This is how environmentally friendly vehicles should be made. Simple works every time. Less resources used,even less to maintain it and it will work reliably until either rust eats it or road accident destroys it.
Even Toyota changed tack after this though. Instead of making electrical switches with contacts thick enough to last for 1,000,000 cycles like on this Hilux they started to think "why are we doing that when we could make contacts only thick enough to last for 50,000 cycles and save cost?" 🙁
But when you have tens of thousands of This era in the same city. That's just horrible amount of toxic emissions. FYI VW DieselGate was not about GHG CO2. But yeah 30 year lifespan should be the goal for light vehicles.
@@Neojhun If it is the port-injected petrol engine, it's pretty clean in terms of particulates. Older port-injected petrol engines are typically far superior than direct-injected (yet more economical) petrol engines, in terms of the former producing less particulates. The former tend to be pretty good -- there is a study which compares the Japanese & Californian petrol-hybrid approach (i.e., Priuses for everybody) to the European diesel approach (i.e., Polo TDIs and Fiesta diesels for everybody) and finds the former far superior in terms of urban air quality. Obviously the diesel Hilux/pickup without any particulate filter, not so much.
An old neighbor had one, 4x2, bare basic. 2.8 diesel (here in Brazil), no turbo, only 77 horsepower, but ran forever. He was an old mechanic, always carrying stuff everywhere. Back then (this was roughly 25 years ago) I didn't care much about them, so I never bat an eye. In 2021, long after I had moved outta the neighborhood, I went to pay him a visit and found out he had passed away some years before, 2019 I think. I felt pretty sad, he was a very good-hearted individual. I don't know what was of the truck, I think the family sold it. If he was still alive and I had the coin, I would've bought that truck from him.
Another Brazilian here. My mom's doctor had a 1992 Toyota Camry and a 1994 Honda Accord wagon. The guy maintained both cars in pristine condition. He passed away a few months before the pandemic started, but I had no money to buy none of his cars. I never talked to any of his sons, but I bet they junked both cars or sold them for cheap. He had once revealed to me that all his family members made fun of him for driving such old, "worthless" cars.
You are so right with the 22RE. Mine was leaking coolant, and I was still able to get it to my mechanic without overheating. Calling this engine reliable is a huge understatement
Same here, mine broke the water pump belt a few miles from home. I was able to limp it home, using the temp gauge. Ran it for a bit, watched that temp gauge creep up a bit, turn it off, coast in neutral. Fire it back up again to go uphill, turn it off, coast in neutral going 60mph downhill to get it back up the next hill at 10-20mph without firing the engine. Thank you advance auto for selling me the wrong sized belt. It was like 1/8th an inch, just SLIGHTLY smaller than the one that came off. Did fine for a few weeks until it shredded.
I will never forget my uncle used to own a 1994 Toyota Pickup that he had until 2018 when it got T-boned. Beautiful truck, and got the job done, and was super reliable.
@@MonolithFanaticthey’re surprisingly safe due to the super strong box frame. Nowhere near todays standards of safety but they hold up better than you’d think
I love the details on this particular truck and its small homage to the Pizza Planet 'YO' tailgate. What's interesting is that you really don't see many of these on the roads in North America because this particular 'Toyota Pickup' (as it was actually called, rather than a Hilux) was in a transition zone between the late 80's Hiluxes with the claw-strap bed lips and the soon to be immensely popular Tacoma. Like many an old Nissan or Mazda truck, these too were beaten to hell and run into the ground.. good examples are a rarity.
My mother bought this exact truck brand new from a dealership in 1992. 32 years later, that damn thing is STILL chugging along, no major mechanical problems so far…
It was great the time about a year ago on the highway I passed either a _really old_ Toyota or Ford pickup (forget now), made curious who was driving such a thing. I became more captivated the old guy had his dog sitting in the passenger seat. Maybe the mental image is infinitely better than a real picture.
Part of me wants to find and import the badge-engineered Volkswagen version of this truck. Yes, Volkswagen sold a version of this truck called the "Taro" in Europe for much of the 80s and 90s. Also, you sound unhinged in this video and I'm totally here for it. :)
In 2003 I bought a 1990 Pickup for $700. It had spent its entire life as a pizza delivery truck at the restaurant i delivered for and i used it for a few more years. That thing was completely beat to crap, but the 22RE gave me no issues. No AC, but it had little vent windows to keep me cool.
