I dont really understand why turbos are being pushed so hard now. That and the fact that the oil change intervals are 10k+ just seems to be making a real pain for the consumer. No shot Im waiting 10k+ to change oil on a turbo'd engine.
Totally agree, I think car manufacturers have pressure from consumers wanting power and the government wanting to “cut” emissions. I guess turbos are the only choice right now. Problem is greedy companies and poor quality control. I would have bought a new tundra but can’t now with all the issues.
@@AviatorsGarage 21 double cab trd sport 4x4 17k miles listed at 42k when i tested it. They spiked it to 46k on the website when i drove it off the lot but i got it for the 42k. Traded in my 2012 4.6l tundra with 168k miles so price dropped 11k from that. It was a lease and i feel very fortunate
Yeah, it’s really too bad What’s going on with those trucks. Hopefully nothing similar happens to the grand Highlander after people start to accumulate some miles
This, and the grandhighlander recall.. whats going on with Toyotas reliability? Are they still selling the Tundra and the Ghighlander in dealerships, or are they only pulling back ones that are on the recall list and still selling some that are NOT on the recall list?
In reality its not debris at the factory is the desigh of the engine combine with to thin oil for usa climate. Rod bearing have to small surface area,not enought oil pressure for the power output. 0w8 oil is piss. Emission is important but not at this level.
Toyota is making some astounding bad decisions regarding their truck builds, and it's not just the Tundra. They will lose massive market share as a result of their decision to put turbocharged 4 cylinders as standard in all Tacomas (naturally aspirated V6 is no longer available) and we all know a turbo is forced induction, which means more heat and higher pressure...and all that places more strain on the engine. Good luck getting much past the warranty period with those.
I agree. The government is putting too much pressure on car manufacturers to produce vehicles with less emissions. This will cause more emissions due to the amounts of repairs needed in the long run.
That is incredible. I would not have heard about it unless you brought it up. It's really a mess.
Ya I can’t imagine having to bring my truck in.
Great info! Thanks for keeping us up to date!
Thank you for your support!
I dont really understand why turbos are being pushed so hard now. That and the fact that the oil change intervals are 10k+ just seems to be making a real pain for the consumer. No shot Im waiting 10k+ to change oil on a turbo'd engine.
Totally agree, I think car manufacturers have pressure from consumers wanting power and the government wanting to “cut” emissions. I guess turbos are the only choice right now. Problem is greedy companies and poor quality control. I would have bought a new tundra but can’t now with all the issues.
That is a video of a short block replacement. it will be much easier and faster to replace a full block vs short. 22 1794 blow at 18k
That’s great but it shouldn’t happen in the first place?!
I got a 2021 tundra. 25k miles
@@TriggermanEst91 smart! How much did it cost you? Good ole V8
@@AviatorsGarage 21 double cab trd sport 4x4 17k miles listed at 42k when i tested it. They spiked it to 46k on the website when i drove it off the lot but i got it for the 42k. Traded in my 2012 4.6l tundra with 168k miles so price dropped 11k from that. It was a lease and i feel very fortunate
Yeah, it’s really too bad What’s going on with those trucks. Hopefully nothing similar happens to the grand Highlander after people start to accumulate some miles
I totally agree. I am happy Toyota came out with a fix though.
Have a 14 no problems yet 136,000
@@RonLingle this is new generation… turbo v 6
This, and the grandhighlander recall.. whats going on with Toyotas reliability? Are they still selling the Tundra and the Ghighlander in dealerships, or are they only pulling back ones that are on the recall list and still selling some that are NOT on the recall list?
@@hailmademodeG that is the sad question! I truly hope they take care of EVERYONE!
In reality its not debris at the factory is the desigh of the engine combine with to thin oil for usa climate. Rod bearing have to small surface area,not enought oil pressure for the power output. 0w8 oil is piss. Emission is important but not at this level.
Interesting point.
@@AviatorsGarage Debris are bs pr story.
Toyota is making some astounding bad decisions regarding their truck builds, and it's not just the Tundra. They will lose massive market share as a result of their decision to put turbocharged 4 cylinders as standard in all Tacomas (naturally aspirated V6 is no longer available) and we all know a turbo is forced induction, which means more heat and higher pressure...and all that places more strain on the engine. Good luck getting much past the warranty period with those.
I agree. The government is putting too much pressure on car manufacturers to produce vehicles with less emissions. This will cause more emissions due to the amounts of repairs needed in the long run.
Tundra just passed dodge for market share 🤣
@@cabinetguy5639 about 3 a day on the facebook pages…
Don’t buy anything newer than 2010
Good advice
over engineered junk and we dont get paid enough to repair being flat rate
I’m sorry to hear that. What a mess