2019 Toyota Tundra SR5 Double Cab 4×4
Class: Large Pickup
Miles Driven: 633
Fuel Used: 46.1 gallons
Real-world fuel economy: 13.7 mpg
Driving mix: 25% city, 75% highway
EPA-estimated fuel economy: 13/17/14 (city, highway, combined)
CG Report Card | |
---|---|
Room and Comfort | B |
Power and Performance | B |
Fit and Finish | B- |
Fuel Economy | C- |
Value | B- |
Report-card grades are derived from a consensus of test-driver evaluations. All grades are versus other vehicles in the same class. Value grade is for specific trim level evaluated, and may not reflect Consumer Guide's impressions of the entire model lineup. | |
Big & Tall Comfort | |
Big Guy | A |
Tall Guy | A |
Big & Tall comfort ratings are for front seats only. "Big" rating based on male tester weighing approximately 350 pounds, "Tall" rating based on 6'6"-tall male tester. |
Fuel type: Regular gasoline
Base price: $37,540 (not including $1395 destination charge)
Options on test car: Entune premium audio with navigation ($525), running boards ($345), TRD Sport Package ($3355), SR5 Upgrade Package ($945), TRD Sport Convenience Package ($1000)
Price as tested: $45,105
Quick Hits
The great: Cabin-storage space
The good: Power
The not so good: Ride, fuel economy, visibility, lacking some modern features
More Tundra price and availability information
Rick Cotta
In the world of pickups, you’re either Chevrolet, Ford, GMC, or Ram … or you’re eating their dust. And that’s not a position in which Toyota is used to being.
But Toyota’s Tundra full-size pickup, introduced for the 2000 model year, has yet to really gain a foothold in what has become one of the American manufacturers’ last bastion of sales superiority. Which perhaps explains why it hasn’t received updates at the pace its U.S. counterparts have enjoyed.
In fact, over two decades of production, it has really only been redesigned once: way back in 2007. Meanwhile, its rivals — including the even slower-selling Nissan Titan — have all been redesigned within the past four years. If you’re keeping count (and we’re betting Toyota is), Ford sells nearly nine F-150s for every Tundra that rolls off the lot.
Last year we tested a very similar 2018 Toyota Tundra SR5 Double Cab, so we invite you to read that report for more details. Here we’ll touch on what’s new and different about this 2019 version, along with some of its finer details.
Test Drive: 2018 Ford F-150 SuperCrew Platinum
Topping the “news” chart for 2019 is that Toyota’s Safety Sense-P (TSS-P) suite of safety features is standard on all Tundras. This includes forward collision warning and mitigation with pedestrian detection, lane-departure warning, adaptive cruise control, and automatic high beams. Included in our tester’s $1000 TRD Sport Convenience Package (seems “Safety Package” would be more apropos) were blind-spot and rear-cross-traffic alert along with front and rear obstacle detection. With that, the Tundra’s safety features are at least up to date.
Other things are perhaps less so. All four American makes offer full-time 4WD — which can remain engaged on dry pavement for convenience sake — but Tundra only offers a part-time system — which should not. Also, Tundra’s maximum towing capacity of 10,200 lbs. and payload of 1730 lbs. significantly trail those of some rivals.
So does fuel economy. All Tundras save for the base SR come standard — and only — with a 381-horsepower 5.7-liter V8 tied to a 6-speed automatic. (The SR gets a 4.6-liter V8.) While powerful and responsive, the combination
falls short in terms of fuel economy, with most rivals offering smaller V6s or turbocharged engines with more transmission ratios. EPA ratings for a 2-wheel-drive Tundra with the 5.7 come in at 13 city/18 highway/15 combined; all its domestic rivals offer powertrains that beat those by at least 5-7 mpg.
Although they’re waning in popularity, Tundra is the only full-size pickup that doesn’t offer a regular-cab body style; just the Double Cab (extended cab) tested and the Crew Max crew cab. And though the Double Cab can be had with our tester’s 6.5-foot bed or an 8.1-foot bed, the Crew Max comes only with a 5.5-foot box.
First Spin: 2019 Chevrolet Silverado
Another area in which the Tundra falls a bit short is in ride quality. The king here is the Ram 1500 — with its exclusive coil-spring rear suspension — but some others aren’t far behind. Granted, our tester was fitted with the TRD Sport Package — which replaces the standard 18-inch wheels with 20s and includes “sport tuned” anti-sway bars and Bilstein shocks — but it hopped over bumps and you could feel more of the pickup-typical frame reverberation than is evident in most competitors.
That may all make the Tundra sound like an “also ran,” but it really isn’t; you just have to want the comparatively limited choices it offers.
Test Drive: 2019 Nissan Titan Platinum Reserve
For instance, yes, it doesn’t get great fuel economy, but that big 5.7-liter V8 sure puts out the power. Despite a fair amount of wheelspin from a full-throttle launch, our tester averaged 6.8 seconds in the 0-60 sprint, and the transmission provides quick kickdowns when the throttle is stabbed at speed. Also, the SR5 Upgrade Package includes a 38-gallon fuel tank (in place of the SR5’s stock 26.4-gallon one), which gets you back some of the driving range the fuel economy sacrifices.
And yes, it may not have terrific tow/haul ratings, but how many folks need more than the roughly 1500 lbs. of payload and 9900 lbs. of towing capacity our Double Cab 4×4 offers?
Keeping in mind that the tested SR5 is just one grade up from the “workaholic” SR, its interior furnishings didn’t look cut-rate. Yes, the dashboard was all hard plastic, but the door tops and armrests — the real “touch points” — were padded, and the trim looked quite nice. Our tester’s $945 SR5 Upgrade Package included front bucket seats to replace the standard bench, and that brought a power driver seat with lumbar adjustment (nice), along with a huge console box and numerous other storage cubbies.
As other full-size pickups have gained a lot in their recent redesigns, the Tundra is showing its age. But it still offers a lot for the money … along with the reliability and resale value long associated with the Toyota name.
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2019 Toyota Tundra SR5 Double Cab