Current Ontario Rebates
#1
Current Ontario Rebates
Rebates
Hey Ontario Rangers,
Any thoughts on wether it's better to go with the 4x2 Sport or 4x4 Sport with the recent rebates being offered? I'll be using this as my primary vehicle, and our winters can be brutal. Didn't get a lot of usage from the 4x4 on my old Jeep Wrangler except with 4x4 at high speeds. It's an extra $5,000 or so for the 4x4. What do you guys think?
Hey Ontario Rangers,
Any thoughts on wether it's better to go with the 4x2 Sport or 4x4 Sport with the recent rebates being offered? I'll be using this as my primary vehicle, and our winters can be brutal. Didn't get a lot of usage from the 4x4 on my old Jeep Wrangler except with 4x4 at high speeds. It's an extra $5,000 or so for the 4x4. What do you guys think?
#4
#5
Good decision. 4x2 in the snow or on ice can be brutal - you'll be glad you have 4x4. The added cost pays for itself; higher resale value and safety wise, and the 4x4 system has been around so long that it's very reliable - no problems with mine, with 450,000 km just turned over on the clock.
#7
Up to you - I think it's worth the money; upgraded parts (e.g. heavy duty shocks, skid plates - which offer more protection - that front skid plate, though a pain in the *** to take off, offers protection from rocks thrown up off the road, whether on a highway or off-road - a stone or rock through the condenser or rad or oil cooler can be an expensive proposition, and I personally know of people who have had that happen just driving down the street).
As to not going off-road much, I think it's better to have the increased capability, even if you don't/won't use it much - again, the value added will be retained at resale time, even if that's well down the road.
There are people who lift their trucks, with big off-road tires, the whole package, and never take them down a dirt road, and others who lower them, soup them up and make them look like street racers, and never "race" them, and that's all ok - it's up to them.
From my point of view, it's all "value-added" - put something "more" into your truck, and it's "worth" more, even if it's only to you, or for your own personal satisfaction.
As to not going off-road much, I think it's better to have the increased capability, even if you don't/won't use it much - again, the value added will be retained at resale time, even if that's well down the road.
There are people who lift their trucks, with big off-road tires, the whole package, and never take them down a dirt road, and others who lower them, soup them up and make them look like street racers, and never "race" them, and that's all ok - it's up to them.
From my point of view, it's all "value-added" - put something "more" into your truck, and it's "worth" more, even if it's only to you, or for your own personal satisfaction.
#8
#10
May be so, but 4x4 is always useful in the snow, whether in Toronto or anywhere else - even if not necessarily "necessary".
FWIW, I've had cars with rear wheel drive, front wheel drive, full time 4 WD, and 4 WD; have driven them all in Toronto winters, and the 4WD is the best in the snow, front wheel drive next best, and rear wheel drive the worst.
Yes, you can get by without 4wd, and as I told the OP, it's really up to him. For my money, it's worth it.
#11
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