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I'm not sure no failures in 76,000 miles over 7 years is anything to really brag about.
I mean... kudos for having a good example of a good truck. But it's not like you've used it hard, you know? |
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Quoted: American company, American made, and American pride GMC View Quote I know I take a lot of pride in the fact that GM was bailed out by my tax dollars. Almost as much pride as the Canadians and Mexicans who build half of GM's fine automobiles take in the company. What do I drive you ask? The most American made truck on the planet. A Toyota Tundra. |
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Piece of shit built by a piece of shit company.
Fuck that piece of shit and anyone who buys one! |
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Currently have an (older, cough) nissan frontier. Been a great truck, but she is long in the tooth, yearswise. Am eyeing up a new tacoma. Buy once, cry twice.
They be spendy... |
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Six sets of wiper blades? Their really skimping on the quality to cut cost whenever they can huh.
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10,000 miles a year and you're impressed it has been good to go?
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Sounds like your Tacoma was a great purchase. Any reason you want a newer vehicle as it sounds like that one has a lot of life left in it. |
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2007 and i'm almost to 200k.
I'm curious if i'm gonna get anything out of it when I ditch it. PreRunner, 4 cyl, 5 speed, 2 wheel drive. I think I'll be lucky to get 5k. No 19k for me. |
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View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes you can thank a union-run Ohio USA company for that. it must have cost a lot of money for toyota to import those truck frames, you'd think shipping costs would kill them. no, someone at Toyota decided to contract the frame manufacturing to a USA-based vendor. they ultimately selected a "industry tier 1" UAW-run company, Dana Corp in Ohio. you know, to give good jobs to skilled US laborers, and stuff. while manufacturing hundreds of thousands of truck frames for Toyota, Dana skipped the sort-of-important step of cleaning machining oil off of the frames before immersing them in the rust-preventative bath. the machining oil not only compromised adhesion to the frame, but also "poisoned" the bath -- as the day wore on the bath became more and more contaminated. so, some frames got "marginal" rust prevention, and others got "shit" rust prevention. match up the "shit" rust preventative coated frames with northern states who apply tons of road salt during the winter, and you got yourself a giant corrosion problem. Dana paid Toyota US$25M for their screw up, but Toyota has paid out far, far, far more than that over the past 5 years -- eating the frame warranty cost and buy back tons of trucks due to their supplier screw-up. please, someone find me an example of GM and/or Ford doing this. depending on (a) the model year of the vehicle, and (b) the severity of the corrosion, as determined by the dealer tech using a set of written guidelines provided by Toyota corporate, there are three possible outcomes: 1) due to lack of corrosion, nothing needs to be done. you bring your Tacoma back annually for a free re-inspection. 2) the frame is replaced. this is the case with some model year 2001-2004 Tacoma's. the dealer schedules a date for the repairs, you drop off your truck, the dealer then gives you a loaner, does the work, and gives you back your truck with a new frame. 3) the vehicle is scrapped and the owner is reimbursed 1.5 times the KBB value. this is the case with most pre-2001 model year Tacoma's. the dealer gives you a loaner and starts the paperwork to get you paid by Toyota corporate. when you get a check you have to return the loaner. note that for item (3) there is the issue of aftermarket modifications. most dealers have allowed the owners to remove any and all accessories. a number of dealers have stated "you need to be able to drive it onto the lot" –– this has led to quite a bit of used Tacoma parts (seats, grilles, light bezels, etc) becoming available. ar-jedi <-- has 2002 Tacoma, lives in snow belt, no rust issue. ar-jedi http://www.autoblog.com/2011/01/18/report-dana-coughs-up-25m-to-toyota-over-rusty-tacoma-frames/ Report: Dana coughs up $25M to Toyota over rusty Tacoma frames
When an automaker is forced to issue a recall, the defective part or feature is generally the fault of the automaker or of an OEM supplier it contracted to. In the case of the Toyota Tacoma – part of a 110,000-unit recall in 2009 – the problem appears to have been traced back to the supplier. And now the supplier is forced to pay for its mistakes. The company in question, according to reports, is Dana, the Ohio-based OEM contractor supplying (among other components) axles and driveshafts for automobiles, commercial trucks and heavy equipment. In this case, it supplied the frames for the Tacoma pickup which were found to rust when exposed to road salt. Although in 2010 Dana sold the plant that manufactures the frame to Mexican conglomerate Grupo Porza's Metalsa subsidiary, since the component in question was built prior to the sale (from 1995 to 2000), Dana has reportedly been forced to shell out $25 million to Toyota over the issue. http://www.autoblog.com/2008/03/07/toyota-extends-rust-warranty-on-older-tacoma-pickups-to-15-years/ Toyota had begun receiving a few reports from customers that excessive corrosion was occurring on the frames of some older Tacoma pickups, specifically 1995 to 2000 models. The Japanese automaker determined that during