We had an old Pizza Hut Ford Ranger, just a tiny white box with an engine in it, needed concrete slabs in the bed in the winter or it had zero traction.
The back bumper was also an option. Super base model Toyotas did not come with a back bumper. My dad had to haggle with the dealership for quite a while to get one with a back bumper & AC. He bought the 1994. Although he sold it in '97, I see it every other day where an old-time mechanic dailies it. He won't sell it to me just yet though...
My first car when I turned 16 was this exact vehicle in silver. Our local dealer was having a sale on them for $6,700. if you wanted AC it was an additional $800. I loved that little truck, so much.
Been driving mine for ten years now and it has all the extras except AC. Vent windows, center armrest, extra gauges, door cubbies, xtra cab, and I couldn't take it anymore. Finally installed AC on it this summer since parts are getting scarce. Only left me stranded once early on because I neglected the water pump/alternator belt. The battery eventually died but it never overheated a single bit, I thought it was the alternator itself. It will probably outlive me, ticking into the distance
Out here in Idaho none of our vehicles rust so you can actually see what lasts and what doesn’t, I see these absolutely everywhere and mine is 30 years old and has 275k miles and still runs
I have this same truck in white and with only 164k miles on it. The inside and outside looks brand new. Definitely turns heads and I get offers on it pretty much every week. I love these trucks.
ive got the same one- Just in about the same condition and 98K Miles. NO PS/ NO AC No Nuthin. Not even the sliding window in the back .... I also heard it was the last year they were made before the added a computer but not 100% on that fact...Nice video!
The very definition of a pickup truck. It's built to do one thing: carry stuff with an adequate amount of comfort and speed. This is what made Toyota legendary. The only things that can kill these are rust and crashes.
I own a 92 toyota DLX cab v6 3.0 4x4. Ran GREAT until It blew the headgasket, so I had the engine rebuilt at 300,000 miles. Just got it back from the shop...I'm a HAPPY woman again now that i've got my truck back on the road for another 300,000 miles🤩😆!!
This is why I love your channel: Straight to the point, honnest and real stuff. Yes this truck is like an hammer, and it does it pretty well. I have 2000 Tundra SR5, same. And I can tell this era when Toyota was builting tools instead of toys, like this pickup you tested and the 2000 Tundra I have, Toyota don't do them anymore, at least in north america. Elsewhere in the world Toyota still make and sell them. I really really miss that simplicity.
Have a 1992 Toyota PU. Four cylinder 4 speed. Yard truck and solid as a rock. Always starts and runs and runs with 144 thousand miles. Couldn’t ask for a better work truck for 700 dollars.
I had an '89 version of this, 22R, carbureted engine, and 4 speed manual. It was the most basic version. Single best vehicle I've ever owned. If it had been the RE version I might have kept it longer.
I had the same truck in Green. I even had the same after market steel bumper that is on your model. But mine was a 1993. I believe your truck is also a 1993 model since it has the two ovals badge. The 1992 had the "TOYOTA" badge. And 1994 had the rear brake light. And I had "YOT" on my tailgate. Unfortunately, the 22RE engine developed an idle surge at only 180K miles. And 3rd gear would pop out. So it drove it another 40K with those two problems. On the day I sold it, 3rd gear started to work again.
When it comes to Toyota trucks or any truck like that, I always say; there's champaign in a fancy glass, or beer in a red solo cup this is the second one & I love it!
I thought about this analogy and have to agree because the solo cup is rigid and resilient even when mass-produced using less and cheaper materials, and if you're happy with using a simple red solo cup as your beer vehicle then cheers to you! Fancy glasses are a liability if you can't afford to replace them, and champagne is for fancy occasions!
I had a 1991 toyota pickup just like that, except it was black. had some 14” Cragar rims on it. Sold it with 422k miles on it for $750 and regret it to this day.
These are the small and practical vehicles that America needs. Even the old ones like this are in demand - just like the old Honda ct 70s. People just keep refurbishing them!
