Never was there a more perfect example of what we all want but can't posses because of government overreach and over regulation. Those would be great ranch trucks.
People say they want them but when push comes to shove, a minority would actually buy one with that little horsepower. Definitely not enough people to justify the expense of bringing them to the retail market. Toyota knows more about what sells better than one individual.
In the end of the day North American customers seems to go for King Ranch cowboy Cadillacs. Didn’t Mahindra do a try with selling their basic pickup in the US and failed.
@tritchie6272 nothing decent is getting built here anyway, so f*ck it at this point. Our manufacturers would rather make massive, impractical, feature-laden trucks of questionable dependability and increasing complexity that they can charge us out the ass for, because they know there's minimal competition. I'd love to see imports take a chunk out of the domestic auto market and force our brands to up their game.
I am so grateful that I am from Papua New Guinea, where this vehicle is legal and on the road in our towns and cities. Nothing beats the reliability and power this machine has to offer.
a lot of people say that, but if you drive it hard, reeving it alot for highway use you can kill it prematurely. Ive seen bad 1hz engines with 150K km ( not even 100K miles) it lasts a long time because it has no power but if you abuse it it you can kill it. In standard use sure you can get a lot of Kms out of it.
@@rolocr I rarely see them fail from abuse usually neglect is what gets them mine got to 750k untill the one time I send to a mechanic for an oil change and he used the wrong oil
Totally. Wonder what it's like to really drive a vehicle now. Even my new 4Runner is packed with new features that i turn off. Lane assist? Lol..c'mon now.
@@555atU I have 2 weeks in a LC Troopy with a rooftop tent in Costa Rica next month. No lane assist or power windows, just 3 foot deep river crossings!
@@555atU thanks, we did 16 days wild camping in our 4Runner in Newfoundland and Labrador this summer. Amazing memories, less is more. Have a great trip.
Land Cruiser 70 series is one of the greatest creations in the world of vehicles. Reliability, durability, simplicity, easy to maintain and timeless design, which are not found in today's vehicles, are more important than electronic devices and features. Its 4.5L V8, inline 6 engines and manual gearbox make this vehicle even more lovable. It's a feeling that binds us to the vehicle. And the exhaust makes some of the best music I've ever heard. People who know the value of LC 70 series know that they can go anywhere without any problem.
The Landcruiser 70 series starts at $80,000 here in Australia. They have a few more features and a v8 or 4cyl diesel engine but are pretty much the same truck. Everyone wishes they were closer to $35k here.
I live in Australia, and have a 76 series GXL Landcruiser with the v8 Diesel, and I can assure you these things are bulletproof. If you care for them, they just keep on going. Over here, they are common to see on the roads, regardless of the cost. Very popular with tradesman and farmers.
Living in Sudbury and working in the Mining Industry has allowed me to see so many of these trucks decked in out in soo many different ways over the years. Most get beat down and only last a handful of years but some of them have been around forever it seems.
We're lucky to have had these with the V8 turbo diesel down here in Aus, for the last 15 years. The V8 has just been continued (thanks also to regulatory overreach). They're often fitted with after market exhausts, and sound pretty nice :) Apparently the last batch of V8's will roll off the production line in Japan in September, replaced with a 2.8L turbo diesel which is already here. But I guess we're lucky to have them even with the 2.8.
WHY THE F*CK CANT WE BUY THESE HERE IN CANADA! TOYOTA ARE YOU LISTENING? POLITICIANS ARE YOU LISTENINING? WE NEED SIMPLE DURABLE TRUCKS THAT WORK AND GET YOU TO POINT A TO B DONT TRACK YOU AND THAT THE OWNER CAN FIX AND KEEP FOREVER!
You don't have power, they don't care about us. They want us to suffer. So that's why we the public will get bloated, complex, garbage that will take all our money so that the poor like me will never gain enough traction to escape poverty. The only way to be able to change things is to have bargaining power. Companies can bargain with automanufacturers because they have more POWER. Why would Ford, Chevy, GM, Dodge make small practical work vehicles for less margin when they can just build some bloated monstrosity and sell it for over $100k? Why would anyone build a small reliable car anymore? Station wagons are SUPER practical for most people yet the only ones I know that make station wagons are basically subaru, and I don't trust those boxer engines. This truck here would probably be perfect for me, but I will never see one. If Toyota sold this truck new right now I would buy it tomorrow, and Toyota probably knows that, but they wont ever sell it to people like me.
