Paden501
Member
- First Name
- Matt
- Joined
- May 31, 2020
- Threads
- 0
- Messages
- 11
- Reaction score
- 15
- Location
- Pittsburgh PA
- Vehicle(s)
- 2020 Jeep Gladiator Overland
- Occupation
- Engineer
I just went through this similar thought exercise a few weeks ago when I bought my JT. I came into my JT after owning a Nissan Frontier Pro-4x w/ the crew cab and 5' bed for about 8 years. I used the truck "as a truck" quite a lot and there definitely were a few times when I wished I had that full size truck bed. However, for 90% of the loads that I hauled (including refrigerators, drywall sheets, top soil... you name it) the 5' bed and lower towing/hauling capacity on the frontier did just fine.
The main thing that challenged me w/ the Frontier was not actually heavy items... it was LONG items. Things like long cuts of baseboard or casing, electrical conduit, etc. were really hard to haul in a 5' bed. I found myself strapping those items to the factory roof-top rack more often than using the bed.
So, when I decided that I was going to get into a JT, I did have to do a little bit of soul searching about buying into another midsize truck that presumably will be even more difficult to haul those long items in (at least when the top is on
).
I guess the reason that I bring this all up is that there are some use cases where a full size truck would be ideal that don't necessarily involve towing an 11K pound boat around or putting a goose-neck camper on the back. That said, I ultimately decided that I'd get creative when those situations come up to have the trade-off of a truck that's also a Jeep.
The main thing that challenged me w/ the Frontier was not actually heavy items... it was LONG items. Things like long cuts of baseboard or casing, electrical conduit, etc. were really hard to haul in a 5' bed. I found myself strapping those items to the factory roof-top rack more often than using the bed.
So, when I decided that I was going to get into a JT, I did have to do a little bit of soul searching about buying into another midsize truck that presumably will be even more difficult to haul those long items in (at least when the top is on
). I guess the reason that I bring this all up is that there are some use cases where a full size truck would be ideal that don't necessarily involve towing an 11K pound boat around or putting a goose-neck camper on the back. That said, I ultimately decided that I'd get creative when those situations come up to have the trade-off of a truck that's also a Jeep.
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