Totally agree about the transmission/clutch, I owned a 1993 5 speed/2wd truck. The clutch is light, super easy to modulate, shift throws on the Toyota are long compared to a sports car, but man its still pretty precise and you feel it click into gear thru the shift knob. There is a certain mechanical feel that is hard to describe. Also that shifter stays tight despite the miles, 170k on my 1993, 200k on my 2004 Tacoma, I drove that truck with 33 miles on it when my dad bought it new, shifted exactly the same. I've driven manual Chevy S10 and manual Rangers, those things suck ass in comparison, clutch is higher effort, shifter is vague, sloppy, gotta slam into gear and hope it engaged.
Ive been driving my 92 xcab toyota pickup since 04. I've driven it to places a two wheel drive truck probably shouldnt go. I have lived out of the back of the thing when times got hard for a little while. Best damn truck in the world. If it breaks, I just fix it and its back for more.
I've had 3 of these Toyota Trucks 1987 22r 5 Speed Long Bed.....Great 1990 22RE Automatic Xtra cab....Better 1994 3.0 V6 Automatic Xtra cab....Best All Awesome Trucks with Great A/C Far Superior to 1987 Mitsubishi, 1990 Ranger, 1993 S-10
according to ur macaoni styling, this is sort of my version to that, my grand uncle have a White one and and i grew up in a 4th gen Hiace which its interior looks very alike. and this is my favorite toyota era. in general i dont like toyotas (like the mid 2000s and some new ones) but this is my favorite because the shifter is nice and its simple to drive and CHILDHOOD NOSTALGIA
Toyota built these trucks so solid that they last a very long time. They keep going on and on like the energizer battery. You might say Toyota overbuilt them.
They’re getting rare because they’re being taken down to Mexico a lot. I have two of them currently using one for parts fixing the other one up And I get offers for them all the time
I had one of these trucks; but mine was a '93 YOT (not a YO as yours is) in grey-green. The very same after market rear bumper. Had sliding rear windows. Had after market AC. Had white wall tires. Had fading clear coat in the very same places (on the hood). Your truck does not have rear spring sag - huh? Mine was also NUMI built (Fremont, CA).
I have a 94 with 22re 5 speed base model with 255k miles. Major repairs include rebuilt transmission, new clutch two head gaskets, timing chain + guides, completely new air conditioning system, brake + clutch master cylinders, radiator, new bench seat reupholstered. Reliability comes with a price to keep this truck going. I think when people think reliability for this truck they think nothing fails and thats not true. It is a good truck and I wouldn’t buy another one because some key parts are no longer available.
Zack l have to thank you for this review of tge Toyota Pick Up l own one and in Australia these are known as the Toyota Hilux ute mine is very similar to this Toyota Pick up the cab is the same mine is white and l have an aluminum tray and was made in 1997 and of course the ute has the 22R motor with a carburetor but it drives very well the engine is an absolute gem it has good power and plenty of torque also it is the Australian model because it hss quarter windows air conditioning which dies work the radio cassette player works sort of and it was built in Japan and the steering wheel is on the right hand side been Australia and l am a retired courier and this is my rolling project ute what a ute to pick as a retirement project l just about fixed it up but l can enjoy it and drive it also it is manual 5 speed and such a joy to change gear you were spot on about the gearbox and the Toyota Hilux gas done 432000 kms aprox 250000 miles l have seen other Hiluxes sell with much much more kilometers on them than mine
I had a 92 4x4 with a 22re and a 3inch body lift with 33s I picked up for $1500 that got hit so i decided I wouldn't put any money into it, It threw every code from thottle body to 02 sensor and drove down the road just fine when i sold it 7 years later for $1000. Had the full BTTF smithy set with the 2x1 lightbar. Just a shame the front drivers side was crushed in.
Several billion years into the future, we will experience the heat death of the entire universe and all life as we know it will cease forever in the empty, starless void. You turn the keys on this Toyota. It still runs.
I have a92 manual rwd . About to get the timing chain and pumps done. I may do it myself. But. Idku ordered all the parts even gonna replace the radiator
Easily the best looking pickup of the 90's. My dad had one, brand new in 1994. 6 months after he bought it, It got hit in the rear with me in it when he forgot to set the parking break and it rolled into traffic. Totaled it. I fortunately came out unscathed.