@@JollyGiant19 technically after 15 years you can import these used, and I see these used-up LC79s for sale as off-road only once in a while. But if you have any hope that government will be helpful in selling these in Canada, you’re being a clown who trusts politicians too much haha.
We have the same problem here in the US. Our protectionist laws and Big 3 lobbyists won't let it be sold by dealers. A lot of people have begun importing 25 year old trucks and Kei cars, which our beloved overlords immediately attempted to ban as well. :T
I was around underground coal mines in the U.S. where diesel-powered equipment was used underground. There could be no sparks generated by the vehicle, so diesel was mandatory and the vehicles were equipped with spark suppression systems on the engine, exhaust, etc. The mine itself was thoroughly ventilated to remove the diesel exhaust from the mine. The mines use extensive very sensitive monitoring systems that monitor all sorts of gases--carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, methane, etc. in the mine. When I went underground at one mine, we rode in (then) a 6.2L diesel Chevy Blazer almost 5.5 miles linear distance and down 1,200 ft. in elevation (roughly a 4% grade). Unlike the underground mine shown in the video, the coal mine only had full lighting at the working face--the everything else was dark except for vehicle and miners' lights. Oh, in the U.S. mining nomenclature, the "people transport" vehicles for underground mining are known as "man-trips."
@@dr.emilschaffhausen4683 it's due to chicken tax. These vehicles would outsell the ones made by your local American brands because they're far cheaper and more reliable. They see it as a threat to the automotive industry. The only other place that outlaws them is western Europe who have that environmentally friendly emissions regulations stick shoved so far up their back ends
@@1wun1 You can however they are usually $60k or more once they get here. Getting pricy for a 15 year old vehicle. Also buying parts would probably involve having them shipped in.
Stephen, Happy Labour Day and thanks for the fascinating surprise. These Land Cruiser pickups are also made with 4.0 V6 gasoline engines which could pass emission requirements. If Toyota ever really wanted to go head to head with the Jeep Gladiator, they could surely do so.
This is what an affordable, reliable, rugged Toyota would look like if Federal Governments would keep their hands off of our lives. Freedom from unnecessary regulations and overbearing oversight.
Not really government. Big auto businesses continue to lobby for the chicken tax to remain in place locking Americans, and Canada is dragged along, into a closed market. The big auto companies can then sell you what they want and can make most money in by following US laws that were intended to make more efficient, environmentally friendly engines like those found around the rest of the world, but they've rules lawyered to their advantage. If you want a change you have to annoy your representatives, get rid of ones that are too friendly to lobbyists and organise your friends into letter writing your senators, governors and even the CEO of those big firms that what you want is more choice in the market
Seeing people wanting these so much, I feel lucky having seen them from the time I opened my eyes here in Kenya. You will pick out one in every 20 vehicles on the road. Ambulance, military, police, tourists and farmers...here, they come in various versions (pickups and wagons).
@@chuggles03 all Toyota’s have relatively weak drivelines that snap like twigs as soon as the power goes up. And even with stock power from the more powerful engines available in this platform they are fragile. Aftermarket axles and suspension are very popular for a good reason. About every other manufacturer has better offroad capabilities and a stronger driveline. But since mines are not off-road tracks Toyotas hold up just fine, and the rest of the car is far better then anything else available.
You made one mistake. They're not 4 corner leaf sprung. The 70-series switched to front coil springs in 1999. So the front axle uses coil springs but the rear axle is indeed leaf sprung.
I think we should with hold judgment and anything we know. He mentioned the vehicle he drove had an inline 6… and it’s an updated 70. So is it a 1hz? Shouldnt it be a vdj? Or the new 4cyl? Maybe this market is different to yours?
I live in North Bay and I used to work at a towing company and one day in 2016 I went back there to pickup a JCB and saw 25 of those trucks and my jaw dropped.
Great video. I always thought this would be a great internet video. I want to go work there now. It's insane how big their operation got compared to 8 years ago. Back then they still refurbed JCBs
My unit in Afghanistan drove up armored Land Cruisers. 5 were 100 series and one was the 70series personnel transport. But we used it mostly to haul equipment when training the Afghans.
