Toyota recalls 300,000+ RAV4s and Highlanders

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The 7th gen Corollas (pre '98) and Tercels from the 90s are among the very few cars you see driven here year round (where rust is really bad do to salt air and lots of rain combined with heavy salt on the roads in winter) that aren't rusted out. Whatever problems Toyota had with rust in the 90s, looking at the cars I see on the roads here, its obvious they sorted it out at least by the mid 90s.

Other car companies clearly haven't. The most common 90s (and post 2000 as well, for that matter) "rust buckets" I notice on the road today are Ford Rangers (I don't know why, of the various Ford's I see, this is so peculiar to the Ranger), Pontiac Sunfires, and Chevy Cavaliers. To be fair to GM, though, there are a lot of Sunfires and Cavaliers here, and both were the brand's low end offering (so the "you get what you pay for" argument has merit there, and the fact that ones built before 2000 are still on the road - regardless of the amount of duct tape and number of coat hangers holding them together - suggests they've already long paid for themselves anyway).

As others have said, SUVs like the Rav4, with their low ground clearance and small 4 cylinder engines, are not going to deliver any kind of traditional SUV performance/functionality and its not reasonable to expect them to for those reasons. Just to stick with the Rav4 (although most automakers have an equivalent competing with it), its Toyota's grocery getter for those (often female) who want to sit higher because they feel safer, yet also don't want anything bigger because of the higher sale price and fuel costs. They aren't buying them to offroad.

Not directed against anyone in this thread, but too many SUV buyers seem to think they can have their cake and eat it too for the price (upfront and in fuel costs) of something like a Rav4, in that its peanuts to operate compared to much larger and more powerful traditional SUVs, but common sense should say its obviously not going to much resemble them in any other way than ride height.

Its a joke to think that the small I4s in them, combined with low ground clearance (plus total absence of tougher sport/utility suspensions found in traditional SUVs) and still large frontal surface area (and resulting high cd) is going to make it a dog at anything other than "crossing a florists wet lawn" (the best way its been put) or as a grocery getter.

Toyota, and others, eventually caught on to the fact that the majority of people buying SUVs during their heyday were neither using them for sport or utility purposes, but for the same mundane things like suburban commuting that sedans have always performed - yet when gas prices soared, everyone whined about thirsty on gas traditional SUVs were (duh), yet they still wanted that feeling of safety from the extra size and ride height - and more reasonable fuel economy that was closer to a typical midsize sedan. So the Rav4, and its peers, are the result: its not any kind of "real SUV" (but most SUV buyers would never know it anyway since the only off street duty their SUVs ever see is navigating mall parking lots), nor is it as FE as the same engine in a (much lower cd) sedan - but its close enough to allow SUVs to still maintain some level of popularity in an age where $5/gallon gas is a reality already in parts of Canada (including this part) and coming soon to a pump near you south of the border as well.

-Spyder
 
Originally Posted By: pzev
Its a corolla with a lift kit...nothing more.


That is incorrect, not even close.






















It's a camry with a lift kit.
LOL
 
Originally Posted By: Shannow
shhh, don't mention the head gasket recall (I hate Toyotas IIRC)


Shannon, you forgot to mention the pre-mature water pump failures that are a popular discussion topic on the Rav4 forums.
crackmeup2.gif


http://www.rav4world.com/forums/99-4-3-mechanical/79701-poll-water-pump-failure.html
 
Originally Posted By: doitmyself
Originally Posted By: Shannow
shhh, don't mention the head gasket recall (I hate Toyotas IIRC)


Shannon, you forgot to mention the pre-mature water pump failures that are a popular discussion topic on the Rav4 forums.
crackmeup2.gif


http://www.rav4world.com/forums/99-4-3-mechanical/79701-poll-water-pump-failure.html


I didn't read that entire 8 page thread, but from what I did read of it, it seems the issue is not only often being discovered by Toyota's own service departments during standard servicing, but that its also being fixed under warranty with no apparent hassles.

Shame on Toyota - how dare your own service people discover the problems during routine service, and the nerve of them to be fixing the defect under warranty and with no apparent hassles!
09.gif


-Spyder
 
As a side note on rav4......
There is no reason for a smallish SUV to be this fast.
(speaking of the GR powered new model)
 
Originally Posted By: Shannow
Originally Posted By: PurplePride
Originally Posted By: Shannow
Toyota should recall every 4 cylinder RAV 4 automatic and crush them for not being fit for purpose (unless a florist needs to cross some-one's damp grass or something.


