- Jun 17, 2001
- 55,420
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- 126
8/3/17
So everytime I'm finally ready to drive up with cash the vans get sold first. I'm off to do this once again tomorrow, unless the van is sold first.
This time the van in question is a 2003 E-350 v10. Will I regret the fuel economy of the v10 over a v8? This won't be a daily driver and I'm really doing this in anticipation of buying a trailer in the future. A v8 would be sufficient for my cargo trailer needs, but might be under powered for a travel trailer.
Decisions decisions...
7/7/17 update
Guys I need your advice: I'm fairly close to buying a 2012 Chevy Express 3500 Passenger van. Based on the feedback from this thread and others, I wanted the passenger van for the rear A/C for dogs. HOWEVER, I have recently found out that the 2012 has rear passenger side curtain airbags. I would need to remove these or disable them from the system in order to build out the back.
So now my options become: buy the passenger van and remove the rear airbags, buy a cargo van and install a rear A/C option, or buy an older passenger van that doesn't have rear airbags (or other related safety enhancements).
Thoughts?
unverified post from some other forum:
6/15/17
So we were about to buy a newer van, but all our money is going to vet bills so we had to scrap that real quick. Any comments on these two vans?
2002 Chevy Express 2500
2000 Chevy Express 3500
OP:
I have never owned a truck, nor have I ever pulled a trailer. Yet I find myself at a point in my life where I need a truck and a trailer regularly.
Use cases:
- Set up info booth at various events, 1-3 canopies + supporting equipment
- Transport dogs (10+ travel kennels after installing some type of ventilation solution; need to transport 10-15 dogs total)
- Long distances (From AZ -> WA possible, maybe even further)
We rented a van for last weekend's event. I accidentally got this van a year ago and said we'd never need something so big. Damn things change quick.
It became rapidly apparent that to transport this many dogs we need a proper multi dog kennel system or consistently sized travel kennel w/tie down; we just have so much stuff that stacking becomes necessary.
While renting makes sense financially, since we can't customize the interior it makes the interior space very inefficient for our purposes. Our choices are now a cargo van or cargo trailer.
What's easier to customize the interior of, a cargo van or cargo trailer?
This is "only" 10 dogs:
//photobucket links removed
So everytime I'm finally ready to drive up with cash the vans get sold first. I'm off to do this once again tomorrow, unless the van is sold first.
This time the van in question is a 2003 E-350 v10. Will I regret the fuel economy of the v10 over a v8? This won't be a daily driver and I'm really doing this in anticipation of buying a trailer in the future. A v8 would be sufficient for my cargo trailer needs, but might be under powered for a travel trailer.
Decisions decisions...
7/7/17 update
Guys I need your advice: I'm fairly close to buying a 2012 Chevy Express 3500 Passenger van. Based on the feedback from this thread and others, I wanted the passenger van for the rear A/C for dogs. HOWEVER, I have recently found out that the 2012 has rear passenger side curtain airbags. I would need to remove these or disable them from the system in order to build out the back.
So now my options become: buy the passenger van and remove the rear airbags, buy a cargo van and install a rear A/C option, or buy an older passenger van that doesn't have rear airbags (or other related safety enhancements).
Thoughts?
unverified post from some other forum:
On the newer Chevy AND TRANSIT passenger vans, per Van Specialties, they run throughout the length of both sides of the vans on the passenger models and can't be worked around safely for top cutting/modification.
6/15/17
So we were about to buy a newer van, but all our money is going to vet bills so we had to scrap that real quick. Any comments on these two vans?
2002 Chevy Express 2500
2000 Chevy Express 3500
OP:
I have never owned a truck, nor have I ever pulled a trailer. Yet I find myself at a point in my life where I need a truck and a trailer regularly.
Use cases:
- Set up info booth at various events, 1-3 canopies + supporting equipment
- Transport dogs (10+ travel kennels after installing some type of ventilation solution; need to transport 10-15 dogs total)
- Long distances (From AZ -> WA possible, maybe even further)
We rented a van for last weekend's event. I accidentally got this van a year ago and said we'd never need something so big. Damn things change quick.
It became rapidly apparent that to transport this many dogs we need a proper multi dog kennel system or consistently sized travel kennel w/tie down; we just have so much stuff that stacking becomes necessary.
While renting makes sense financially, since we can't customize the interior it makes the interior space very inefficient for our purposes. Our choices are now a cargo van or cargo trailer.
What's easier to customize the interior of, a cargo van or cargo trailer?
This is "only" 10 dogs:
//photobucket links removed
Last edited: