 2003 Lexus LX470 - had to go "Gucci" to get the wife approval. I purchased mine in 2019 with 192K miles. Learned after the fact, that the vehicle had dealer maintenance records on Lexus's website. Every 5K miles it was at the dealer and had everything done to it on time. Including the timing belt 2 or 3 time. The vehicle is a clean example of the LC100 platform. My goal is to reach at least 300K miles. No reason or desire to buy a new vehicle at todays oppressive prices. Enjoy the content and the passion! God Bless
That thing will go 500k easy if taken care of.
330k on our 01. Recent compression test revealed all is well within spec. Everything in the drivetrain is heavy and reliable. You’ll likely go well past 500k. Many have gone over a million and still driving around without issues.
Still driving my 2000 LX 470 out here in the rural California desert! 🇺🇲
300k is 1/3 life on those, just do the oil changes every 5k.
238,000 on my 2004 LX 470. Bought it with 218k on it. Favorite vehicle I have owned
In Australia we got the twin solid axle 105 series as well as the 100. 105 is a wide body 80 with the 100 slapped on top. Here these both came with 2 fuel tanks.
Y’all get all the cool vehicles.
01 Land Cruiser owner here. 330k and still runs like new. Nice to see another owner who appreciates his the way we do ours.
Picked up a '95 4runner a couple years back and I love it! 150k miles on it I think it'll give me another 150 with regular maintenance.
The dodge 318 engine was something. I rode one from Memphis to Anchorage and back.
Nice Ford!
We had that engine in a 67 van we converted into a camper, and it never let us down. Ever. Downright solid mill.
Had Cordoba with 360 that got 23 miles to gallon. Dad was good mechanic machinist, he said those engines are poured in mold at factory and can be 100 CC's off speck new. If they are blueprinted to speck they will perform.
The 318 was crap lol.. Underpowered and an oil burner
Dodge 318s, and chevy 350s, also good options.
I’m a dodge man too I worked at a DCP dealership for many years
Always wanted one of your land cruisers. Nearly bought one a couple years back. Just bought my OBS 7.3 Powerstroke manual 4x4 8 months back. Absolutely love it! Happy it’s got your stamp of approval
I ditched new trucks and "upgraded" to a 95 7.3. Great truck. Great video!
ME TOO, THE NEW TRUCKS ARE WEAK, BUILT FOR SHOW OFF SOCKER MOMS, TRIED A NEW CHEVY SILVERADO ,BECAME MY WORST DECISION OF MY LIFE, WENT BACK TO A 12 VALVE CUMMINS,
7.3 is a weak diesel motor vs the 6,7
@@tillman40depends on your classification of “weak” but cool story. I had a gen 3 6.7, great motor.
@@tillman40 The 7.3 is weak, but they are 100x easier to work on. The average man with basic automotive knowledge can fix 80% of the issues on a 7.3 at home. A 6.7 has to go to the shop for just about anything beyond replacement of the battery.
Excellent video. My dad was an MP at Ft Leonard Wood when I was 5. He had just came back from Vietnam, went to OCS became an officer and went MP because he got the Purple Heart and figured MP would be a good job on civilian market some day. Which was true because after retiring from Army he then retired from the DEA. I digress. When I was 5 he took me to the motor pool. I remember learning about engines. He told me to never forget PMC. To this day i do all my PMC and my engines last. Bros in Christ Chad and Chili and CornyBread wherever you are!😂
You couldn't have made this video at a better time. Thanks, Chadd and thanks to the team!
I’m definitely voting for the Ford. My 1989 F-250 hasn’t let me down yet. I’ve had several of these trucks. My dad’s truck has 1,650,000 miles on it with the PowerStroke 7.3L. That truck of his has spent its life with a trailer hooked to it.
Was that an error? 1.6 MILLION miles?!?
@@JokerG16 nope. It literally has that many miles on it.
@@JokerG16 it’s had 3 clutch replacements, obviously a few sets of injectors, basically the usual maintenance. The Ford Dealership that he takes it to for service can’t hardly believe that it’s still truckin along. I think most people who own a diesel know that they like to be worked. That’s what they are designed to do.
Original motor?
@@mendoblendo321 yes.
My 2001 7.3 liter Powerstroke has 425,000 miles on it. Still runs like a top. I have that same Hydra tuner on it too. Definitely helps with the power issue. I’m keeping it till I die, or it has a million miles on it. I love stuff that refuses to quit.