this half decade of production, some Taco frames may not have received the kind of corrosion protection from the factory that's needed to withstand harsh climes, especially ones where salt is used to deice roadways. While there is no recall and Toyota says that the number of instances where it has found rust go beyond the surface of the frame to penetrate the metal is small, the automaker is pulling an unorthodox move and doing something about anyway. Toyota is extending the rust perforation warranty on all 1995-2000 Tacoma pickups, some 813,000 units, to 15 years from the original date of purchase, AND you don't have to be the original owner, or the second or the third even. Anyone who owns a Tacoma from this era and finds rust perforation on the frame can have his or her truck officially inspected for rust damage, in which case Toyota will either repair or buy back the truck regardless of its condition. Owners will start receiving letters by mid-March, and those who don't can visit a dealership for a free inspection. |
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I bought a new sienna this afternoon and while at the dealership I noticed outside the service garage 2 pallets of brand new frames totalling 10 frames. I don't know if they were 4runner, sequoia, Tacoma, or tundra but obviously they're still dealing with a lot of rotted out frames.
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2006
182K Front pads at 100K (still had 1/3) Rear shoes still going Right front wheel bearing at 182K Plugs 110K 3 sets tires 3 batteries Oil changes @ 12K Mobil 1 filter at 6K |
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Quoted:
unless he's using it to haul farm equipment around, that's about the most gently-used pickup i've ever seen. 10k a year? View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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10,000 miles a year and you're impressed it has been good to go? unless he's using it to haul farm equipment around, that's about the most gently-used pickup i've ever seen. 10k a year? Leave it to GD to miss the point of the thread. How many other brand trucks can you drive for seven and a half years and get so much of your money back. I got it for $29500 and they are giving me $17000 back. That's what I was trying to convey. |
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Quoted:
Sounds like your Tacoma was a great purchase. Any reason you want a newer vehicle as it sounds like that one has a lot of life left in it. View Quote Just ready for something new. I already have a 1970 Chevy short bed truck if I need to haul something. Thinking about getting something sporty. Something with stick shift. |
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Quoted:
Leave it to GD to miss the point of the thread. How many other brand trucks can you drive for seven and a half years and get so much of your money back. I got it for $29500 and they are giving me $17000 back. That's what I was trying to convey. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
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10,000 miles a year and you're impressed it has been good to go? unless he's using it to haul farm equipment around, that's about the most gently-used pickup i've ever seen. 10k a year? Leave it to GD to miss the point of the thread. How many other brand trucks can you drive for seven and a half years and get so much of your money back. I got it for $29500 and they are giving me $17000 back. That's what I was trying to convey. Used truck prices off ridiculous right now, just about any used truck is worth way more than it should be. |
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1998 Tahoe here. 355,000 miles and still going on all the original drive train.
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96 Tacoma here 310,000
No major problems yet Also have a 2010 tundra 120,000 problem free miles also 67 firebird is broke down as often as its running, but on its 4th engine and who knows how many miles |
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I have just under 80K miles on my 2003, should be more but I always have two vehicles
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2012 with 92,xxx.
It's about time for breaks and new air filters. That's it. I have replaced tires and wiper blades. Oh, and floor matts. |
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All trucks have a high resale right now, check the top ten list. It's supply and demand, same reason you paid so much for that in 2007, it fills a small 4x4 niche with the wrangler.
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Quoted: Leave it to GD to miss the point of the thread. How many other brand trucks can you drive for seven and a half years and get so much of your money back. I got it for $29500 and they are giving me $17000 back. That's what I was trying to convey. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Quoted: 10,000 miles a year and you're impressed it has been good to go? unless he's using it to haul farm equipment around, that's about the most gently-used pickup i've ever seen. 10k a year? Leave it to GD to miss the point of the thread. How many other brand trucks can you drive for seven and a half years and get so much of your money back. I got it for $29500 and they are giving me $17000 back. That's what I was trying to convey. |
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Shitty trucks don't have fucking wars named after them
ITT: Butthurt Dakota/Ranger/Canyon/Frontier owners knowing their truck isn't worth shit while Taco owners laugh. |
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My company truck is a 2013 f150 4x4, in a year and a half I have put 100,000 miles on it. The only thing I have had is 1 set of brakes and 1 set of tires.
