Re: What's your ride?
Posted: Wed May 05, 2021 8:56 pm
Tunnelcat I'm curious on something, when you engage 4WD with the shift lever. Does it feel stiff and a little difficult to move at times going from H2 to H4?
The new Land Cruiser Prado is out, and it's coming to the US next year, marking the end of the FJ Cruiser after 17 years. I think this makes the 5th gen 4Runner the last SUV to be built on the J150/Prado platform until its redesign in 2025. Too bad the FJ isn't coming back for any country. It really is still a cool looking vehicle.Tunnelcat wrote: Sun Mar 14, 2021 10:56 pm Yeah, apparently Toyota still sells it in the Middle East and in the Philippines of all places.
Considering that Toyota is shoving nothing larger than a 4-cylinder engine into it, there's been a lot of negative comments over that one decision from hard core FJ'rs. Sure it looks FJ like, but it's missing the one thing that makes it good for rock crawling, a larger engine, at least a V6, with lots of torque and power. A turbo 4 or even a 4-cylinder diesel won't cut it. Plus, I thought diesel engines were being phased out over time in passenger cars/trucks anyway, at least in the U.S.?TigerRaptor wrote: Fri Aug 11, 2023 11:38 pmThe new Land Cruiser Prado is out, and it's coming to the US next year, marking the end of the FJ Cruiser after 17 years. I think this makes the 5th gen 4Runner the last SUV to be built on the J150/Prado platform until its redesign in 2025. Too bad the FJ isn't coming back for any country. It really is still a cool looking vehicle.Tunnelcat wrote: Sun Mar 14, 2021 10:56 pm Yeah, apparently Toyota still sells it in the Middle East and in the Philippines of all places.
You never posted a picture of yours.![]()
Element. The one that looks like a box. Perfect for outdoor activities and dogs.
Sorry, didn't see your question earlier. The transfer case shift lever WAS always hard to move since the truck was new and the 4WD switch would stick and had a delay in shifting. I had to jiggle the steering wheel back and forth to get it to shift into 4H (dash light would indicate) while driving. I drained out the OEM TC gear oil last year, I figured it was getting old after 11 years, and put in some Ravenol 75W synthetic gear oil. It works much easier now. Good stuff. The old oil looked clean and fine, but obviously the lubricity of the new synthetic is different. The front and rear differentials have been changed twice since I've owned it. That oil gets really nasty fast.TigerRaptor wrote: Wed May 05, 2021 8:56 pm Tunnelcat I'm curious on something, when you engage 4WD with the shift lever. Does it feel stiff and a little difficult to move at times going from H2 to H4?
That was the first thing that went. My A/T went on the new wheels, and the winter tires went on the stock wheel. Toyota figured most people who buy these vehicles will end up changing out the tires anyway. So they put on the cheapest Bridgestone or Dunlop tires available. The Bridgestone Dueler H/T D684 II they were using at the time kind of suck.Tunnelcat wrote: Sun Aug 13, 2023 11:37 am Picture of my 2011 FJ. It's still got the OEM tires, which are going to be replaced this year, even though there's a lot of tread left because I just haven't put the mileage on it. I need tires made in this decade by now. It's now worth more than I paid for it.
I heard other vehicles, like the Helix also had this problem. I'm not sure if there were any lawsuits outside the US.Tunnelcat wrote: Sun Aug 13, 2023 11:37 amAll those FJ's in the winter road salt belt are having their frames rust into dust, so it will become even more rare. Toyota was sued for the Tacoma suffering the same fate and had to replace frames on a bunch of Tacos. But the FJ never got on a class action suit for the same issue. Dana, who made the frames for Tacos and FJ's, screwed up and didn't get them painted properly. The rust starts at the welds and spreads. It rusts inside the frame too, so the cancer happens inside and out.
No worries. It's not that hard to engage 4WD anymore. But holy hell, in the beginning it felt like my arm was going to rip off.Tunnelcat wrote: Sun Aug 13, 2023 10:51 pm
Sorry, didn't see your question earlier. The transfer case shift lever WAS always hard to move since the truck was new and the 4WD switch would stick and had a delay in shifting. I had to jiggle the steering wheel back and forth to get it to shift into 4H (dash light would indicate) while driving. I drained out the OEM TC gear oil last year, I figured it was getting old after 11 years, and put in some Ravenol 75W synthetic gear oil. It works much easier now. Good stuff. The old oil looked clean and fine, but obviously the lubricity of the new synthetic is different. The front and rear differentials have been changed twice since I've owned it. That oil gets really nasty fast.
Curious. Is the Element based on the Pilot?Isaac wrote: Sun Aug 13, 2023 8:37 pmElement. The one that looks like a box. Perfect for outdoor activities and dogs.
I happen to have a Honda. A FIT...
They have a similar lineage, but are not based on each other. The Element is the platypus of SUVs. The story goes they took a CR-V and made it slower and added more space to the cabin. They removed all carpeting and passenger doors for suicide doors, found on extended cab pickups. The pilot is based of a CR-V as well but they scaled up the power and included nice seats, carpeting, and made it competitive to other normal SUVs.
You know what that makes us?