Still rocking out my 2002 3rd gen 4runner.
Same. Mine is 07.
Mine is a 98!
97 3rd Gen here! 195K still going strong!!!
1999 limited 4runner, e-locking rear diff. 317,000 miles...
@@Doorgunner50 Very nice rig.
Maybe instead of the IRS getting 87K agents, maybe they should be helping our vets. Maybe we should stop giving the Ukraine money
Maybe we should stop giving Israel money .
@@petegarrido5406 Bingo.
1 Timothy 5:8 “But if any provide not for his own, and specially for those of his own house, he hath denied the faith, and is worse than an infidel.”
10% for the big guy
Don't forget the illegal criminal invaders thar are on the public dole, too!
Stop giving money to those willing to fight and join the fight on your own. Do not consider Russia an enemy? Ask if they consider you an enemy.
Toyota all day long, 100%. My uncle still daily drives a 1987 Corolla, I drive a 2005 Camry with 200,000 miles, no issues whatsoever. Just keep up with the maintenance and they'll last forever.
I had a 97 camry with 346k and the trans went out so i revbombed it for an hour to try nad blow it uo and it never did blow it just revved til the radiator popped and it caught fire haha
Thank you, Chad.
Ford all the way for me.
My primary truck for the past 9 years has been my 1986 F250 regular cab LB 4x4 6.9idi Diesel with camper shell. I bought it for $3,750 from the original owner. (EMP proof I might add)
I’ve owned 29 ford products over my life and they have been good and bad but overall good to me.
I had a ‘96 just like that one except it was red. I still have a 2000 F350 with the 7.3. Great truck, but I prefer the older body style. Yours is a great example of a great truck.
I prefer the 70’s fords but up to 96 were the last of the fords that looked right to me.
Those land cruisers really hold their value
Better than anything else
I had a j100/LC and mistakenly sold it. Picked up a j200/LX and love it.
@@basicgunbros4332all older Toyota 4x4
S hold the same value. Only looks higher on the land cruiser because there so expensive out the gate
Love the truck. Last year we bought a 2002 Excursion with a 7.3 and 71k miles. Love driving it.
Whatsup Chadd. I drive a 2006 Toyota sienna. I love my van. Gets about 22 mpg. 260 hp. I used to work as a farm tech and when I'd be way out in a cornfield and it starts to terentially downpour, and those fields just start to fill up, sheesh. Buddy I'm telling you that van has gotten me out of some tough spots. Like you talk about if you're somewhat of a car guy you really gotta know your engines. For a v6 I think my model is up there for reliability for Toyota. Love the content. Really we are in some very pivotal times and I love that you ring the alarm bell on those topics, love, but I do enjoy this content as well. God bless brother.
I have a 79 bronco 4x4 with a big block 460 , there is just something awesome about an old bronco and a meaty 460 . I also am building a 94 Toyota Land Cruiser and installing an all aluminum block 5.3 L33 into it for an awesome family offroad capable rig.
I have a rock crawler jeep on 39.5” tires with four link set up and wife has a 93 rubicon all stock.
They all have their sweet attributes
460s are massive motors that never like to pass gas stations 🤪
@@hanskloss1331
You are corrrect.
It eats gas stations.
I am debating about putting a 12 valve Cummins in it,… I already have one sitting in my building ready to install
Our 1969 Ford F-250 4x4 truck is still working on our ranch, we have nine Ford 4x4 trucks. We also have four older Toyota Landcruisers FJ , 40s 55s and 60s they are some of the most dependable vehicles ever made. And they are cheap and easy to fix without a professional mechanic.
My bride & I purchased a 1-owner, 1 year old LandCruiser in 2005 (2004 100-Series). We choked at the price and she said we would take the kids to college in it. Kids are now done with college and the 2 UZ-FE + original drive train is still running strong with nothing g but regular MX. Currently 278k and our plan is to drive it INDEFINITELY! Bumpers…we tried something a few years back which has worked out really well. We had a product called Line-Extra from the Linex shop applied. It is textured like the bed liner material but is color-matched to the vehicle and looks terrific. We put it on the running boards and the side body cladding also. That stuff is amazing as it increases the strength of the plastic by many X. If you scuff it, simply spray touch-up paint and the rough texture is very forgiving and scuffs disappear completely. This is a better alternative than aftermarket bumpers for ours since it is a soccer-mom unit which will likely before too long turn into a soccer-grandma rig.