Here in Colombia (south America) we have a lot of these cars, actually new ones with 2.8 diesel or 4.0 v6 or the v8, 2 or 4 doors and are very expensive but very popular and anyone with the money can buy it .
Very cool Stephen,yes these are great trucks ,I have a cousin in Australia who is in charge of maintenance dept and they have a fleet of thereon their site,4&5 gear are locked out ,low range only , they have a few variants like Miller industries builds, personnel carriers, ambulances ,etc, their site is open pit mining so allot have A/C simply the reason of daily temps being 35-40 and his supervisor vehicle has A/C and these vehicles take a beating that no road going version does the corrosive fine dust gets in everywhere and eats into parts, in the middle east they sell them new to the public and are quite well equipped with almost all the amenities,95% manual trans, 5% autos ,V6 gas or diesel inline 6 or turbo diesel 4cyl , no V8 diesels and not cheap to buy, i would own one in a minute i could get my hands on one 👍
Luved in Australia for a little bit. I guess it's that hard to get one. I see them in second hand markets throughout Sydney, Perth and rarely Melbourne. Are they really hard to get?
Canada allows you to import these that are 15 years or older. So if you really want one you can get them from any of the Arab countries, Central and South America, Africa, Australia or Asia.
Don't they still have to pass Transportation Safety requirements? I was able to bring a 1970 FJ40 home to America, from Japan, but still had to pass a traffic safety inspection. Mostly lights, horn, passenger safety items, stuff like that. The engine and exhaust were grandfathered in under a similar 15 year program.
@@stillnessbetween5103 each state and province has their own rules regarding such things. So yeah, that can be a roadblock in some cases. In the states only fourteen require a safety inspection. But even within certain states, like Washington, only certain counties require emissions testing whereas others don’t.
From the Netherlands here. I am driving a 70 series Landcruiser (Troop Carrier) for more than 20 years now, with the natural aspirated 1HZ engine. Import of new cars is a long time forbidden because of European emission rules. Nowadays old diesels before that time are not allowed in the center of my home town (The Hague) anymore I had to convert it to a camper because these rules did not apply to a camper when you live in the city itself. Even new landcruisers of any kind (which meet the Euro 6 emission rules) are crazy expenses in the because of ridiculous taxes, e.g. a US 70.000 car will become a US 200.000+ car just because of CO2-taxes 😞.
G’day from Australia: These Type of Toyota have been on the roads of Australia since the mid 1960’sand are in fact the predecessor of the larger Prado, GLX and Sahara Land Cruiser Types. And yes they had Toyota V8 Turbo Diesel. Which incidentally has now been deleted in place now are 4 Cylinders. Yes they are tough and reliable and available for on the road registered. Far superior than most of the stuff coming out of Asia, China and the America’s. And that is why mines spec these vehicles in prefer to any other vehicle available.
In Canada I have a 2018 Tundra and 2014 Lexus GX460, in Trinidad where I winter I have a 2012 Hilux 3.0l diesel and a 2007 78Series Troop Carrier... I feel so blessed!!!
Back in the early seventies the mine I worked at on the West Coast of Tasmania two land cruisers replaced series three land rovers, it was years until the mine bought another land Rover, they are just the best
Another reason the normally aspirated engine is preferred is that depending on the mine, a lot of these trucks may have flame/spark/explosion proof conversions - that process is so much easier with a N/A all mechanical diesel engine.
Luckily we can get them here and the variety is wide going from 4,0 liter V6 gas to 4,2 diesel NA, 4,5 V8 turbo diesel and now the GD 2,8 turbo diesel engines with automatic gearbox. Dual lockers, single cab pick up, dual cab pick up, troop carrier body, 5 door and 3 door. Leafs on the rear and coils on the front for the pick up and fully coiled for the passenger versions! Aleluya!
A company I worked for did conversions for mining contractors with these. They are just amazing. When they come out of a mine they are rusted and busted! I have seen some lighter duty reconditioned and are now on the road because in Canada, you can register it after 15 years.