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I recently lost my 11 year old, 4 cylinder Tacoma to a crash. Insurance gave me almost 13k for it.
If it had been a Dakota, they would have said "Yeah, our client killed your truck. You're welcome!" Quoted:
Shitty trucks don't have fucking wars named after them ITT: Butthurt Dakota/Ranger/Canyon/Frontier owners knowing their truck isn't worth shit while Taco owners laugh. View Quote Belligerents: GUNT, FAP Oh Africa, don't you ever change |
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Quoted:
Belligerents: GUNT, FAP Oh Africa, don't you ever change View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
Shitty trucks don't have fucking wars named after them ITT: Butthurt Dakota/Ranger/Canyon/Frontier owners knowing their truck isn't worth shit while Taco owners laugh. Belligerents: GUNT, FAP Oh Africa, don't you ever change Asia does it with more cougarness. |
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I am happy for you that your gently used little truck didn't give you any big problems.
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Japanese simply build better cars/trucks. I used to drive American but got tired of working on the junk all the time. I finally bought a Honda accord and been driving it for years with no major problems. A lot of Hondas and Toyotas are built here in America by non union workers. Most American cars are now built in mexico. I will never own another "American" car in my life the Japs do it better right here in America.
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Quoted:
Japanese simply build better cars/trucks. I used to drive American but got tired of working on the junk all the time. I finally bought a Honda accord and been driving it for years with no major problems. A lot of Hondas and Toyotas are built here in America by non union workers. Most American cars are now built in mexico. I will never own another "American" car in my life the Japs do it better right here in America. View Quote Like you i only owned "american" cars. now after working for acura for 11 years i only drive honda/toyota/nissan products. everything else on the road is garbage compared to them. once you own japanese you will not buy anything else. |
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Quoted:
Leave it to GD to miss the point of the thread. How many other brand trucks can you drive for seven and a half years and get so much of your money back. I got it for $29500 and they are giving me $17000 back. That's what I was trying to convey. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted:
Quoted:
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10,000 miles a year and you're impressed it has been good to go? unless he's using it to haul farm equipment around, that's about the most gently-used pickup i've ever seen. 10k a year? Leave it to GD to miss the point of the thread. How many other brand trucks can you drive for seven and a half years and get so much of your money back. I got it for $29500 and they are giving me $17000 back. That's what I was trying to convey. Some of us got it. |
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I love Tacos.
For less than 3k you can mod one with a high end 3" lift, air lockers, and have money left over for a topper. It's probably going to be my next Overlander project, once the new trucks become more available. |
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I've been looking for a decent beater truck. Something not beat to death but not so nice I'd get excited if it got a ding or a scratch. Found a nice truck at a "get it off the lot" price that I grabbed. Truck prices are high as hell, at least around here. Not unusual to see decent 10 year old, 4 door, 4WD trucks with double the mileage of yours for the same or more money.
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93K miles on my 2010 Chevy Silverado with no problems except for a factory recall for a bad throttle position sensor, which was a 20 minute repair. My other three Chevy and one GMC truck were reliable too, and I plowed snow commercially with two of them. I'm glad the OP is happy with his little Japanese truck.
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I get the same BS letters from Nissan. Dealer would love to fuck you over on a new Tacoma or really fuck you over on a big shiny Tundra.
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Quoted:
They are super low maintenance and the resale value is great. I bought this new from the dealer in February 2008. I've had 76000 trouble free miles. 1 Set of tires. 1 Set of spark plugs. 2 Batteries 3 Air filters 1 Set of front brake pads 6 Pairs of wiper blades 15 Oil changes No mechanical failures No Service Engine Light Almost forgot driver side brake light bulb. Texas Direct Auto gave me an offer today. Not trade-in but cash offer. I'm sure I could easily get 19K from an individual. http://i59.tinypic.com/eu38z4.jpg http://i57.tinypic.com/t7em1l.jpg View Quote Love it, without the cab though, to accommodate a surfboard & motorcycle but it's really pricey. I originally went for a Ford F150 but the gas mileage sucked and trouble with California smog requirements. I almost broke down for a Nissan Frontier but I'm going to save my pennies for a Takoma. |
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