Ok folks, I'm going to the braintrust to help me think this through.
My truck, 2019 Chevy Colorado, diesel, long bed, 4x4 Z71, got in an accident a couple weeks ago. Unfortunately, the frame got bent a bit, and the insurance company is talking about totalling it, though it is a really marginal case where it probably could be repaired, but the salvage value is too high, so they probably won't fix it. Yeah, it'll probably end up fixed on the cheap and driving in Mexico in a few weeks. I'm SOL.
So, insurance co. will need to write me a big check. I need a truck, and I'm really partial to the Chevy/GMC mid size twins. Suburban life makes driving a full size a chore. I'm a GM guy. Changing that isn't happening. I know their faults well, which usually keeps me ahead of problems. Getting a new $50k truck isn't happening. I might be tempted if there was free money (0% loans) floating around, but those days are gone for now.
First. Convince me I really don't need the diesel again. It was cool. It was fun. It was (very) slow. It hauled loads really well, but at most I tow a 5,000# trailer a few times per year (but it is in the mountains), though I do carry close to a max payload weight fairly often. They're hard to find too, so it would limit my choices. I never ended up putting the miles on it I planned to, mostly because of COVID, so it was 57,000 miles in 4 years. Diesel got more expensive, and still is. I know all the rational reasons not to get the diesel. Tell me again...
Needs to be 4x4. Not optional. There are a few times per year I'd be stuck without it, and even driving in heavy rain in SoCal, 4x4 is very helpful in an unloaded pickup.
Do I get something older (~2019)/higher miles (50-70K) for low to mid 30k's range, or something a bit newer (2021) with <20K miles (and better warranty), for upper 30k's? There are some features that make me not want to go older than 2019. Is it worth around $5K savings for the higher mileage/older vehicle? My fear going with an older one is that I know GM products tend to go through a few more expensive (but readily fixable) problems once they get to 80-100K miles. An extra 40K+ miles wear and tear on truck suspension isn't insignificant either. I'm leaning towards newer...does that make sense (given all the other limitations I've put on this...)?
My truck, 2019 Chevy Colorado, diesel, long bed, 4x4 Z71, got in an accident a couple weeks ago. Unfortunately, the frame got bent a bit, and the insurance company is talking about totalling it, though it is a really marginal case where it probably could be repaired, but the salvage value is too high, so they probably won't fix it. Yeah, it'll probably end up fixed on the cheap and driving in Mexico in a few weeks. I'm SOL.
So, insurance co. will need to write me a big check. I need a truck, and I'm really partial to the Chevy/GMC mid size twins. Suburban life makes driving a full size a chore. I'm a GM guy. Changing that isn't happening. I know their faults well, which usually keeps me ahead of problems. Getting a new $50k truck isn't happening. I might be tempted if there was free money (0% loans) floating around, but those days are gone for now.
First. Convince me I really don't need the diesel again. It was cool. It was fun. It was (very) slow. It hauled loads really well, but at most I tow a 5,000# trailer a few times per year (but it is in the mountains), though I do carry close to a max payload weight fairly often. They're hard to find too, so it would limit my choices. I never ended up putting the miles on it I planned to, mostly because of COVID, so it was 57,000 miles in 4 years. Diesel got more expensive, and still is. I know all the rational reasons not to get the diesel. Tell me again...
Needs to be 4x4. Not optional. There are a few times per year I'd be stuck without it, and even driving in heavy rain in SoCal, 4x4 is very helpful in an unloaded pickup.
Do I get something older (~2019)/higher miles (50-70K) for low to mid 30k's range, or something a bit newer (2021) with <20K miles (and better warranty), for upper 30k's? There are some features that make me not want to go older than 2019. Is it worth around $5K savings for the higher mileage/older vehicle? My fear going with an older one is that I know GM products tend to go through a few more expensive (but readily fixable) problems once they get to 80-100K miles. An extra 40K+ miles wear and tear on truck suspension isn't insignificant either. I'm leaning towards newer...does that make sense (given all the other limitations I've put on this...)?
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