Although 1hz is not offered anymore here in Australia we only get i4 and v8 diesels, this engine is my absolute favourite. Bloody thing is indestructible.. love the 1hd engines too
I have one still. A 1992 MWB wagon. Typical Landcruiser blue grey paint with the FRP top. Mines the flash version, suspension seats and a factory roll bar 😊 Love it.
Gosh, I want one in the US so badly. Awesome video!!! You could have done an hour long video on these trucks! It would have been nice to know what really kills them in only 3 or 5 years. Do you mean the engine goes? The frame goes bad? I mean, how much mileage can you really get in a mine?
yes ! Toyota has gas engines that are sold in U.S. , just basic 4x4 ,looks like they still have Manuel locking hubs , love a troopy van ....add a pop top ,the car camper ,overland rig I could build ,maybe the LC300 will be sold here again ,but a more utilitarian, than a 3 row luxury family school bus the LC200 was
These are huge sellers in Australia . We had the 150Kw 430 Nm V8 diesel initially. That engine ceased production late 2023. We now have the 2.8l diesel out of the Hilux/Prado. 150Kw & 500Nm . Miss that V8 diesel Roar
Enjoyed the video. Mine sites in Australia use the turbo V8 and some of the mines just bury the LandCuisers at the end of life, they never leave the mine site. Cheers
These have been legal in Australia since the very first incarnation of them appeared for mining in 1956. These are the toughest trucks and over the last 45 years have hardly changed only by way of Different engines including V8s. The original FJ40 series was a little smaller but some are still going today. We get them in cab chassis, 2-door with tray, 4-door with tray and 4-door troop carrier.
I use these (turbo-v8 though) in Aus in exploration in/for/adjacent to the mining industry; we load them, pull with them, off road all day long, knock trees over constantly, etc. They are covered in dents, and when you lay underneath them there are no surfaces that aren't bent or damaged in some superficial way. After doing that for months we will then drive for thousands of kilometres fully loaded and pulling loads to get home. Hopefully we will have had time to get an oil change in between, which is usually all that's needed. ABS sensors, oil sensors, brake lines are still able to be damaged, but apart from that they tend to be fine.
A cool truck for sure. I know many want and like all of the bells and whistles; however, I am one of the few who like more of the basic truck and these are them.
They sell these things in Australia for $81000 CAD for same spec model with a 2.8 turbo diesel and automatic. Toyota stopped taking orders on the 4.5 turbo diesel v8 as its ceased production of that engine. Although they are tough they require a lot of mods to suspension as the standard ride is bone jarring and the v8 is a boat anchor and requires re-map and exhaust to make any power and then the clutch requires replacement due to the torque increase. Rear wheel track is narrower then the front as they widened it to accommodate the v8 ,which is a pain when driving though sand. As a farmer ,I gave up on these things years ago ,way too expensive for what they are.
Really Cool, now that our import laws up here at 15years. The 4.5L turbo diesel 70 and 200 series and now import legel but just expensive. There's a couple of companies in canada importing but there damn expenive.
ive had 4 of them here in australia all fitted with the turbo diesel v8 and i love them. by far the best sounding diesel cars youll ever hear once they have a 3-4' exhaust installed and they are solid, simple and so bloody fun to drive due to having solid axles and being a barebones car with a big v8 in it . but they are over $100k new in aus which is alot of money for a car with no electric windows unless you pay the extra for the gxl trim
I was halfway through before I realized it was for mines not mimes. I mean they’re all white like the face paint but I didn’t think mimes would need so many trucks.
70 Series encompasses several models. The pick up or truck chassis is the 79 Series. 78 Series is the troop carrier, 76 Series is the 4 door wagon, 75 Series is the 2 door wagon, etc.
I've been to a mine that had these. They get abused hard, they spend most of their life in 2nd gear at red line as they locked out the higher gears. Not uncommon for people to launch them into the air over huge bumps or smash them into the walls underground.
@@theworkshopmechanicchannel3296 When i´m off road, everybody sais "wow how capable is your Land Cruiser!" and i always think "if i can do this with the 22R.. the 4500 engine must be a monster!"
@@gmultimedio I’m very been in the automotive trade since the late 80’s and it’s been years since I’ve seen a 22r engine. I might add they are a very sturdy power plant
An electric truck underground? Sounds like the potential for uncontrollable fire to me, with all the damage they receive you know the battery case will take a hit!
