My point is that it's a mechanical defect (known mechanical defect) that Toyota CHOSE not to address because they could. The morally pure Toyota that advocates fantasize about would have addressed this, they didn't because that company doesn't exist, it's a fictional construct.
But the owners are still hung out to dry with the same engines, prone to the same failure, yet again underscoring that this isn't some moralistic endeavor by Toyota, driven by some social conscious, but rather one tied to the implications of an NHTSA safety recall, which ties into your argument with
@edyvw.
Right, the 2024+ engines are failing for a completely different reason than the 2022/2023 engines, and to assume that they might just be affected by the same issue is obscene and borders on slanderous!
https://www.tundras.com/threads/tundra-engine-failure-analysis.161753/
The charts there, in that thread, show 7 examples of blown 2024 MY engines, which, while less than the 25 2023 MY engines, is still significant.
And there it is, like Trudeau's Crying Tour, the assurances that Toyota will always endeavor to "do the right thing©" and this would have nothing to do with it being an NHTSA mandated safety issue.