You rebel!We move furniture and boxes between houses and drive at high speeds, for example 55 mph in a 45 mph zone.
You rebel!We move furniture and boxes between houses and drive at high speeds, for example 55 mph in a 45 mph zone.
Their engines are disintegrating with recommended oils, so no need to introduce another drama.Hey guys, y'all remember when people actually thought Toyota engines would explode if you used a higher grade oil. Oh man, that was wild. Good times.
I believe the kids these days classify these types of shenanigans as “wildin’”.You rebel!
Is there evidence that suggests oil is the culprit or is it a bad design/component? No oil can overcome a flaw.Their engines are disintegrating with recommended oils, so no need to introduce another drama.
In this drama, it was buried that their recall “due to the debris in the engine,” didn’t work, so they are recalling recalled engines.
Hybrid owners can still just pray.
Close to 250k engines under recall (including already recalled engines?)?Their engines are disintegrating with recommended oils, so no need to introduce another drama.
In this drama, it was buried that their recall “due to the debris in the engine,” didn’t work, so they are recalling recalled engines.
Hybrid owners can still just pray.
Yep. But no hybrids. The can drive on battery. Literally Toyota’s argument.Close to 250k engines under recall (including already recalled engines?)?
Bad design. And they knew it since 2017.Is there evidence that suggests oil is the culprit or is it a bad design/component? No oil can overcome a flaw.
...but we all know those engines are still affected. This is going to cost them tens of billions.Yep. But no hybrids. The can drive on battery. Literally Toyota’s argument.
It won’t. Toyota is riding out warranty. After that you are on your own....but we all know those engines are still affected. This is going to cost them tens of billions.
That's an unconscionable plan on their part - they know they are defective. I assume the secondary market on these has already crashed? The hybrids will be worthless outside of warranty if they don't fix them.It won’t. Toyota is riding out warranty. After that you are on your own.
Simple.
I am thinking there will be a bunch of people who will buy them under the assumption that it is Toyota, and it lasts forever.That's an unconscionable plan on their part - they know they are defective. I assume the secondary market on these has already crashed? The hybrids will be worthless outside of warranty if they don't fix them.
I think it's a main bearing design flaw, last I heard. Toyota bought time with the "machining debris in the engine" excuse but I'm hearing that many speculate it will need a complete redesign.Is there evidence that suggests oil is the culprit or is it a bad design/component? No oil can overcome a flaw.
It was same thing in 2018 when first problems became evident in LS500. But Toyota thought they could scam customers and get away with it.I think it's a main bearing design flaw, last I heard. Toyota bought time with the "machining debris in the engine" excuse but I'm hearing that many speculate it will need a complete redesign.
Toyota has changed a lot. I see what you mean w/r/t your previous comments on Toyota reliability. I have a friend with two GR engines. Additionally his 4Runner transmission went out under warranty at 10k. He has a high pitched whine like a supercharger that is probably his timing components. And how he has a timing cover leak on his 2GR. But he's die hard Toyota still. (And he bought the extended warranty.)It won’t. Toyota is riding out warranty. After that you are on your own.
Simple.
There is a lot of perception there.Toyota has changed a lot. I see what you mean w/r/t your previous comments on Toyota reliability. I have a friend with two GR engines. Additionally his 4Runner transmission went out under warranty at 10k. He has a high pitched whine like a supercharger that is probably his timing components. And how he has a timing cover leak on his 2GR. But he's die hard Toyota still. (And he bought the extended warranty.)
This is what I've always assumed but they aren't being overly communicative about it. I understand why they aren't, they need to get the safety recalls done first and hybrid owners would flip out wanting replacement now, but that doesn't make hybrid owners feel any better until they do it don't do it.If we're being charitable... it could be that Toyota does plan to do something about the hybrids once the non hybrids have been taken care of, however safety concerns would mean the non hybrid should have priority since the hybrid can still drive itself out of harms way if required when the main engine blows and they probably can't fix everything all at once.
That would be my guess. I do think Toyota will eventually get to the hybrids.
There was a guy on Facebook and by 22k miles his Tundra has had the engine replaced 2x and the transmission 1x.Toyota has changed a lot. I see what you mean w/r/t your previous comments on Toyota reliability. I have a friend with two GR engines. Additionally his 4Runner transmission went out under warranty at 10k. He has a high pitched whine like a supercharger that is probably his timing components. And how he has a timing cover leak on his 2GR. But he's die hard Toyota still. (And he bought the extended warranty.)