Funny you profile the Ford as we have one of those also! My dad searched high and low and purchased 2-year old in 1990 and it too was a 1-owner. It is a 1988 F-250 4x4 SuperCab w the 7.5 / 460. My folks drove it some but it mostly sat outside for decades. We pulled it in a shop during Covid and saved it. Full frame-off, custom fabricated flatbed, even oversized fuel tanks than the original. To your point, we did swap-in a junkyard find solid front axle during the build. The rig only has 80k miles. We needed a truck for one of our businesses and Covid had everything jacked up in terms of sourcing a new one, so we opted for this solution instead….Old School!
1999 FORD F250 SD SUPERCAB 7.3 , 4 inch lift, 12lb winch, tuned a little, pretty good mileage around these hills on the Blue Ridge, upgrades on air intake and exhaust, its my shtf truck.
I love my 96 power stroke. Got it for 4500$ like 15 years ago
I have a 2000 100 series Land Cruiser. Everything about the vehicle is a marvel to me. It’s a testament to a relentless Japanese culture of perfectionism. After 24 years of eating up terrain and miles, the 100 series doors close with a heavy thud seal when you shut them. The engine and power train will climb up any terrain you lay before it. The A/C system is still frigid where you could hang meat in it. The Land Cruiser was built to move people and equipment from point A to B and get there no questions asked. In Africa, Middle East, and Australia this meant people’s livelihoods, and the Japanese understood this. They built it with honor. I don’t know what a check engine light looks like because it doesn’t come on, honestly Toyota should have removed that dummy light from the odometer because it’s a waste of space. I live in Texas and I believe I could get in my Land Cruiser right now and drive as is to Patagonia South America and most importantly then drive all the way back to God’s country (Texas). Sorry for the dissertation.
70's era solid axle pickup trucks. Carburetors and distributors. No computers, simple to fix and run forever.
93 F-250 big block gas owner. 387k miles, minimal problems. Used hard too pulling tractors and hay around. They don’t build them like that anymore
Two great trucks. I love older Fords. The 'Yotas are unquestionably established also. Very tough to choose. Personally I've a Mil. Miles on one Ford and a half Mil. on another. I'm sure the 'Yota will do the same. Great channel, great cause, great episode. Keep it up. Peace!
Okay, I'd choose the Ford. I like the space.
@@nighttimepaul5209 me too. Space is everything for this 6’3” wide body. The wider track does play hell in those off road ruts left by the narrower trucks, so you end up dancing around a lot.
As the Chief Marketing Officer at Power Hungry Performance, and as a fellow OBS owner, we appreciate you running our #hydrachiptuner
Don't be scared of cranking that baby up! Mine stays on 80hp and mine has 356,000 miles on it, the valve covers have never been off. No oil leaks either! Great video, new like and new subscriber!
Daily drive a 2000 100 series LC. 423,000 miles everything still works, rides amazing. Most reliable car ever built by the hand of man! 13 mpg no matter what terrain
Been driving a 95 F350 7.3L 4X4 for over 20 years now. Everyone loves that truck.
I have a 97, over 20 years also.
A soft cloth w deet or off bug spray will bring those headlights back to like new.
Don't rub it too long. Just swipe it once of twice and stop once it becomes clear.
The bug spray melts the oxidation.
The 7.3 Powerstroke/International is somewhat of a legendary engine, particularly in the diesel engine space.
Somewhat?! No, it IS legendary. The 7.3 powerstroke and 5.9 Cummins will always be legendary engines.
@@jurlinquist 5.9 is garbage by itself unless it was bulletproofed. But still 1000x better than any gas vehicle.
I have a 6.7L Ram Cummins and some people have surpassed 1 million miles w/ their 6.7s without a single tune-up.
Even know mine doesn't need it, mine is bulletproofed as you can get, and I deleted the crap out of everything.
After some alterations and upgrades, I can make my own diesel and it will run just fine.
Looking at it from the outside, it looks like a regular diesel minus the bumpers. I have special ordered 1" .50 caliber rated armored plates protecting the radiator and engine as well as in the doors and cab. And it's 100% EMP proof!