Battery’s are easy to protect with some heavy protection underneath. A very thick sheet of plastic can be strong enough to hold the entire car falling down on a spear head. It’s just costs money and is heavy, that’s why consumer cars don’t have that protection. But it is very easy to do.
I'm very familiar with these trucks , we have every version of them in middle east ! we have I6 NA Diesel , 4 cylinder turbo diesel , 4.5 turbo V8 diesel , and 4.0 V6 gasoline (same engine as old 4runner ) , they are super rough to drive but they are a joy ! and unmatched reliability
Super interesting video! I was just thinking they should look into making them electric, when you started driving one. It makes so much more sense than a diesel for the mining application; no emissions so the workers aren’t breathing in the fumes, super-low maintenance costs, and incredibly cheap to charge up too. I would think the battery pack will outlast the truck due to the abuse they take on site, so that could be reconditioned and put into another reconditioned truck I guess.
An EV could be the dead Canary in a mine? I knew someone who got a hold of an ex mining LC and managed to plate it (temporary transit?) and drive it to a customer in the US. Maybe the client was a collector.
We heard some stories about LCs "going missing" from mines and somehow making their way onto the road. Or some mines that went bankrupt and ended up selling them to the public. So there's definitely a few out running around in the world.
@@TruckKing once they're 15/25 years old, you could effectively "import" it as grey market. Any difference in taxes or tariffs would have to be paid given it wasn't imported originally for road use. Any necessary mods required to make it street legal would have to be done (likely minimal unless done as part of the customization for mine work). And then the import paperwork and mechanical certification documents go to the licensing jurisdiction, where it would be legally certified and licenced for road use. After that, it's just another truck.
In western Australia those Cruisers fitted with a twin turbo and are unstoppable street legal trucks because Any car that was legally produced and sold without airbags can still be driven.
@@urgeeked3977 Nope, it`s extremely underpowered, barely pushes itself uphill. As a daily driver f-150 is w-a-a-ay better: faster, more comfortable, can tow etc., etc. For average people TLC 70 with 1HZ is not a realistic option at all...
I work on a northen mine of the nunavik and we drive those every day. These are pretty indestructibles! They take a lot of beat every day very tough trucks
these would be a amzing option for hunting ranches in south tx and mexico to keep on a private ranch and use as ranch vehicle for 20 plus years at a time and im sure miller could build special hunting beds and attachments each land owner would want
Here in Zambia 🇿🇲 the average price is about USD 88,000. The last few V8s are still coming but you can't order one anymore. You can now only order the 2.8L Another thing for the African market is Adblue and DPFs are excluded.
There is also a company called Access that specializes in Land Cruisers for the mining industry. They are in Rouyn-Noranda on the Québec side and I think they also have something in Sudbury. There’s even a brand called "electric cruiser" which has a différent logo very similar to the original one. They own the Toyota dealership in rouyn, and also sell other heavy equipment including hino trucks
That's the best hardtop Land Cruiser 1HZ. In Papua New Guinea, the 1HZ has powered the country ever since the 70s. Load, reliability and durability. The longest running LC70 clocked over a million km and still running 👌
Never was there a more perfect example of what we all want but can't posses because of government overreach and over regulation. Those would be great ranch trucks.
Except you can never leave the ranch.
People say they want them but when push comes to shove, a minority would actually buy one with that little horsepower.
Definitely not enough people to justify the expense of bringing them to the retail market. Toyota knows more about what sells better than one individual.
@matthewgaines10 but... they're already importing some of them for this industry...
In the end of the day North American customers seems to go for King Ranch cowboy Cadillacs.
Didn’t Mahindra do a try with selling their basic pickup in the US and failed.
@@johans7100 safety and emissions regs in North America are far too expensive to meet to justify importation
This the truck every N/A auto company should offer. No no frills work truck. Where do i send my money?
@roxydog545 I guess you can send your money to whatever Politician will legalize them.
Bribe your state rep to repeal the chicken tax
@@jamessizemore7103 Then nothing will be made in the USA anymore.
