mrbubbly
Mr.Bubbly
mrbubbly

I feel old that I had to scroll this far to find BT&H.

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Honda doesn’t need to bring the Harmony, BT&H got it covered.

I prefer my Honda 4x4's built by a Japanese company in Malaysia using GM parts.

Well, it came with nice Corinthian leather, if I recall

My German is rusty.

As are most of my other things. 

This has always been a Toyota truck quirk. My buddy has a ‘17 taco in Taliban Tan like yours, same setup. I can drive 80-85mph in my full size GM and beat his fuel economy driving conservatively. But its a tacoma, its pretty awesome.

There you have it, internet. I have fixed the Silverado HD!

I think that’s what he actually has now.  But I feel like the Aztek was a bit roomier.  Could be remembering it wrong. 

The Tesla Model X design looks like what I imagine the 3rd gen Aztek would have been.

I think the avy looks good...

If the interior wasn’t so dated, I’d gladly own one today. In addition to like the design, I think it was one of the most functional trucks ever made. I can’t believe the midgate isn’t a thing on the new short beds, and it pretty much created the crew cab revolution.

The 2nd gen was the

Only the version in the Torrent / Equinox

The Aztek had the right idea, but Buick did the better version.

“It had a horrible engine

What was wrong with the 3400? Those lasted forever and had really good torque off the line. Maybe not so great for track days, but excellent for daily driving duties.

Ohhhh so a Holden Crewman will make a triumphant return, and in America no less? The ultimate utility vehicle. Not a truck, not a sedan, not a CUV but like a bit of everything?

because they have been the no.1 recalled car in the US in about 5 of the last 6 years, and they had to buy back about 1 million trucks and fit another 800,000 because the frames rusted through.

Also had one of those ‘lemon’ 2010 Camrys. Had to have the whole dash pulled to replace the heater core. It was never the same with I’ll fitment, rattles. This was only one of the big issues that car had.  

Because household appliances have more character than a Toyota? The appliances might have better road handling too.

I was part of that camp for many years myself. However, my last Toyota was a 2011 Camry that at 63,000 miles had just had it’s 3rd automatic transmission failure. The 1st was replaced at 33,000 and the 2nd at 44,000. Blown front shocks at 25,000, a faulty VVT actuator at 29,000 and a persistent VSC warning light that

Sounds like you’re describing my Dodge Caravans. With the 3.3 liter engine, they easily go 250,000 miles with no major repairs, just tires and brakes, and that’s while being driven on some of the worst roads and severe climate in the U.S.