I miss the days where u could get a basic truck no PowerWindows no nanny state buls#it TPMS sensors, no humongus laptops buried in the dash where u have to cycle thru multiple screens just to change radio volume.
That was a beautiful review. I always am curious about this year Toyota; and ealier now, actually. (A "forklift engine". Made near or at the original Tesla factory in Fremont, CA (NUMMI).
Can someone tell me the reliability difference between the 22RE and the current Tacoma 2.7 L engine? I just bought a 2023 Tacoma SR with the 2.7L as an extra vehicle and I am hoping to keep it forever.
I'm on my second 93 Toyota pickup truck the first one was right just like that the second one is Superman blue🎉 one thing I can tell you is you're going to kill that ignition with all those keys replace the ignition on both of mine too many keys kills ignitions
Thanks for reviewing my truck ! 🤟🤟
Mr. Yuck is mean! Mr. Yuck is green!
@@marcberm i am mean.. But not green.. Mostly black from melting iron
I learned how to drive in the truck and I’ve never gone back have a car I own is a Toyota
YO, love the truck! Honestly, one of my fav reviews so far on the channel.
If yours was a 92, did it have an ashtray light?
This is how environmentally friendly vehicles should be made. Simple works every time. Less resources used,even less to maintain it and it will work reliably until either rust eats it or road accident destroys it.
Even Toyota changed tack after this though. Instead of making electrical switches with contacts thick enough to last for 1,000,000 cycles like on this Hilux they started to think "why are we doing that when we could make contacts only thick enough to last for 50,000 cycles and save cost?" 🙁
But when you have tens of thousands of This era in the same city. That's just horrible amount of toxic emissions. FYI VW DieselGate was not about GHG CO2. But yeah 30 year lifespan should be the goal for light vehicles.
@@Neojhun If it is the port-injected petrol engine, it's pretty clean in terms of particulates. Older port-injected petrol engines are typically far superior than direct-injected (yet more economical) petrol engines, in terms of the former producing less particulates. The former tend to be pretty good -- there is a study which compares the Japanese & Californian petrol-hybrid approach (i.e., Priuses for everybody) to the European diesel approach (i.e., Polo TDIs and Fiesta diesels for everybody) and finds the former far superior in terms of urban air quality. Obviously the diesel Hilux/pickup without any particulate filter, not so much.
Don't confuse the greenies. (They think electricity comes out of the wall.)
@@Neojhun
Hug a tree.
Sponsored by Scotty Kilmer😂
Zack should review Scottie's Celica 😂
@@UA7daniel94’ Celica 😂
An old neighbor had one, 4x2, bare basic. 2.8 diesel (here in Brazil), no turbo, only 77 horsepower, but ran forever.
He was an old mechanic, always carrying stuff everywhere. Back then (this was roughly 25 years ago) I didn't care much about them, so I never bat an eye.
In 2021, long after I had moved outta the neighborhood, I went to pay him a visit and found out he had passed away some years before, 2019 I think. I felt pretty sad, he was a very good-hearted individual. I don't know what was of the truck, I think the family sold it.
If he was still alive and I had the coin, I would've bought that truck from him.
Another Brazilian here. My mom's doctor had a 1992 Toyota Camry and a 1994 Honda Accord wagon. The guy maintained both cars in pristine condition. He passed away a few months before the pandemic started, but I had no money to buy none of his cars. I never talked to any of his sons, but I bet they junked both cars or sold them for cheap. He had once revealed to me that all his family members made fun of him for driving such old, "worthless" cars.
@hachiroku8677 Man, that hurt just by imagining. 😞 Poor lad had two of the most reliable cars in human history and uneducated people had no idea!
You are so right with the 22RE. Mine was leaking coolant, and I was still able to get it to my mechanic without overheating. Calling this engine reliable is a huge understatement
Same here, mine broke the water pump belt a few miles from home. I was able to limp it home, using the temp gauge. Ran it for a bit, watched that temp gauge creep up a bit, turn it off, coast in neutral. Fire it back up again to go uphill, turn it off, coast in neutral going 60mph downhill to get it back up the next hill at 10-20mph without firing the engine. Thank you advance auto for selling me the wrong sized belt. It was like 1/8th an inch, just SLIGHTLY smaller than the one that came off. Did fine for a few weeks until it shredded.
