http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com/2012/10/how-cafe-killed-compact-trucks-and-station-wagons/
That is a truly fantastic piece of work. I still hold to my point that the Chicken Tax came first (undeniable, by the dates) and remained a larger actor through most of the intervening years.
BUT that article makes excellent points, and if you read between the lines it only further reinforces my original point that US big business influences government to enact protectionist regulation that benefits their ability to profit from unsustainable models while the rest of world actually advances.
At some point it will come crashing down, and by some point i mean 'remember the auto bankruptcies a few years ago?' The structural regulatory/trade barrier problems havent changed, although the 'domestic' manufacturers have upped their car game enough to possibly survive the almost inevitable next crisis.
Got to imagine it was the chicken tax that let American cars makers just give up on trying to be competitive in the small truck market.
Give up makes it sound like they were reluctant and not the primary drivers of the policy changes that led to it.
Its hard for me to imagine a situation where a Dakota would be too small for me.
I still think the original Dakota (87-96) hit the sweet spot for truck size. My dad has one, ive had one, and will probably have another.
The challenge is that there doesn't seem to be a good market for much smaller trucks. I've looked into them at a few different times, but they always ended up being more expensive for something that was far less useful to me. And when I last looked, the fuel economy of the compact trucks with the V6s wasn't anything to write home about.
All by design, my friend. As the article asks, Cui Bono?
I want something truly small, a Fiesta based truck, a Fiat 500 based truck, a VW Polo based truck. Something that could get 40 miles per gallon on the freeway and park in tiny spaces and still haul 800 lbs.
This is semi-useless since we're talking about new vehicles, but i heard you had rampage experience and i know for a fact you have Omni experience. You can take a 1.7 VW drivetrain from an Omni, put it in a Rampage, and bolt a vw diesel to it. Just sayin!
I'd like to see a much more utilitarian small truck with a base price way way lower than full-size trucks. But given the market in America, they'd never sell them.
Replace "the market" with "the entities and interests that control the market", and you're there.
When manufacturers say that "there is no demand for small pickups," this *IS* intentional on their part.
FTFY
Who has a Zetec our Duratec that will fit my Ranger?
I drove a late model 16v ranger and found it actually semi-entertaining. I think you're on the right track!
Small pickups cost virtually the same amount as full-size and thanks to the advances in fuel mileage on full-size pickups, don't get much better mileage.
What you're describing is the intentional result of ~90/10 split of energy and resources devoted to improving full size trucks vs small trucks. Everything done to a full size truck can be done to a smaller one. The fact that it isn't is due to choices and intentions, nothing accidental or based on the 'freedom' of the market.