It's not that I count them out, I know some are very capable. But putting aside any known "problem" engines, I will always choose the largest displacement or highest-output available, for every vehicle I own. I'm the guy you heard yelling at his dealer salesperson, "why the hell isn't the 6.4L I put in my Dodge Charger available for my pickup truck?!?"
A buddy has that exact configuration, and I know he loves it. But around town, he'll admit my 5.7L Hemi is quicker. That difference isn't enough to choose a bad truck over a good truck, but it is enough to be the deciding factor between two good trucks.
My bad dealership experience started with a very bad GM truck. I can't remember exact order of events, or probably even half of everything that failed, but I'll try to give a quick summary:
- Front left 4wd solenoid failed at 4 years.
- Exhaust hangers rusted out at 5 years, required complete new exhaust, front to back
- Front right 4wd solenoid failed at 6 years. Dealer repair, failed to tighten all steering linkage taper pin castle nuts upon reassembly, and I caught it only because truck started "wandering" across the highway due to slop, on way home. Scariest automotive "non-event" of my life, I'd have surely died if I hadn't pulled over when I did, as the steering link between two front wheels fell off as soon as I stopped.
- Clutch failed at 6 years, dealer didn't replace pilot bearing, but must have damaged it trying to.
- Front diff started leaking at driveshaft input, dealer replaced seal with wrong size. All fluid leaked out and coated underside of truck, I caught it when truck started smoking from gear oil on exhaust. Seal ID must have been 1/2 inch larger than driveshaft input hub... the gear oil must've been pouring out on the mechanic's head as he tried to fill it.
- Clutch failed second time at 7 years. You guessed it... bad pilot bearing.
- Brake lines rusted thru and failed at 9 years... and then again at 11 years... two different areas
- Plastic hydraulic line between master and slave clutch cylinders cracked, most expensive piece of plastic ever made.
- Both slave and master cylinders on clutch failed inside first 10 years, don't remember exactly when, or what order
- Check engine light came on, and truck started running rough. Took to dealer 1, they charged me something like $1500, and problem came back within 24 hours. Took 3 more times to dealer 1, before giving up and switching to dealer 2, who charged me another $1700 and never fixed the problem. Repeated with dealer 3, same result. Eventually took to a local (non-dealer / non-GM) garage, who spent a day or three debugging, before finding and fixing the problem. I can't remember total cost, but it was in neighborhood of $5k between four shops, which would inflate to about $10k today.
So let me ask you... after that experience, would you ever buy another GM? I'm sure they've improved, but I'm just not sure I could ever enjoy or be comfortable driving one of their products, ever again.
Why? I know they have huge advantages in some applications, but can you explain how I'd actually benefit from the higher cost, given the usage profile I've laid out?
Let's pretend that's true. It's not, but let's pretend.
Now... all things equal, why would I want to pay $10k more for a diesel, on a truck that will probably never see more than 50k miles in its lifetime, and does maybe 100 miles per year hauling a 7k# trailer?
You sound like the kind of guy who thinks everyone needs a dump truck, to move a sandbox.
I do drag race... or I did, for most of my life.
Agreed with you, on all of this. But I'm not running a city maintenance operation, I'm buying a truck to drive to the airport when it snows, haul 1500# racing boat trailers on weekend, and pull my 7k# firewood trailer a half dozen times per year to a local farm where I harvest wood.
That's not me! Although I'll usually acknowledge the need to replace a vehicle many months before I get around to actually doing anything about it, the actual research and buy more often than not takes place in a single weekend. I can't even remember the last time I made more than a single dealership visit, in the process of buying a vehicle.
That's pretty cool, and something I might have entertained at a different point in my life. But these days, the time I'd sink into that is honestly worth more than the price between rebuild vs. new truck, or used vs. new truck. I'm not salaried, so every hour taken away from work is a potentially-billable hour.
No worries, there. I may hate spending money, the result of having grown up cash-poor, but have done well enough the last 20 years to be able to just pay cash for all vehicles. Money isn't a factor in this new truck decision, other than getting good value, and not spending it on something I don't need or want.