My LJ is going to try to pretend to be a truck if my upcoming elk hunting trip is successful... I'd happily take a taco.
My LJ is going to try to pretend to be a truck if my upcoming elk hunting trip is successful... I'd happily take a taco.
I've been keeping an eye out for a truck the past few months. As much as I love my Jeep, I'm not driving that thing 8 hours to and from school a few times a year for the next 3 years. I've been mainly looking at first gen Tacomas, but holy shit are they expensive. Who is paying $12k for a truck with 300k miles on it?
Have Taco prices been pretty consistent like this for the past few years or are they like TJ prices and just gone nuts the past 2 years or so?
For what it's worth I bought a one owner 2004 Taco TRD , ( 206 c.i.d. V-6 and a 5 spd. manual ) in 2015 for 13,400 with 114000 miles on it.
It has been a great baby truck , and has much more highway performance than my TJ. I just check mileage today and with non ethanol gas it has been getting 24.24 mpg. in mountain commuting and 20% highway. About 1500 lbs is all I can haul comfortably. The freaking Toyotas hold their value , however it seems to be a great baby truck for my application. Good luck in your search.
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my 99 tacoma trd 4x4 has been a good car for 260k miles. I just pulled it out of the bushes after sitting for 5 years and it fired right up.thinking about selling it for 8k
I say car because the front ends are weak and prone to snapping wheels off.tow trucks used to have a fixture for when,not if that happened to the poorly designed tacoma/tundra front ends.
They need alignments and parts regularly if actually used offroad much.they barely haul any weight while getting good mileage.
Yeah I've definitely come to realize that a TJ is a great second car. Far from the worst DD, but also far from the best. Did a 14er this weekend with some friends and we were planning on taking my car and then realized that there was absolutely no way we were going to fit the 4 of us with gear in there. So we took my buddy's XJ instead and even that was pretty cramped. Taco won't be much better as far as leg room goes but at least I can fit a few packs in there.
Off road the Taco is a very poor substitute for the TJ. The IFS makes me puke a little in my mouth , fragile and next to no articulation.
Is there anything like chro-mo axle shafts for them? I have zero experience with IFS so I'm not super familiar with how to beef them up.
Off road the Taco is a very poor substitute for the TJ. The IFS makes me puke a little in my mouth , fragile and next to no articulation.
The lower balljoint tries to pull apart under weight,not compress like most designs. The rack and pinion isn't very robust.
They really are a nice drive on the highway if their ergonomics happen to suit your body, and are a good fit on narrow driveways and forest roads. For extra weight carrying i put an extra leaf in the packs.
I have a hard time buying the toyota tax just to own one though. They are overpriced like jeeps.
My previous minitruck was a ford ranger that hauled more,wheeled better,jumped further and higher and had more power.
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Just dealt with the toyota tax on this high mileage beater. I am fairly impressed with how well it drives for 230k miles.
4th gen 4runners are solid. We sold a 2004 2wd with 240k to buy our 2010 4wd 5th gen and I wish we'd just bought a newer, lower mileage 4th.
My LJ is going to try to pretend to be a truck if my upcoming elk hunting trip is successful... I'd happily take a taco.
Yeah I've definitely come to realize that a TJ is a great second car. Far from the worst DD, but also far from the best.
Well, I always knew I wasn’t like other people. I ain’t a kid and the ‘98 TJ has been a DD since we bought it in 2002.Most people dont daily an old Jeep unless your a kid
Well, I always knew I wasn’t like other people. I ain’t a kid and the ‘98 TJ has been a DD since we bought it in 2002.
I used to live in Virginia where they have personal property tax on vehicles, and one year the tax on my Tacoma went up. I checked the tax rate and it was the same. They were applying that rate to a higher vehicle value than the previous year. So I called to report the error and they assured me that the Tacoma had actually gone UP in value, year to year. I couldn’t believe it! But that’s Toyota trucks for you.
That's easy. A long time ago I and a buddy folded a 5 point bull onto the back of a three wheeler. It hauled both of us and the elk out of the mountains but the step climbs were pretty squirrrrrely.My LJ is going to try to pretend to be a truck if my upcoming elk hunting trip is successful... I'd happily take a taco.