And no doubt you feel the same of Ford, GM, Chrysler when they issue recalls?
Do tell.


C'mon, find a thread where I have bashed Toyota...particularly in any of the unintended acceleration threads...off you go...

Have you ever driven a 4 cyl auto Rav 4 ?

Could never accuse them of even intended acceleration, while they swallow fuel like a fish does water. Handle like aspic, and when called on to do even minor off roading fail.

That's the nature of my beef with the Rav, nothing to do with Toyota, except that they released it.


Just asked a question - seems overly sensitive.
My wife has a 1996 RAV4 2WD, and it's got 180k miles, nothing more than a clutch and batteries and headlamps.
It is a great vehicle, sips gas, and parks in spots 1/2 the size of most vehicles.
Not saying Toyo ois perfect, but my 2006 Scion tC has 85k miles, and nothing thus far sans a new battery which I replaced at 5-years to be preemptive.

YMMV, just don't like bashing of a brand as ALL of them have histories of bad releases, and bad handling of issues.
 
I wasn't bashing ANY brand...I think that you are the one that was being sensitive.

I was bashing the 4 cylinder, 4WD, Auto RAV 4, which I find about the worst modern vehicle that I've ever driven.

Toyota make some great stuff, I'd have my 4Runner back tomorrow, request Prius and Hybrid Camry if I can get them when travelling, and am trying to organise a Hilux as a section vehicle.
 
Would you rather have them recall vehicles and be honest about it, or just do what GM does and deal with each owner as the problem comes up, cover some of them and tell some to go to [censored] because they cant prove their maintenance on the vehicle? I think the fact that they are making it known and fixing it for free is a glimpse of how well they treat the customers, and that through [censored] or high water to keep their customers happy, and the Toyota vehicles on the road properly running..

For the record the rav 4 is a in general bland vehicle marketed to women who like the possibility of going off road, but do mainly city driving. For the record it wouldn't go thought any more mud than my civic.. the only reason it can slightly off road is its ride height. And it's defiantly not the pinnacle of Toyotas lineup
wink.gif
 
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What? With a safety issue defect the automaker has no choice but to recall. Toyota or any other automaker doesn't do recalls just because they are so nice. Rarely does any automaker notify every owner of every potentional repair issue that is a non-safety issue. You can cast dispersion on GM but Toyota is known for the silent recalls as much of more than anyone else.
 
Originally Posted By: mechanicx
What? With a safety issue defect the automaker has no choice but to recall. Toyota or any other automaker doesn't do recalls just because they are so nice. Rarely does any automaker notify every owner of every potentional repair issue that is a non-safety issue. You can cast dispersion on GM but Toyota is known for the silent recalls as much of more than anyone else.


Import land is full of fuzzy kittens, honest CEO's and people who smile and wave at you! Nothing bad EVER happens in Import land!

grin.gif
 
Originally Posted By: OVERK1LL
Originally Posted By: mechanicx
What? With a safety issue defect the automaker has no choice but to recall. Toyota or any other automaker doesn't do recalls just because they are so nice. Rarely does any automaker notify every owner of every potentional repair issue that is a non-safety issue. You can cast dispersion on GM but Toyota is known for the silent recalls as much of more than anyone else.


Import land is full of fuzzy kittens, honest CEO's and people who smile and wave at you! Nothing bad EVER happens in Import land!

grin.gif



crackmeup2.gif
 
Originally Posted By: Brenden
Would you rather have them recall vehicles and be honest about it, or just do what GM does and deal with each owner as the problem comes up, cover some of them and tell some to go to [censored] because they cant prove their maintenance on the vehicle? I think the fact that they are making it known and fixing it for free is a glimpse of how well they treat the customers, and that through [censored] or high water to keep their customers happy, and the Toyota vehicles on the road properly running..

For the record the rav 4 is a in general bland vehicle marketed to women who like the possibility of going off road, but do mainly city driving. For the record it wouldn't go thought any more mud than my civic.. the only reason it can slightly off road is its ride height. And it's defiantly not the pinnacle of Toyotas lineup
wink.gif



I told myself I would stay out of this thread after my initial one (which was at the amount of recalls for the auto industry as a whole) butI must respond to this.

At one time, GM, Ford, and Chrysler certainly were bad with recalling vehicles. But these days, the Detroit 3 are just as likely to recall vehicles as anyone. They have, quite a lot. The industry as a whole has recalled more vehicles in the past year or two than I can ever remember happening.
 