I will never forget my uncle used to own a 1994 Toyota Pickup that he had until 2018 when it got T-boned. Beautiful truck, and got the job done, and was super reliable.
I would not wanna get T-boned in a truck like this, did he make it out alright?
@@MonolithFanaticthey’re surprisingly safe due to the super strong box frame. Nowhere near todays standards of safety but they hold up better than you’d think
@@MonolithFanatic
What do you know? Go wrap yourself in a bubble.
@@interstate80.
Why would he think when he can parrot things that he thinks will make him sound smart?
unfortunately they are small and can get totaled in an accident.
I love the details on this particular truck and its small homage to the Pizza Planet 'YO' tailgate. What's interesting is that you really don't see many of these on the roads in North America because this particular 'Toyota Pickup' (as it was actually called, rather than a Hilux) was in a transition zone between the late 80's Hiluxes with the claw-strap bed lips and the soon to be immensely popular Tacoma.
Like many an old Nissan or Mazda truck, these too were beaten to hell and run into the ground.. good examples are a rarity.
I have a 94 2wd bare bones like this one and I’m trying to take care of it and not have it beat up
That's not an 8 ball on the shifter...it's an infinity ball on a Toyota pickup that's going to be out there forever. :)
bam. truth. someone's going to spot it poking out of a sand dune 250 years from now and dig it out, start it up.
My mother bought this exact truck brand new from a dealership in 1992. 32 years later, that damn thing is STILL chugging along, no major mechanical problems so far…
I have a reliable 1996 tacoma that rarely gives me any problems. My only vehicle for the last 23 years.
Word to your mother.
-- Vanilla Ice
It was great the time about a year ago on the highway I passed either a _really old_ Toyota or Ford pickup (forget now), made curious who was driving such a thing. I became more captivated the old guy had his dog sitting in the passenger seat. Maybe the mental image is infinitely better than a real picture.
You sir are LIT in this video. Never seen the big friggen bottle fly so hard.
I cracked up so hard at that
Part of me wants to find and import the badge-engineered Volkswagen version of this truck. Yes, Volkswagen sold a version of this truck called the "Taro" in Europe for much of the 80s and 90s.
Also, you sound unhinged in this video and I'm totally here for it. :)
1991 owner here. Still works after some mechanical tuneup and I plan on cosmetically restoring the entire pickup.
Huh... A Toyota with an "Infiniti" shift knob. Neat. 🤔
In 2003 I bought a 1990 Pickup for $700. It had spent its entire life as a pizza delivery truck at the restaurant i delivered for and i used it for a few more years. That thing was completely beat to crap, but the 22RE gave me no issues. No AC, but it had little vent windows to keep me cool.
We had an old Pizza Hut Ford Ranger, just a tiny white box with an engine in it, needed concrete slabs in the bed in the winter or it had zero traction.
Bought mine new in 94
208 k miles. Most reliable truck I’ve ever owned. Never selling it. I get offers all the time for it.
The back bumper was also an option. Super base model Toyotas did not come with a back bumper. My dad had to haggle with the dealership for quite a while to get one with a back bumper & AC. He bought the 1994.
Although he sold it in '97, I see it every other day where an old-time mechanic dailies it. He won't sell it to me just yet though...
Learned to drive in one. '89 Pickup XTra Cab 4-cyl 4x2 5-speed. My favorite vehicle of my youth.
My first car when I turned 16 was this exact vehicle in silver. Our local dealer was having a sale on them for $6,700. if you wanted AC it was an additional $800. I loved that little truck, so much.
Watching this video in my 1989 toyota v6 manual 1 ton. Great review Zack! Couldn't have commented about the shifter any better myself.
Former Uhaul box truck or RV chassis?
Been driving mine for ten years now and it has all the extras except AC. Vent windows, center armrest, extra gauges, door cubbies, xtra cab, and I couldn't take it anymore. Finally installed AC on it this summer since parts are getting scarce. Only left me stranded once early on because I neglected the water pump/alternator belt. The battery eventually died but it never overheated a single bit, I thought it was the alternator itself. It will probably outlive me, ticking into the distance
I love the old school vehicles more than the current ones. Toyota has always been one of the most reliable car names out there.
