Geoarch
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Steve
- Joined
- Feb 3, 2022
- Threads
- 26
- Messages
- 1,528
- Reaction score
- 1,431
- Location
- Albuquerque, NM
- Website
- swxrflab.net
- Vehicle(s)
- 2024 JTR, Bright White AT; 2022 JTR MT (traded)
- Occupation
- geoarchaeologist (retired)
I think you're mostly right. But manual transfer case shifting, and MT was top of my list, and it's standard on the Gladiator. Sure there is other stuff I got like the hard top, winch bumper (I always have a winch on my 4X4s), tonneau cover for some security, larger and better tires than my Tacoma etc. It's true my Tacoma TRDPro is "more comfortable", but it doesn't have live axles which has been an issue in the situations I must be in for my fieldwork. So, yeah you are right and wrong. Still, I think the Gladiator looks bitchen not to put too fine a point on it.Based purely on practicality, a Ranger or Colorado does everything ours does for $10k less.
But the top and doors can't come off, and it has no soul. You can tell me that the Colorado or Ranger are boring and I'm with you 100%. But they do every useful task a Gladiator can do in comparable comfort, with better fuel economy for 10k less.
Again, I'm not knocking the Gladiator. I just chose to buy one. But what differentiates the Gladiator from a ranger is a bunch of things that fall squarely into the Wants category. Not needs.
and ps. I love my truck more every day. I spent a half hour with my 14 year old daughter on the way home from skiing blasting around on a dirt road in a few inches of fresh snow. Ha. with her egging me on faster faster. I wouldn't have that time with my Volvo. Which is why I bought the Jeep. As a family fun vehicle.
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