Our company has many Ford and Chevy pickup trucks, along with a few Dodges, Nissans and others. These are trucks for our managers and foremen, and they see varied duty. The biggest chore for one guy's truck might be putting the trash cans at the end of a driveway. Another may tow a trailer with a large trencher routinely. We have 20-some heavy duty utility trailers we use to take materials and tools from our warehouse to projects.
It has been our experience that with Ford and Chevy trucks, their F150 and 1500 series trucks handle well and provide a comfortable ride. These are the best ones for trash can duty. They are just too wimpy for real use.
Going to F250 or 2500 gets you a truck that you can use for heavier duty applications. The ones with heavier optional suspensions are even better. These won't squat down in the rear if the trailer has a couple hundred pounds ot tongue weight, and they corner and handle better - particularly if there's something in the bed.
Looking back I can laugh now. Remember when gas shot up past the $1/gal mark? We thought we'd be smart and get a fleet of those gas (and some diesel) sipping riceburners. While they were fun for darting about the city traffic, and used less fuel per mile, they were a disaster otherwise. They made El Caminos look like heavy duty trucks. To add insult to injury, they had some very serious rust problems.................chim