@tritchie6272 nothing decent is getting built here anyway, so f*ck it at this point. Our manufacturers would rather make massive, impractical, feature-laden trucks of questionable dependability and increasing complexity that they can charge us out the ass for, because they know there's minimal competition.
I'd love to see imports take a chunk out of the domestic auto market and force our brands to up their game.
@@ThraceVega If a foreign brand that's not owned by any Government wants to sell here,maybe they can build here and employ Americans.
I am so grateful that I am from Papua New Guinea, where this vehicle is legal and on the road in our towns and cities. Nothing beats the reliability and power this machine has to offer.
I'm currently in Kenya and these Toyota pick ups are a staple throughout Africa for also the same reasons you mention
Hi from Australia 🦘.. my of 2000 model LandCruiser with that same 4.2 1HZ engine has 680,000 klms on it.... So just about run in.
Yep and you could probably still sell it for a profit
Ohhh you got a new one! nice...
Nearly, another 700k she'll be just about right
FU kangaroo 🦘 😃
GI (left shift one on keyboard for each) kangaroo 🦘 for teasing us. 😃
The small, but mighty, 1HZ diesel. One of the most reliable engines ever produced.
a lot of people say that, but if you drive it hard, reeving it alot for highway use you can kill it prematurely. Ive seen bad 1hz engines with 150K km ( not even 100K miles) it lasts a long time because it has no power but if you abuse it it you can kill it. In standard use sure you can get a lot of Kms out of it.
@@rolocr all in the world is to be used prudently, if you abuse it it will break.
@@rolocr. Million kilometer mothers in Australia. Abuse anything you'll kill it
@@rolocr I rarely see them fail from abuse
usually neglect is what gets them mine got to 750k untill
the one time I send to a mechanic for an oil change and he used the wrong oil
@@christianlee1343 people have the false idea of them being unbreakable. They are not. It's a good great looking car but heavily over hyped
Came for the 70 series curiosity….stayed for the mining modifications. Very interesting!
This is a real Land Cruiser unlike that hybrid soccer mom crap they want $90,000 for. Great video. Thank you
Exactly………
Totally. Wonder what it's like to really drive a vehicle now. Even my new 4Runner is packed with new features that i turn off. Lane assist? Lol..c'mon now.
@@555atU I have 2 weeks in a LC Troopy with a rooftop tent in Costa Rica next month. No lane assist or power windows, just 3 foot deep river crossings!
@@blackwatch7151 im heading to WY with 4Runner next Saturday...im excited all the while being totally jealous of you. 😂. Stay safe.
@@555atU thanks, we did 16 days wild camping in our 4Runner in Newfoundland and Labrador this summer. Amazing memories, less is more. Have a great trip.
Land Cruiser 70 series is one of the greatest creations in the world of vehicles.
Reliability, durability, simplicity, easy to maintain and timeless design, which are not found in today's vehicles, are more important than electronic devices and features. Its 4.5L V8, inline 6 engines and manual gearbox make this vehicle even more lovable. It's a feeling that binds us to the vehicle. And the exhaust makes some of the best music I've ever heard. People who know the value of LC 70 series know that they can go anywhere without any problem.
You can't say it better , I completely agree with you
Dope video, I can’t even imagine how many of these Toyota would sell if they made them street legal. Bare bones bulletproof work truck.
No such thing has " Making street legal" its regulation that makes them not legal, not because the "thingy doesnt go pop like it should"
The Landcruiser 70 series starts at $80,000 here in Australia. They have a few more features and a v8 or 4cyl diesel engine but are pretty much the same truck.
Everyone wishes they were closer to $35k here.
Yeah, they are charging you a big markup, but these sound more similar to the ones Toyota sold to you guys in the early 2000.
about $54k U.S we pay that for the all new tacoma
I wish I could buy one for $35,000 Canadian. Take one over any kind of truck the big 3 make.
@@NoToBigBro thats the governments faults
@@youtubecarspottersguide1 and it breaks if you drive it in dirt now
It sucks that these can't be made street legal here. I've always liked that style of Land Cruiser.
its utilitarian not a luxury truck ' loaded with $10k in opts ' me I like the 70 series wagon and troop carrier
They can make it street legal and in FACT it is street legal in the free world, you just live in a slave state.
they can, but jeep would die
Thank your current government and vote accordingly in the next election.
