One 2018 F150 will drive the same as another one if configured the same, in theory. So go drive what you're looking at somewhere and if you like it and the whole Carvana model buy it. Return it if you don't like it. Just saw an empty Carvana transporter heading out of town the other day likely back to home base Tempe. The reviews don't seem any better or worse that you'd expect of dealer reviews. FWIW Scotty K doesn't like it, probably because they don't sell 15 year old Corollas.
From Wiki: (doesn't sound like a car dealer shill operation)
Quote
Carvana was founded by Ernest Garcia III, Ryan Keeton and Ben Huston in 2012 as a subsidiary of used car retailer and finance company DriveTime and was spun off in 2014.[2] It operates as an online-only used car dealer that allows customers to shop, finance, and sell or trade-in cars through their website.[3][4][5] Headquartered in Tempe, Arizona, Carvana gives customers the option of having their purchased vehicles delivered to them or they can choose to pick them up at one of the company's 18 car vending machines.[4] Each car comes with a 7-Day "Test Own" return policy which allows customers to return the vehicle for any reason within 7 days of the purchase date.[6]
In November 2013, Carvana opened its first iteration of a car vending machine. In 2015, a fully automated, coin-operated version of the signature car vending machine opened in Nashville, Tennessee.[7]
In April 2017, the company went public and began trading on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol CVNA.[8] The Arizona-based company has been called the "Amazon of Auto" after selling a record 94,108 used vehicles online in 2018, more than twice its sales from the previous year. Carvana posted 2018 annual revenue of nearly $2 billion, up from $859 million in 2017.[9] In 2018, it was the fastest growing automotive retailer in the country.[10]
I'm going to go see this thing someday.