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The front and rear suspension of the Bronco uses coil springs for better ride, handling and control than the Tacoma, which uses leaf springs in the rear. Coil springs compress more progressively and offer more suspension travel for a smoother ride with less bottoming out.
The Bronco has vehicle speed sensitive variable-assist power steering, for low-effort parking, better control at highway speeds and during hard cornering, and a better feel of the road. The Tacoma doesn’t offer variable-assist power steering.
The Bronco’s drift compensation steering can automatically compensate for road conditions which would cause the vehicle to drift from side to side, helping the driver to keep the vehicle straight more easily. The Tacoma doesn’t offer drift compensation steering.
For better handling and stability, the average track (width between the wheels) on the Bronco is 1.6 inches wider in the front and 1.7 inches wider in the rear than the average track on the Tacoma.
For better maneuverability, the Bronco 2-Door’s turning circle is 6.7 feet tighter than the Tacoma XtraCab’s (35.5 feet vs. 42.2 feet). The Bronco 4-Door Sasquatch’s turning circle is 8.3 feet tighter than the Tacoma 6-ft. bed Double Cab TRD Sport/Off-Road’s (39.9 feet vs. 48.2 feet).