Great truck. Had an 81 toyota pickup. Basically the same thing with a carbureted engine. Here in the midwest rust got most of them.
Out here in Idaho none of our vehicles rust so you can actually see what lasts and what doesn’t, I see these absolutely everywhere and mine is 30 years old and has 275k miles and still runs
I have this same truck in white and with only 164k miles on it. The inside and outside looks brand new. Definitely turns heads and I get offers on it pretty much every week. I love these trucks.
I can definitely say, as someone familiar with the T100 here, and the Hilux in Africa, that this is the strongest truck I’ve even seen or driven!
ive got the same one- Just in about the same condition and 98K Miles. NO PS/ NO AC No Nuthin. Not even the sliding window in the back ....
I also heard it was the last year they were made before the added a computer but not 100% on that fact...Nice video!
The very definition of a pickup truck. It's built to do one thing: carry stuff with an adequate amount of comfort and speed. This is what made Toyota legendary. The only things that can kill these are rust and crashes.
I own a 92 toyota DLX cab v6 3.0 4x4. Ran GREAT until It blew the headgasket, so I had the engine rebuilt at 300,000 miles. Just got it back from the shop...I'm a HAPPY woman again now that i've got my truck back on the road for another 300,000 miles🤩😆!!
This is why I love your channel: Straight to the point, honnest and real stuff. Yes this truck is like an hammer, and it does it pretty well. I have 2000 Tundra SR5, same. And I can tell this era when Toyota was builting tools instead of toys, like this pickup you tested and the 2000 Tundra I have, Toyota don't do them anymore, at least in north america. Elsewhere in the world Toyota still make and sell them. I really really miss that simplicity.
Have a 1992 Toyota PU. Four cylinder 4 speed. Yard truck and solid as a rock. Always starts and runs and runs with 144 thousand miles. Couldn’t ask for a better work truck for 700 dollars.
I had an '89 version of this, 22R, carbureted engine, and 4 speed manual. It was the most basic version. Single best vehicle I've ever owned. If it had been the RE version I might have kept it longer.
I had the same truck in Green. I even had the same after market steel bumper that is on your model. But mine was a 1993. I believe your truck is also a 1993 model since it has the two ovals badge. The 1992 had the "TOYOTA" badge. And 1994 had the rear brake light. And I had "YOT" on my tailgate. Unfortunately, the 22RE engine developed an idle surge at only 180K miles. And 3rd gear would pop out. So it drove it another 40K with those two problems. On the day I sold it, 3rd gear started to work again.
When it comes to Toyota trucks or any truck like that, I always say; there's champaign in a fancy glass, or beer in a red solo cup this is the second one & I love it!
I thought about this analogy and have to agree because the solo cup is rigid and resilient even when mass-produced using less and cheaper materials, and if you're happy with using a simple red solo cup as your beer vehicle then cheers to you! Fancy glasses are a liability if you can't afford to replace them, and champagne is for fancy occasions!
i learned stick on one and still drive it to this day with +250,000 miles probably one of the best first cars for anyone EVER
this exact truck in white is gorgeous
I had a 1991 toyota pickup just like that, except it was black. had some 14” Cragar rims on it. Sold it with 422k miles on it for $750 and regret it to this day.
I'm never selling mine.
These are the small and practical vehicles that America needs. Even the old ones like this are in demand - just like the old Honda ct 70s. People just keep refurbishing them!
God what I would do for a brand new off the lot, 0 miles, Toyota pickup with the 22RE.
This is one of the trucks to have ever existed that I would shoot myself in the face to get.
I have the 4x4 version of this truck, owned it since new, toy needs to bring them back no matter the cost
Totally agree about the transmission/clutch, I owned a 1993 5 speed/2wd truck. The clutch is light, super easy to modulate, shift throws on the Toyota are long compared to a sports car, but man its still pretty precise and you feel it click into gear thru the shift knob. There is a certain mechanical feel that is hard to describe. Also that shifter stays tight despite the miles, 170k on my 1993, 200k on my 2004 Tacoma, I drove that truck with 33 miles on it when my dad bought it new, shifted exactly the same.
I've driven manual Chevy S10 and manual Rangers, those things suck ass in comparison, clutch is higher effort, shifter is vague, sloppy, gotta slam into gear and hope it engaged.
