tentspast
Well-Known Member
Long overdue, I think they've nailed the styling... and the interior looks nice too. Surprised they didn't transition to the new chassis used by the global Navara (has a multi-link coil rear end)
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Exactly why Nissan Frontier up until last year sold well in the US market - 72k units in 2019 - in a base version it is priced less than competitors and I'd assume Nissan will continue to aggressively discount from list to promote sales volumes. For a number of people it's a truck that meets their needs and it has proven to be reliable. I ride in one weekly as my golf partner has one, a 2006 and it drives nice, but the interior looks really dated, but so does my 2004 Saab.Personally, I like "dated".
Currently driving an 07 Ranger, I'll likely buy a 2021 Frontier when my Ranger finally caves. All this tech in new vehicles I don't want or want to pay for.
Same 3.8 with different tyranny. Same low Power and low MPGThis engine is brand new as of 2020. The 2020-2021 frontier have the DI 3.8 V6 with a 9 speed auto. I took a 2020 PRO-4X on an extended test drive and I was very unimpressed by the torque of the 3.8. The 9 speed did feel great though. I think the old 4.0 was the better engine. The 3.8 screams up top, but it’s super noisy and feels very Honda Vtec like. Just not an ideal engine for a truck.
Gen 2 Fronties rode rough - that was why the wife nixed them from our shopping list when looking for a truck. They would have to really upgrade the Underpinnings to get it smoothed out.yeah that's my impression - front resembles Chevy, rest is very much Taco. And I would speculate that those 2 makes are the ones that might experience some sales loss to Frontier.
Now the Frontier will likely ride better than Ranger and the Pro variant comes with Bilsteins - that would have been nice for the Ranger FX4 package.
They all look like Tacoma's... from the side. Even the ranger, except for the round wheel wells.The "new" Nissan Tacoma.
Looks EXACTLY like one, IMO. Especially in that gray.
Don't get attached, looks like the next gen decided a big motor and "imposing grill" is more important than visibility.The hood slope on the Ranger is the best innovation in my opinion.....the best near front visibility of the bunch. I thought the Ranger would have a front window droop as its a Ford original. Otherwise, the Pathfinder is pure copycat. I guess if you can't beat 'em, try to join 'em. The Ranger has the most unique, differentiating body style of the bunch.
My brother has about 160,000 on his 3.5 EcoBoost. Bone. Stock.Depends on what qualifies as "good" to you. And in that regard opinions vary wildly.
I'll bet for those truck buyers that place longevity, simplicity and lowest cost to operate as main features, the non-turbo V-6 will be much better than the turbo 4 banger.
Think we can get 17 years and 175,000 trouble free zero maintenance miles (just oil changes and other fluids) from our 2.3 turbo's?
That's what my '02 Tacoma SR5 V-6 TRD 4x4 had on it when we traded it in on our 2019 Ranger. So that's the goal we're shooting for.
Ever been into the shop for anything except oil and fluid changes?My brother has about 160,000 on his 3.5 EcoBoost. Bone. Stock.
What a hot mess that reply is. You bought what you consider to be the worst looking truck on the market.I'm glad to see Nissan in this space. It'll force Ford to continue being competitive.
All these stock trucks from the side look like crap IMO. From the side profile, I think the Ranger looks the worst. I love my Ranger, make no mistake. But getting stingy with the wheel clearances isn't improving my mood at all. From the side profile, I think the Colorado looks toughest.