It's about time to retire my s10

Ghost Magnum

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I been driving a 2001 chevy S10 for three years.
It ran well for a while. Surprisingly good during the deep freeze. I bought it for next to nothing.
I made a extremely low offer for it. And I was stunned the owner accepted it. That was until I found it needed 800 in repairs to the suspension. The past year. The exhaust now has a leak (it is loud), hard starts, cold stalls, disappearing antifreeze, wiring is a nightmare, driver side tail light doesn't work unless the blinker is on. The worst of all. The AC doesn't work.
My house is almost done. Just got to hang drywall and paint it.
I thinking about buying a left over 2020 colorado or ford ranger. I don't really care about trim level or what engine it has. Just as long as it has 4 wheel drive. Let's just say 4 wheel drive would have been very handy last month.
The payments will take away from my Torino budget.
 
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We drive our vehicles until they "die", become unreliable or get to the point where you are throwing good money after bad. About the only way you can come out ahead. In states that have annual safety inspections unless you do the work yourself a vehicle like yours if is to retire. 20 year old vehicles suspension work can be expensive.
 
Bought new, an 06 Tundra 6cyl SR5 with 72k. It may be retired someday by the family member who gets it after me but so far just oil changes and a free water pump under warranty. The wife a 13 Avalon with 72K, another trouble free vehicle. Hardly any mileage put on either and the virus kept us at home for a year. We are a car salespersons nightmare.
 
I had an S10 for a few years and other than the AC never working right had little problems with it. However had more bad luck with getting the thing almost totaled in a accident Took 5 weeks to get it fixed. Then someone backed in to it in a parking lot. Did you know the bed must be removed to fix a dint in the cab. Then a big hail storm beat the heck out of it. After all that I traded it off. That was 25 years ago and I have never been near a body shop sense.
 
I had an S10 for a few years and other than the AC never working right had little problems with it. However had more bad luck with getting the thing almost totaled in a accident Took 5 weeks to get it fixed. Then someone backed in to it in a parking lot. Did you know the bed must be removed to fix a dint in the cab. Then a big hail storm beat the heck out of it. After all that I traded it off. That was 25 years ago and I have never been near a body shop sense.

Yeah, the S10 is a very good truck. I bought it out of necessity. But now I'm a fan.
 
Bought new, an 06 Tundra 6cyl SR5 with 72k. It may be retired someday by the family member who gets it after me but so far just oil changes and a free water pump under warranty. The wife a 13 Avalon with 72K, another trouble free vehicle. Hardly any mileage put on either and the virus kept us at home for a year. We are a car salespersons nightmare.

Was it the 3.5 V-6? We had a water pump to out on wife's 2015 Sienna Van prior to warranty expiration. They replaced it. Seems some of the pumps on that engine were weak (bearing failure) have a 2016 Camry with the 3.5 V-6 and no problems. Both are great vehicles.
 
I had a 1996 S10 Blazer with Vortec V6 from 1998 to 2020. When I gave it to my son, it had about 240,000 miles and was still running strong. Had to replace the usual maintenance suspects over the years, but it ran strong and was a solid car. I now have a 2003 Tahoe with a Vortec V8. It has 308,000 and it is a solid car and the engine runs like new.
 
I don't know you will be able to find a left over in today's market. Since you are familiar with the s-10 platform, maybe look for a newer, low mileage example.

Both my father, and a friend owned them, and found them reliable thru over 200k each.

Larry
 
I had a take-home G-ride for 25 years, but the unfeeling government wanted the latest one back when I retired. I found this traded-in 2001 2dr 4WD Explorer at an Audi dealership in Denver. I cost about the same as a set of tires for a medium-fancy Audi.

Its at 189K right now. It needed a new fuel pump after a year, then nothing until the radiator began leaking faster than I could fill it up, so it just got a new one. Other than that its just been gas, oil, and brakes.

I only planned to keep it til 200K miles but I think I'll see how long it'll go.
 

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The 4.0 Nissan Frontier is a good bus if you can find one used. They are a sea of plastic inside but it doesn't bother me. I had the 4.0 Xterra and had multiple buy offers for it in the time I owned it. The 4.0 with the 5-speed auto seems to be a solid drivetrain.
 
I been driving a 2001 chevy S10 for three years.
The exhaust now has a leak (it is loud), hard starts, cold stalls, disappearing antifreeze, wiring is a nightmare, driver side tail light doesn't work unless the blinker is on. The worst of all. The AC doesn't work.

It sounds to me like it shouldn't be on the road. Time to find something quickly payments or not before you are left stranded, or pulled over for a safety check.
 
We drive our vehicles until they "die", become unreliable or get to the point where you are throwing good money after bad.

That's why I let the 2008 Mercury Grand Marquis I bought as my very first brand new car go at 238,000 miles. My dealer was trying to find a replacement cable for the instrument panel in advance of any failure and could not find one in the whole country. I took it to the Gettysburg Auto Auction and a dealer from Baltimore came up and bought it.
 
It sounds to me like it shouldn't be on the road. Time to find something quickly payments or not before you are left stranded, or pulled over for a safety check.

Yeah, I know. I'm checking local dealers now. I found a ford dealership that has a left over 2020 ranger for next to nothing. The only thing I absolutely want is 4 wheel drive. But I can't be to picky. I just going to have to shop around.
 
I don't know you will be able to find a left over in today's market. Since you are familiar with the s-10 platform, maybe look for a newer, low mileage example.

Both my father, and a friend owned them, and found them reliable thru over 200k each.

Larry

I found a left over ranger. Not 4 wheel drive though. Can't be to picky.
 
My daily driver is a 2002 Toyota Tundra, v8 trd, 310000+, replaced the timing chain at 175000, oil changes, some 02 sensors,brakes thats about it. Have a 2017 Tundra that I bought when I retired, drove it from TX to LA 4 times the first year I had it, as we were moving. Now it sits in the garage, just turned 18000 miles. I cant stop driving my old truck it runs great. Seats have always been covered, its in pretty good shape. I probably need to get rid of it before stuff start going south, its paid for itself over and over. Wife is constantly telling me to drive new one that isnt new its 4 years old now. I think she is right. It handles better and is way more comfortable. I told her if the old one dies I will walk away and start driving the other.
 

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