Ive been driving my 92 xcab toyota pickup since 04. I've driven it to places a two wheel drive truck probably shouldnt go. I have lived out of the back of the thing when times got hard for a little while. Best damn truck in the world. If it breaks, I just fix it and its back for more.
I've got a modern version of it, the 2.7L Tacoma and plan on it being my daily for the next 20+ years.
I've had 3 of these Toyota Trucks
1987 22r 5 Speed Long Bed.....Great
1990 22RE Automatic Xtra cab....Better
1994 3.0 V6 Automatic Xtra cab....Best
All Awesome Trucks with Great A/C
Far Superior to 1987 Mitsubishi, 1990 Ranger, 1993 S-10
according to ur macaoni styling, this is sort of my version to that, my grand uncle have a White one and and i grew up in a 4th gen Hiace which its interior looks very alike. and this is my favorite toyota era. in general i dont like toyotas (like the mid 2000s and some new ones) but this is my favorite because the shifter is nice and its simple to drive and CHILDHOOD NOSTALGIA
Old Toyota + manual transmission = double layers of reliability security
Toyota built these trucks so solid that they last a very long time. They keep going on and on like the energizer battery. You might say Toyota overbuilt them.
I had one of these passed down to me from my grandpa. At 265k miles the rust got too bad underneath and I had to call victory.
Love my 94! Exact same color! 135k miles, 5 speed, 22re!
They’re getting rare because they’re being taken down to Mexico a lot.
I have two of them currently using one for parts fixing the other one up
And I get offers for them all the time
I got mine from my uncle for $500 bucks since he knows how bad i've always wanted one. I don't think i'm ever selling it.
I got 2 but I’m selling one and it’ll most likely be taken to Mexico
I had one of these trucks; but mine was a '93 YOT (not a YO as yours is) in grey-green. The very same after market rear bumper. Had sliding rear windows. Had after market AC. Had white wall tires. Had fading clear coat in the very same places (on the hood). Your truck does not have rear spring sag - huh? Mine was also NUMI built (Fremont, CA).
I have a 94 with 22re 5 speed base model with 255k miles. Major repairs include rebuilt transmission, new clutch two head gaskets, timing chain + guides, completely new air conditioning system, brake + clutch master cylinders, radiator, new bench seat reupholstered. Reliability comes with a price to keep this truck going. I think when people think reliability for this truck they think nothing fails and thats not true. It is a good truck and I wouldn’t buy another one because some key parts are no longer available.
Fix the ac (optional) and put a decent sound system in it and this is all the car you need for the rest of your life.
Had a 92 love that you could get a long bed 7 ft. Put 350k on it and a transmission 5th gear was week,no comfort here just function ❤
I actually had a 1992 Toyota Tacoma 5-speed pick-up truck and it was the BEST. I currently have a 2014 Tacoma and it is the BEST.
I have a 2000 tacoma base model (very similar to this truck), it's very simple and possibly the best first car i could have wished for
I've had my 92 for 11 years and the biggest issue I've had is the head gasket around 2016/7.
Seasoned. What a terrible thing to say to a seat.
- Will Riker
Perfect vehicle. A/C because lets face it. It's getting more and more essential for survival.
No frills other than that. Perfect runabout
Picking up my tomorrow ✌️
Zack l have to thank you for this review of tge Toyota Pick Up l own one and in Australia these are known as the Toyota Hilux ute mine is very similar to this Toyota Pick up the cab is the same mine is white and l have an aluminum tray and was made in 1997 and of course the ute has the 22R motor with a carburetor but it drives very well the engine is an absolute gem it has good power and plenty of torque also it is the Australian model because it hss quarter windows air conditioning which dies work the radio cassette player works sort of and it was built in Japan and the steering wheel is on the right hand side been Australia and l am a retired courier and this is my rolling project ute what a ute to pick as a retirement project l just about fixed it up but l can enjoy it and drive it also it is manual 5 speed and such a joy to change gear you were spot on about the gearbox and the Toyota Hilux gas done 432000 kms aprox 250000 miles l have seen other Hiluxes sell with much much more kilometers on them than mine
Best big friggin bottle test of all time. 11/10 would test again
i just cant describe how much i like this truck. i want one so bad
I had a 92 4x4 with a 22re and a 3inch body lift with 33s I picked up for $1500 that got hit so i decided I wouldn't put any money into it, It threw every code from thottle body to 02 sensor and drove down the road just fine when i sold it 7 years later for $1000. Had the full BTTF smithy set with the 2x1 lightbar. Just a shame the front drivers side was crushed in.
