tacotac
Well-known member
- Thread starter
- #1
Reveal was cool but as far as I am concerned there are a few unanswered questions, and also some oddities.
- 11in of ground clearance on the TRD Pro is very misleading. In fact that’s the maximum running clearance. Ground clearance is at 9.5in, which is much lower than both the ZR2 and Raptor. See: https://www.thedrive.com/news/2024-...vs-ranger-raptor-colorado-zr2-frontier-pro-4x
- 2400W inverter sounds great especially for camping/overlanding. But no words on if it will work when engine is off? On the Hybrid Tundra, engine needs to be running for the AC outlet to work so that’s a bad sign. This could either be a game changer or big miss.
- Payload for TRD Pro and Trailhunter? Toyota is known to have low payloads, which is a big minus for overlanding. Trailhunter being a trim dedicated to overlanding, one could imagine it has a great payload but if that’s the case why not advertise it?
- No memory seats is a huge miss for me. Both the new Ranger and Colorado have it. We have only one vehicle with my wife and we alternate who is driving every single day. So frustrating they will sell those TRD Pros for 60K, you have electric ventilated seats but adding 2 memory button was too much to ask. Thanks Toyota.
- The 33in tires are misleading. The competition has 285/70/17 and this has 265/70/18. This is slightly smaller in diameter, and very much smaller in width (10.4 vs 11.2 in). Far from a true 33in. Now the question is can we fit 35s without trimming?
- No front locker when the competition has it. It’s a shame but I am ok with this one. Mostly use the rear locker anyway.
- No price announced sucks. All the others announced their pricing with the reveal.
Depending on the inverter, payload and pricing answer I might buy a TRD Pro, Trailhunter,… or go with the competition. My guess is that those will cost about the same as the Ranger Raptor, which makes the ZR2 a great deal at $48K.
- 11in of ground clearance on the TRD Pro is very misleading. In fact that’s the maximum running clearance. Ground clearance is at 9.5in, which is much lower than both the ZR2 and Raptor. See: https://www.thedrive.com/news/2024-...vs-ranger-raptor-colorado-zr2-frontier-pro-4x
- 2400W inverter sounds great especially for camping/overlanding. But no words on if it will work when engine is off? On the Hybrid Tundra, engine needs to be running for the AC outlet to work so that’s a bad sign. This could either be a game changer or big miss.
- Payload for TRD Pro and Trailhunter? Toyota is known to have low payloads, which is a big minus for overlanding. Trailhunter being a trim dedicated to overlanding, one could imagine it has a great payload but if that’s the case why not advertise it?
- No memory seats is a huge miss for me. Both the new Ranger and Colorado have it. We have only one vehicle with my wife and we alternate who is driving every single day. So frustrating they will sell those TRD Pros for 60K, you have electric ventilated seats but adding 2 memory button was too much to ask. Thanks Toyota.
- The 33in tires are misleading. The competition has 285/70/17 and this has 265/70/18. This is slightly smaller in diameter, and very much smaller in width (10.4 vs 11.2 in). Far from a true 33in. Now the question is can we fit 35s without trimming?
- No front locker when the competition has it. It’s a shame but I am ok with this one. Mostly use the rear locker anyway.
- No price announced sucks. All the others announced their pricing with the reveal.
Depending on the inverter, payload and pricing answer I might buy a TRD Pro, Trailhunter,… or go with the competition. My guess is that those will cost about the same as the Ranger Raptor, which makes the ZR2 a great deal at $48K.
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