Originally Posted By: Brenden
Would you rather have them recall vehicles and be honest about it, or just do what GM does and deal with each owner as the problem comes up, cover some of them and tell some to go to [censored] because they cant prove their maintenance on the vehicle? I think the fact that they are making it known and fixing it for free is a glimpse of how well they treat the customers, and that through [censored] or high water to keep their customers happy, and the Toyota vehicles on the road properly running..

For the record the rav 4 is a in general bland vehicle marketed to women who like the possibility of going off road, but do mainly city driving. For the record it wouldn't go thought any more mud than my civic.. the only reason it can slightly off road is its ride height. And it's defiantly not the pinnacle of Toyotas lineup
wink.gif




LOL...Yeah, Toyota would never undertake "special service campaigns" in order to keep the general publics knowledge as low as possible. They are open and honest as the day is long...lol
 
Originally Posted By: LS2JSTS
Originally Posted By: Brenden
Would you rather have them recall vehicles and be honest about it, or just do what GM does and deal with each owner as the problem comes up, cover some of them and tell some to go to [censored] because they cant prove their maintenance on the vehicle? I think the fact that they are making it known and fixing it for free is a glimpse of how well they treat the customers, and that through [censored] or high water to keep their customers happy, and the Toyota vehicles on the road properly running..

For the record the rav 4 is a in general bland vehicle marketed to women who like the possibility of going off road, but do mainly city driving. For the record it wouldn't go thought any more mud than my civic.. the only reason it can slightly off road is its ride height. And it's defiantly not the pinnacle of Toyotas lineup
wink.gif




LOL...Yeah, Toyota would never undertake "special service campaigns" in order to keep the general publics knowledge as low as possible. They are open and honest as the day is long...lol


Exactly some people give Toyota and the rest of the Japanese automakers way too much credit. And some people don't seem to understand the difference between serious safety recalls which are mandatory and the lower profile service campaigns vs. service bulletins that are never really published and distributed to owners. Do some people really think rainbows and kittens Toyota sends owners the service bulletins telling them to get to the dealer and fix every potential problem under warranty?
 
NO manufacturer does.

There are still ways available to find this information, though.
IIRC they HAVE to make it available.
That doesn't however, mean that people know it's there, or where to look.
 
The way I see it, Toyota has almost slipped to the level of my Caravan with its recently rebuilt tranny.

I don't think anyone can top this insult.
crackmeup2.gif


Hey, if you can't laugh at yourself.........
 
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Originally Posted By: mechanicx
Originally Posted By: LS2JSTS
Originally Posted By: Brenden
Would you rather have them recall vehicles and be honest about it, or just do what GM does and deal with each owner as the problem comes up, cover some of them and tell some to go to [censored] because they cant prove their maintenance on the vehicle? I think the fact that they are making it known and fixing it for free is a glimpse of how well they treat the customers, and that through [censored] or high water to keep their customers happy, and the Toyota vehicles on the road properly running..

For the record the rav 4 is a in general bland vehicle marketed to women who like the possibility of going off road, but do mainly city driving. For the record it wouldn't go thought any more mud than my civic.. the only reason it can slightly off road is its ride height. And it's defiantly not the pinnacle of Toyotas lineup
wink.gif




LOL...Yeah, Toyota would never undertake "special service campaigns" in order to keep the general publics knowledge as low as possible. They are open and honest as the day is long...lol


Exactly some people give Toyota and the rest of the Japanese automakers way too much credit. And some people don't seem to understand the difference between serious safety recalls which are mandatory and the lower profile service campaigns vs. service bulletins that are never really published and distributed to owners. Do some people really think rainbows and kittens Toyota sends owners the service bulletins telling them to get to the dealer and fix every potential problem under warranty?


I think the recent events in the Japanese nuclear industry are a clear indication that cover ups and saving face are not just something Toyota is guilty of (and creating a zombie army of consumers who think their vehicles were crafted by the hands of God himself) but that the idea of saving face is very cultural, and so things that should be brought to light (like the huge list of problems at Fukushima far in advance of the earthquake, the covered-up Toyota issues that came to light when the "unintended acceleration" problems were being discussed) are not until something HUGE happens and then all the ghosts come flying out of the closet.

Very different than the way Ford/GM/Chrysler are run (and subsequently treated). But again, different culture.
 
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