22RE IS *THE* ENGINE
Several billion years into the future, we will experience the heat death of the entire universe and all life as we know it will cease forever in the empty, starless void. You turn the keys on this Toyota. It still runs.
Was there an ashtray light in this one or did there use to be?
I have a92 manual rwd . About to get the timing chain and pumps done. I may do it myself. But. Idku ordered all the parts even gonna replace the radiator
YO! Sponsored by Toy Story and pizza planet 🍕
I like the Tasmanian Devil floor mats.....very 90s
Beautiful simply and reliable all In one package!
3:20
Tacoma followed that tradition to this day 😅
My 2021 Tacoma can't fit big bottles, too 🤣
Easily the best looking pickup of the 90's. My dad had one, brand new in 1994. 6 months after he bought it, It got hit in the rear with me in it when he forgot to set the parking break and it rolled into traffic. Totaled it. I fortunately came out unscathed.
I miss the days where u could get a basic truck no PowerWindows no nanny state buls#it TPMS sensors, no humongus laptops buried in the dash where u have to cycle thru multiple screens just to change radio volume.
The "YO" reference to the yellow pizza delivery pickup in Toy Story
You should check with Guinness book of records to see if you drove the most different vehicles
Once again this truck reminds us how good cars used to be 😢
Wtf reviews an old Toyota pickup?!? Oh, that’s why your channel is on point!!!
Looks pretty rust-free, for, was it, Illinois?
I had an 87, with a carbureted version of the same engine.
Funniest Big Friggin Bottle segment, didn't expect that.😆 must be Voiceover Zack's frustrated 2nd take
I own 1993 every one literally every on ask me if I’m selling it … Beautiful comfortable driving truck ❤😍🥰
I have an RV built on the Toyota Truck chassis. They are fantastic.
My buddy cut the rv off and put a sectioned dually bed on it
6:46 - also interesting to note that it was sold as a VW in Europe. 🤯
They stoped building trucks like this because they lasted to long and were to cheap
That was a beautiful review. I always am curious about this year Toyota; and ealier now, actually. (A "forklift engine". Made near or at the original Tesla factory in Fremont, CA (NUMMI).
Oh i always see a local farmer drive one around town a light blue paint on it
In the middle east toyota but the 22r in the cressida with 5 speed manual as 4 cylinder option
What a great car it drives better than pick up
Low ride means easy to load heavy stuff. Don't lift it.
id say the early 90's Sonomas and S10's with the 4 cyl iron duke are just as reliable
I miss simplistic small trucks like this.
The engine will outlive the body & frame
Fluid film?
5:12 :: TOYOTA HILUX
FROM PIZZA PLANET
*"TOY STORY EDITION"* 🍕🌎🚀
Can someone tell me the reliability difference between the 22RE and the current Tacoma 2.7 L engine?
I just bought a 2023 Tacoma SR with the 2.7L as an extra vehicle and I am hoping to keep it forever.
The 2.7 is a great engine actually. Very well built, don’t think it stacks up to the 22re just because of extra electrical stuff added
I have the 2.4L very reliable.
My daily driver is a 93 Toyota pickup 🛻
The air conditioner was just more wear and tear on your engine. So it will last even longer.
I'm on my second 93 Toyota pickup truck the first one was right just like that the second one is Superman blue🎉 one thing I can tell you is you're going to kill that ignition with all those keys replace the ignition on both of mine too many keys kills ignitions
I need that fucking bezel too!!!!!
does it pass the BFB TEST? OF COURSE NOT!!! WHY WOULD IT?!?! 😭😭😭😂😂
just totaled my subaru, and broke up with my girlfriend the week of my birthday. had my 91 yota to take my dog to the dogpark though.
timing chain
Mine does not shift smooth at all
replace shifter seat
Mine shifts fine, but throws me back in my seat.