brentbba
Well-known member
5' bed. Offroading I wanted a better turning radius and breakover. Wheelbase is longer than my old Landcruiser to begin with, and turning isn't as good. 6' would have been worse.
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Iād argue that 60 lbs is not a factor unless youāre an MMA fighter checking every carb that you eat before fight night. My tag payload limit is 1,245. Ripped off the ARB sport bar Iām at ~1,320. Add the GFC in October, Iām back to 800 lbs for gear when I tare my own weight. Plenty.Another factor to take into consideration is the payload is like 60lbs less on the 6'.
Kind of backwards, since most of the other 6' models have the same or higher payload than their 5' counterparts.
So even though you have more space, technically you can carry less (weight).
LC would've been the rig to get then. shorter, tighter turn radius than a 5' bed TH. Do you need a truck to reach the cave.I drive my Tacoma through MĆ©xico and Central America to go caving. This usually takes us on very small roads with terrible maintenance- things the larger trucks with lower clearance (as opposed to a 2 ton log truck) just aren't going to get across. I watched a 6 foot double cab have to get winched off the trail more than once, so that took it out of my choice realm. I really wanted a 6 foot extra cab, but oh well. 5 foot it is to try to minimize overall size. I'm already unhappy with how large the truck has gotten, but the 5 foot is the compromise.
I need a truck to carry the 3500 lbs of diving gear that we normally take down there. Volume wise it fills the 6 foot bed to the roof of a wedge ARE camper and completely fills the back of the extra cab. I'm curious to see with the rear seats removed if we get the same storage volume in the 2024. The landcruisers and 4runners don't have enough storage space- it's wasted with seat structure.LC would've been the rig to get then. shorter, tighter turn radius than a 5' bed TH. Do you need a truck to reach the cave.