I keep a 250-gallon tank in the back and an electric pump in the event I need to take gas from some liberal antifa puke.
I would not trade my truck for any modern bs.
Wouldn't mind a tractor trailer set up the same with a smaller battle trailer behind it ;)
I've got a 2000 F350 7.3 and a 2004 4runner with the 4.7 v8. Love them both!
That’s a beautiful ford chad! No way would you ever find a truck in that condition up here in Michigan. Truck bodies only last about 5 years up here
The wife has great taste in trucks ! Not sure what the heck she’s doing with you Chad. 😂 I’m a ford diesel guy for sure. Miss that 7.3 that I owned 20 years ago. Rolling a 2013 F350 with a delete, tune and 4” lift along with several suspension upgrades. Purchased new, 123k now, last truck I’m hopefully needing to buy at 55 years old. Keep up the good work guys
I've owned quite a few snazzy 4WDs in my 4 decades of driving and my '97 OBS Ford F250 7.3L diesel always draws the most attention and comments at the fuel stations and anywhere I drive it. I did not buy it for the compliments, I enjoy the dependability and old-school ride and look. I'm an old Landcruiser fan as well. Love the 1970 FJ55 "iron pigs". That's a dang nice truck your wife has. She has impeccable taste.
Great review! I have a 2001 7.3L F250 and it actually has heated seats that work. Got it a few weeks ago for the farm. Love it. And it's red.
Oh - and I paid right at 15k. Somebody traded it in at a Hyundai dealership of all places. Just gotta look every day and know what you're looking for :)
@@DrTimothyMHouchinMDLexington
I still have my 2002 F-250 Super Duty with the 7.3L Power Stroke I special ordered brand new directly from Ford a few weeks after 9/11 in 2001. It has 226,300 miles and is still my daily driver that runs great. The Toyota comments are a joke.....these trucks will easily last 500,000+ miles even when abused and worked hard. Some urban cowboy that drives his Toyota to the grocery store and never hauls anything but a weedeater, backpack blower and salt for the water softener isn't even close to the same thing. You'll NEVER see those vehicles used in the skilled trades or as farm trucks. They aren't built for that and won't hold up.
"76 F-250 4x4 Highboy with a 390/C6 auto. My only regret was that there wasn't a 4EOD conversion, which would have done wonders for fuel economy; 16 mpg with a 4.10 great set and 38's on the trims.
My 76 f250 4x4 with a 351 4 speed bulldog tranny. Gets under 10 miles a gal. On or off road. It was purchased from a gentleman retired from Ford. He got it in the later yr around November, december of 76 they replaced the 390 with a 351.
The 390 was a special find, most had the 360. Torque monster. Awesome engine.
@@markpoore3260 , I never heard of a " bulldog" transmission in the older Ford F series trucks. What I do know that came in the older F series trucks was the New Process NP435 4 speed manual transmission. Is this " bulldog" transmission aftermarket?
@@hk45c62 the old man I got it from retired from ford. He always called it a bull dog or granny low first gear made for pulling. Over 40 yrs of owning it I’ve always called it a bull dog due to its low gear pulling power. It has the 351 not the 360 engine in it also. He may order that set up back then. He passed away in 1989. There’s no way of knowing g unless ford can verify through the vin
@@markpoore3260 , I was just wondering because I've come across some unusual things in Ford trucks and cars that weren't listed in Ford catalogs but some how ended up being installed by the factory or could be ordered from a Ford dealer and installed. Two examples would be a 1973 F 350 4x4, with a 300 inline 6 with a factory 4 speed manual, that had an overdrive unit installed between the bellhousing and the transmission. The second one was a 1971 Ford Galaxie 4 door with a 429 big block with a factory 4 speed and a 3.91 rearend with a Detroit Locker. That's why I was curious about your truck.
In America... he should have made a disclaimer...
I had a 1997 Toyota Tacoma 4x4 two seater 5spd manual manual that was the BEST and now I have a 1993 Suzuki Carry 4x4 with locking axles 4spd manual and is a TANK that can go anywhere and American manufacturers are so scared of these Kei class Japanese trucks they're not allowed in America unless they're 25yrs old or older.
People who don't know will over look the Land Cruiser but that's one BEAUTIFUL truck and would be my choice between his two!
Yota's (Japanese) are the hands down best for perfect made vehicles... older especially
Got an 03 that runs great!!!
