Big pickup trucks have one clear advantage over all other vehicles
- Full-size pickup trucks can combine hauling capacity with ample seating.
- They can also deliver these advantages while delivering cruising comfort.
- The main drawback is that the truck bed is exposed to elements.
Everybody knows that pickup trucks have a killer feature: the truck bed.
Other types of vehicles can be more practical for everyday use, but pickups come in pretty handy when you need to move house, engage in some heavy home improvement, serious gardening, or simply to move around everything from mountain bikes to kayaks.
For just this reason, a lot of folks keep around a smaller pickup as a sort of weekend vehicle. But there are times when choosing a full-size pickup makes sense.
Full-size pickups rule the US auto market. Ford, General Motors (with its Chevy and GMC brands), and Fiat Chrysler's RAM sell millions of big pickups annually. They're quite popular, and quite profitable. But they're usually favored by people who have serious use-cases.
People like farmers, ranchers, and contractors. They demand hauling capacity, towing credibility, and legitimate offroad chops from their pickups.
Every once in a while, a citizen such as myself gets to appreciate the virtues of a full-size pickup. This happened recently when I had to carry four kids and their gear back from summer sleepaway camp. I've driven plenty of full-size pickups, but I hadn't previously thrown this challenge at one. My chariot was a Toyota Tundra.
Here's what happened: