So I went looking at trucks again trying to decide what to do, and drove a 2004 ram 3500 5.9HO cummins 4x4 long bed, Gotta say I was impressed with the wya it rode and the power it had. It has 143000 miles on it and seems to be in pretty good shape. Its and AT. Anything I should specifically look at on this year model truck? Im thinking I may just pull the trigger and get this newer truck.
My .02:
It boils down to what you want to "upgrade."
You can take an old truck and put a hot powerplant in it. You still have an old truck, with all of the benefits and hassles thereof. An older truck is cheaper to register/insure, but often lacks creature comforts and such. If your existing rig is comfortable to you and you're okay with the generally higher likelihood of breakage, go that way. (I say "generally higher" as, all else being equal, an older vehicle is more prone to failure than a newer one.) A motor swap might also mean smog hassles to deal with with.
Or you can get a newer truck. In (again, grossly) general terms it will have a better ride, more comfort and/or features than an older truck, and be (again, generally) more reliable. In this scenario you don't have to deal with special emissions hoop-jumping.
I recently went through this with my utility/tow rig, and though my case is admittedly more extreme (I jumped forward 40 years, 1974-2014), I opted to stop putting time and money into the old and get a new truck.
Of course you'll do your research on the new(er) ones to see what motors/trannies to get or to avoid ... but I'd recommend strongly looking at the new vehicle scenario. Might cost a bit more $$ up front, but could save you time and frustration and gain you peace of mind. I'm pleased 'cuz I can now focus my time on keeping one truck running instead of being split between two.
-- A
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No prius for me! Im leaving it stock height for now and just doing the front end work that it needs!