When I worked oilfield years ago, we had to drive out about 1/2 mile to turn water valve on.
On rainy nights nobody except the guy with the Suzuki 4x4 could get there and back.😅 It was an old reliable little tank
Had a 98 Taco and its the only car I regret getting rid of. Now I have an 07 FJ and a Subaru Kei truck! Kei truck gets so many comments, especially when I am loading up with lumber or mulch at Lowes or Home Depot.
I bought my wife a 93 F-150. Garage kept in North Dakota from an old couple. Her husband ended up passing away and she sold it to our local dealership. Couldn’t believe my eyes when I first seen that truck man. Looked like it rolled right off the showroom floor in 93. I’ve got a 94 150 as well. Absolutely not in the shape my wife’s truck is in. But it’s fitting for her and mines fitting for me! But I can confirm they are beastly trucks. Any old truck will do what it’s gotta do if you take care of it properly!!
2000 LC owner here. Approaching 350k miles. Unquestionably the best vehicle ever made. Towing trailers over the passes here in CO, Ive had the accelerator pinned for over an hour strait and the temp guage doesnt move a millimeter.
If its anything like my 94 LC, you need the throttle pinned just to keep moving on the passes.
Toyota is the underrated champion of all vehicles.
They were. Their new CEO went woke and the new four-cylinder engines with twin turbos, etc. the new tundras engines blowing in 500 miles. They are done now. Aspirated 5.7 L V8 4.7 L land cruiser 100 series engine 4.0 L V6 forerunner, those are the ones you want.
@roguesovereignrogue9124 My friend bought a new tundra when they came out and literally has had no issues
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@@pat2430 well, I guess that one example makes everything I just said, and all the people having problems all over the place that is easy to research null and void.
@@roguesovereignrogue9124my 2019 Tacoma is a V6 4x4. I love it
All I have is a horse with a scabbard.
Parents got this Land Cruiser in ‘04. After years of service in my childhood, shipped it to our home in Cameroon, West Africa. She’s loving life over there. Beast of a vehicle.
My buddy runs a non profit helping vets get their benefits, pretty amazing to see how many people he has helped and how much it changes lives. Thanks for spreading awareness around the shortage of people that can help.
1970's jeep wagoneer! I would love one!
Yeah, they were good machines, but; when they "break"... ¡¡MAN! you are looking at one expensive REMEDY!
Toyota pickups with the 22R.
Most reliable truck period was the ram250 with the 12 valve Cummins.
That 22R was an 80's bulletproof powerplant!!!
I had the regular cab '95 F150 4×4 300 six Big stick 5 sp. when I bought it was pink and the bed was loaded down rotting garbage. I shoveled out the garbage along with the maggots & buffed it out and waxed it. It turned bright red! Ran like a top & dependable as hell. The only repair was replacing the fuel pump on the front gas tank.
Toyota - High miles - Low maintenance - Oh what a feeling ! My 2003 Tacoma is at 295K and runs like a champ, still sounds like a sowing machine. My 2012 Ford F150 work truck has 285K also runs like a champ.
There is only one choice, the Land Cruiser.
Me sitting here with a 2016 F150 and would rather have your wife's Ford...
Toyota man here, 2013 Tacoma gen 2, pyrite mica green, snorkel, Fox sus, extra fuel tank. and a series 80 Land Cruiser. super solid. like the video.
gay pride
Love that OBS! Reminds me of my dads when I was a kid. I’m gonna get one one day. Can’t beat the classics
Both good choices for reliable functionality. My wife spotted a '95 F250 w/7.3 liter Powerstroke; same configuration as yours but black & Burgundy 2-tone, when I retired in 2016 (on Craigslist). We got it with about 160K miles for under $8K. I was told by a fellow whose biz is to refurb OBS trucks, that I could get $30K for it in a week's time.
Starter went out recently...$399 installed by a mechanic I found on a roadtrip when it failed. Starter was in-stock at a local parts house. My buddy with an '08 Tundra also just had a starter failure...$1400 installed at dealership. (He's still in shock).
I chose the truck over SUV so I could pull a trailer (15K pound towing capacity, though I'm more comfortable with current trailer at 7500 pounds).
Thanks for all aspects of your teaching on this channel!!!
‘99 Land Cruiser owner here. The most reliable and overbuilt vehicle I have ever owned.
