tacotac
Well-known member
2) I am definitely not the 5%. Unless you are talking about soccer moms and mall crawlers who buy Broncos and TRD Pros to drive city only. I use the vehicle for what it is built for. The TRD Pro is not built for city driving but for high speed off road use.1.) I don't care about "Marketing" I care about what something actually is.
2.) You're the 5%, not the 95%. Most people aren't doing what you are doing every Friday. And even with what you do every Friday, there are 6 other days of the week. Those 35's are not exactly ideal on the road for efficiency, acceleration, braking. The New Taco will destroy your bronco on 35's in acceleration, highway merging, passing, etc., while getting better mpg. There is a clear trade-off with larger tires.
3.) I never even mentioned comfort and wasn't talking about comfort relative to larger tires, I was talking about efficiency, practicality and acceleration on road. That extra rotational mass hurts all those things, as well as wear and tear. And I'm sure the NEW Tacoma will be plenty comfortable on the road, and I'm sure most will be plenty happy with it's fox suspension, both on and off-road.
4.) I didn't even mention the wheel offset thing. Frankly I don't care. As someone else mentioned, it's not like they used wheel spacers. Nothing wrong with using wheel offset for a little wider stance, assuming it's reasonable amount of offset, which coming from Toyota's factory that way, it's obviously reasonable.
5.) Nothing is perfect and they have a budget to contend with and a market to target. They have to pick and choose their battles and where to spend money and where to save a little. I stick to my opinion that it will be a very well rounded on and off road machine, all things considered, for most people. If people want something more hardcore off-road then you can always mod it, or get a ZR2 instead. Again, it all depends on ones individual needs/desires.
the new Tacoma will destroy my Bronco in acceleration not because of its tires but because of the hybrid engine. My bronco destroys any Tacoma and 4Runner in existence today in acceleration highway merging while getting better MPG. Your argument is moot.
3) You mentioned daily driving usability. This includes comfort as far as I am concerned.
Acceleration is not hurt because I have a different gearing ratio from the factory. My Bronco with the 35 package accelerate just as good as a Badlands on 33s thanks to that.
You would be surprised with tire mass. My Bronco has the lightest off-road 35in tires in the world at 52lbs. Thatâs on average 15 lbs lighter than any other 35in all terrain, and several lbs tires than most 33in tires such as the ones on the new TRD Pro, short of the 33in KO2 that weights the same.
By the way. My main complaint is the abysmal suspension travel by design on the new Tacoma, not the lack of 35s.
4) no, using wheel offset for 3 inch more width is plainly wrong. Fanboyism and lack of objectivity here is through the roof but thatâs to be expected on a Toyota forum. Just like when I list a few fact against a colorado on their forum (like poor MPG and lack of reliability) I get shot at that I am dumb if I buy a truck to get good MPG and that colorado lack of reliability is a myth.
5) yes you can mod it. In this case you buy the TRD off road. The expensive TRD PRO is not supposed to have its full axles and suspensions changed. That would be ridiculous.
You are all the same, incapable of having objective judgment. I donât mind being critic towards what needs to be. Wonât prevent me to buy one of those and enjoy it.
Pardon me for wanting Toyota reliability and hybrid engine, and best in class off road capabilities at the same time. I should be ashamed and dumb for wanting a mid size truck with a hybrid engine, with the same tires and suspension travel (30% more than the TRD) as all other competitors offer, instead of 3 inch of extra width by offset. JeezâŠ.
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