Yes they do, but have had worse experience with MB and OpelToyota has never been has good as some say, here they seem like they will last but rust will take the cars of road. And Toyotas like to rust like hell.
The prius does seem like a reliable hybrid though.
Don’t forget about those GT86’s/FR-S’s that blew up and Toyota denied the warranty on!Tundra 3.4L V6 debris, Tacoma transmission stuck in 6th gear, Tacoma bump stops failing, GR Corolla catching fire due to throwing a rod and oil leaking onto turbo and Toyota denying warranty.
Actually, engine issues are not that a big of a deal since you can always fix them, or replace them. Safety issues are more of a concern. Now they have admitted they cheated in these tests, using different materials.I have been telling you guys here for a long time that Toyota and complexity always had mediocre results. In Europe, these things have been happening for 20+ years, and before that, they did not happen just because cars would rot before they would fail mechanically.
They had very good recipe before: be behind others 20-25yrs, and polish technology that other introduced and abandoned by now. Now they decided to try to catch up. Well, it takes time. In those 20-25 years, others acquired know-how.
Which tests? Not familiar with Toyota cheating (on this continent). I know they had some issue with cheating in Japan.Actually, engine issues are not that a big of a deal since you can always fix them, or replace them. Safety issues are more of a concern. Now they have admitted they cheated in these tests, using different materials.
https://apnews.com/article/toyota-c...kers-scandal-26585a96df2a32f7d67a4011a0a98772Which tests? Not familiar with Toyota cheating (on this continent). I know they had some issue with cheating in Japan.
Toyota's reputation comes from mechanical reliability, not crappy brakes or handling. That is another can of worms, and safety-wise, especially active safety, or how not to get in an accident, it is really not a shiny example.Actually, engine issues are not that a big of a deal since you can always fix them, or replace them. Safety issues are more of a concern. Now they have admitted they cheated in these tests, using different materials.
Next thing you know, they will be shipping their cars with freaking laser beams attached to the roof.As in purposely drive buyers away by intensionally making unreliable ICE-driven vehicles hoping they will someday forgive your sin of making a terribly unreliable vehicle and then buy your POS electric vehicles? That’s some next level marketing genius there...
This got me rolling.They saw Nissan and said we want some of that
For me it was a 2002 Nissan Maxima SE with the new 3.5L VQ and a sunroof (but no deflector)!This got me rolling.
When I bought my 1998 Nissan Maxima SE, brand new, I felt like I had arrived in life. It was a 5 spd with every available option except sunroof wind deflector.
I guess people still experience that same thrill when picking up a new Rogue or Sentra today.
I thought it was 3.5 TT engines? Lexus has a 3.4 TT out right now that I haven’t heard of any issues with.
More on the Tacoma suspension issue.
It's not only that. They got caught cheating on crash test using different materials/parts and modified door panels. The modification must have consisted of an extra jack in the door side of cars that were to be tested in a side impact test. This is to avoid the door panel cracking open in a way that could cause sharp edges when the side airbag deploys, thereby injuring the occupants.Toyota's reputation comes from mechanical reliability, not crappy brakes or handling. That is another can of worms, and safety-wise, especially active safety, or how not to get in an accident, it is really not a shiny example.
No, not on your continent, but crash test cheating from the Toyota.Which tests? Not familiar with Toyota cheating (on this continent). I know they had some issue with cheating in Japan.