Thank you both for the reviews, a well done presentation.
Would opt for the OBS Ford.
Maintenance is ever so important to keeping these older trucks running good, if done right, they will last a lonnng time.
Basic n' easy to work on AND they feel like a truck when driving...
Kudos for supporting Veterans. Overall: we should all be neighborly and helpful to other people out there.
Have 1996 F350 4x2, 7.3 Power Stroke, 5 speed, 3:55, 4" exhaust - sounds fine, 232,000 miles, 16 mpg with heavy camper.
1993 F250 4x4, 7.3 IDI non-turbo (so simple n' durable), factory, 3:55, E4OD, 121,000 miles, 17 mpg .
1986 F250 4x4, 6.9 non-turbo, 4-speed with Gear Vender OD, 4:10, 203,000 miles, 18-20 mpg - very durable.
4Runners FTW. I’ve had a gen 1,2,3 (which my son is borrowing right now) and 5. Really loved every one of them.
2:42 That very good boyo stepping on the scene 💚
Got a one owner 89 Bronco. Besides the faded paint it’s pretty clean and the one minor small dent in the door. Take the family cruising through the desert all the time.
The full size F-150 based Broncos were a awesome rig and very tough. A far cry from the unibody car based SUVs and Crossovers of today. The F-150 based Ford Broncos had a full steel frame, solid rear axle and differential, most were V8 302/351 powered as well.
The 7.3 is a beast I had one in a e350 van over 300,000 miles when I sold it👍
My 1992 Chevy Silverado Z-71 single cab stepside with a 350. I have over 260,000 miles with the original engine and transmission. Also original 3:73 gears/rearend. Zero maintenance on the transmission and rearend. 4x4 and AC still works.
I love my 1999 F350 Super Duty 7.3 crew cab and long bed. And yes fond memories made on that tailgate!
I have the baby Ford to that F250, a 98' Ranger XLT 4X4 with the OHV 4.0. Bought it 4 years ago for $3500 with 130k miles and mint interior
I have a 75 f100 with a 429 great truck. My daily driver is a 06 silverado it has 338k on it runs and drives beautifully.
For the OBS, check out a company called Skys Off-road Design. They make kits to put an 05+ solid axle under the front and matching leaf springs for the rear. I’ve got one of their kits on my 95 350 crew cab.
Two weeks ago, I traded in my retirement truck / rv tow vehicle. I had a 2021 diesel 3.0 powerstroke F-150 and traded for a 2020 Toyota Tundra. I would HIGHLY recommend buying a 2nd Gen Tundra (2007-2021). They are very popular for tow rigs, especially with them all coming stock with 4:30 gears. The F-150 was great, other than how overly complicated inside electronics. It was more like a laptop than it was a truck. I've owned 4 Toyotas, and never regretted buying any of them. They work. I don't like spending money on stuff that breaks. The warranty should be worst case scenario, I don't want to need it.
Great video brother I love watching and listening to you every dam day.
My brother did a Cummins swap in an 09 F350 srw high end trim package low Mileage truck. He purchased it with a blown engine just to do the project. It's a very nice rig. I'd personally rather a late 90s myself.
3 of 7 Project's reviews are honest, clear and educational in itself.
Keep 'm coming!
The Toyota Land Cruiser is the preferred land based mode of transportation here.
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The older raptor 6.2L trucks, tacomas and 4runners with the 4.0L are worth looking at. The 4runner in particular is a fantastic vehicle.
I like both of your families rigs.
I too drive an old school 1st generation Tundra 4.7l (w/2UZ -engine)SR5 4wd w/ factory locker out back. I’ve got it kitted with a ARB Steel bumper, heavy duty coils and I will not sell it!
Love the Channel!
Some things never change. My grandfather passed away because the V. A wouldn't give him a breathing machine for sleep apnea even though he qualified for it. It just took too long to get it done, and he ended up dying in his sleep when he stopped breathing. I'm not sure if it was a stroke or a heart attack. that was brought on by the sleep apnea, but he went to sleep and never woke up.
Hey dude, I recently went to your brothers house in our armuchee Georgia. Me and my wife were driving through there and I drove up the long driveway on Turkey Mountain and saw the house. I grew up there from the time I was born until I was 18 years old Now I’m 39 and I haven’t seen it in forever. It’s still the same color though, but you guys took away the cool hot tub. there was some guy doing electrical work under the big aluminum shed that told me who you were and that’s really cool
I had a ‘97 F-350 solid front axel, BEAST work truck. I have my 2019 F-350 super duty now just as beast. It is set up to overland, over 520 miles per tank of fuel, love it!
The twin traction beam front suspension was one of the best compromises IFS with as close to solid axle articulation as you could get. Very good for desert style high speed running. The OG Bronco had that for years and was very good. With the exception of the radius arm bushings.
Just finished rebuilding my ‘81 FJ43 Land Cruiser. Best truck ever.
2000 Ford Excursion Limited 6.8l V10 Gasoline. Best truck I ever bought. Just had it bed lined... the entire outside. Getting ready to do the inside. Will never sell it.
I have an obs f150 stick shift 4x4 300c.i. inline 6, it is iconically a reliable beast! when all my newer vehicles have issues this is my go to ranch truck
Such a reliable work horse, the Ford 300 inline 6 cylinder.
I love the older stuff. my collection is a, 1986 f150 4x4 manual, 1987 f250 4x4 manual, 1987 nissan d21 2wd v6 manual, 1997 f350 4x4 7.3 4 door, 2003 toyota tacoma 4 door 4x4, 2006 honda civic 5 speed manual, 2007 toyota sequioa.
Chad swerved into Scotty Kilmers lane and did a great revue. I’d take the Toyota.
I’m a FJ80 guy. Solid front axle, lockers front n rear, mine has the 2UZFE swap, 6” lift with 35’s, 12k warn winch. It’s a beast.
It’s called a twin I beam suspension it goes way back on fords it was made for farming in the fields with the furrows high and low spots, Chad I was a mechanic for twenty years and seen just about everything lol !
1990 F250 XLT Lariat w/6 speed manual trans. It was one tough truck and a contractor bought it from me years ago.
Being as i already have 2 OBS 7.3 Fords and love them to death, I would have to go with the OBS F250. Mine are both crew cabs, a 96 and a 97.
Story of a veteran up here in Canada. Lost an arm in service. To qualify for disability benefits, he has to go in every year and prove his arm didn't grow back.
I happen to own both of these vehicles; almost. My 97 is an F350 with the live axle. And my TLC is a 2021 200 series. Both are awesome for all the reasons stated in this video. But if I could only pick one, it would be the truck. The TLC is like having a Range Rover that doesn't break down. It's comfortable, and luxurious, and amazing off road. But the truck can do so much more.
Lc is worth many more monies
@@matthewhayes5221 That's absolutely true. And yet, the truck can still do a lot more. The TLC is much better for off road capability. The truck wins in every other category except for long range comfort. The truck even gets better fuel milage. That's funny, considering the truck weighs more than twice as much as the TLC, and it's 27 years old.
Excellent video brother; i agree on both.
I currently own 3 Land Cruisers... an FJ40 from 1980, an 80 Series from '94 (beast), and a 100 Series from '02 (super comfort).
Thanks for your post
The way I understand it, the 7.3 diesel was developed as a tractor motor. Ford had a long relationship with navistar, and asked for a diesel to put in the big trucks. It's a dt444 or something like that. Great old truck your wife has. Best sounding diesel to me
Recall on front leaf springs. I owned a 1996 F250 powerstroke. The front springs sag slightly and look like they are bending the wrong way or almost no curve. I believe the recall was for 95-97 models but not sure.
Had the front leaf springs replaced for free at Ford dealer even though I was Q second owner. The truck made me feel every bump in the road after that.
Not sure if the recall is still active.
I sold the truck at only 60k miles. Still regret doing so. It towed my 78 landcraser on a steel 18 ft trailer like it was nothing. With mountain pass elevations between 7000-10500. Also had it at the very top of Pike Peak on Jan 1 2000 to pick up the Addaman mountain hikers. Dam good trucks.
Had a 1965 FJ45 Cruiser wagon, your wagon’s grandpa. Was a metal beast but the longer wheelbase limited it’s off roading but a ton of room. And was a surveyor in the Dakota badlands for a few seismograph companies back in the 70s-80s. We ran Ford F-250 Hiboys with 460s. Yeah, not much comfort but freakin bullet proof and the guys working the jug lines abused the daylights out of those things but could not kill them. Even through the early 80s they were built tough af but finally got some padding inside and more comfortable.