@@TepidJean Jeep and pretty much anything with the "off-road" sticker attached to it. Even Toyota other lineups.
I live in Australia, and have a 76 series GXL Landcruiser with the v8 Diesel, and I can assure you these things are bulletproof. If you care for them, they just keep on going.
Over here, they are common to see on the roads, regardless of the cost. Very popular with tradesman and farmers.
Living in Sudbury and working in the Mining Industry has allowed me to see so many of these trucks decked in out in soo many different ways over the years. Most get beat down and only last a handful of years but some of them have been around forever it seems.
We're lucky to have had these with the V8 turbo diesel down here in Aus, for the last 15 years. The V8 has just been continued (thanks also to regulatory overreach). They're often fitted with after market exhausts, and sound pretty nice :) Apparently the last batch of V8's will roll off the production line in Japan in September, replaced with a 2.8L turbo diesel which is already here. But I guess we're lucky to have them even with the 2.8.
My dream truck is a 70 series double cab in Khaki color.
LandCruisers are all over Australia, they are on all outback farms, most rural fire services, outback police , and just about everywhere else
WHY THE F*CK CANT WE BUY THESE HERE IN CANADA! TOYOTA ARE YOU LISTENING? POLITICIANS ARE YOU LISTENINING? WE NEED SIMPLE DURABLE TRUCKS THAT WORK AND GET YOU TO POINT A TO B DONT TRACK YOU AND THAT THE OWNER CAN FIX AND KEEP FOREVER!
You don't have power, they don't care about us. They want us to suffer. So that's why we the public will get bloated, complex, garbage that will take all our money so that the poor like me will never gain enough traction to escape poverty.
The only way to be able to change things is to have bargaining power. Companies can bargain with automanufacturers because they have more POWER.
Why would Ford, Chevy, GM, Dodge make small practical work vehicles for less margin when they can just build some bloated monstrosity and sell it for over $100k? Why would anyone build a small reliable car anymore? Station wagons are SUPER practical for most people yet the only ones I know that make station wagons are basically subaru, and I don't trust those boxer engines.
This truck here would probably be perfect for me, but I will never see one. If Toyota sold this truck new right now I would buy it tomorrow, and Toyota probably knows that, but they wont ever sell it to people like me.
YOU SHOULD TRY TO VOTE HARDER TO GET TRUDEAU OUT, IVE HEARD THEY WILL START IMPORTING THESE IF WE VOTE FOR CONSERVATIVES.
@@anarsamedi7358Good luck if you think they’ll ever let you import these 😂
@@JollyGiant19 technically after 15 years you can import these used, and I see these used-up LC79s for sale as off-road only once in a while.
But if you have any hope that government will be helpful in selling these in Canada, you’re being a clown who trusts politicians too much haha.
We have the same problem here in the US. Our protectionist laws and Big 3 lobbyists won't let it be sold by dealers.
A lot of people have begun importing 25 year old trucks and Kei cars, which our beloved overlords immediately attempted to ban as well. :T
I was around underground coal mines in the U.S. where diesel-powered equipment was used underground. There could be no sparks generated by the vehicle, so diesel was mandatory and the vehicles were equipped with spark suppression systems on the engine, exhaust, etc. The mine itself was thoroughly ventilated to remove the diesel exhaust from the mine. The mines use extensive very sensitive monitoring systems that monitor all sorts of gases--carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, methane, etc. in the mine. When I went underground at one mine, we rode in (then) a 6.2L diesel Chevy Blazer almost 5.5 miles linear distance and down 1,200 ft. in elevation (roughly a 4% grade). Unlike the underground mine shown in the video, the coal mine only had full lighting at the working face--the everything else was dark except for vehicle and miners' lights. Oh, in the U.S. mining nomenclature, the "people transport" vehicles for underground mining are known as "man-trips."
I don’t understand how we can drive motorcycles on the street but we can’t get these
Protectionist lobbying from the Big 3.
>:[
Shhh these regulatory fucks will outlaw motorcycles too....
Agree. It's stupid. They meet crash standards in other countries.
@@dr.emilschaffhausen4683 Pick up truck from the 3 manufacturers
wants to maintain their cash cows
@@dr.emilschaffhausen4683 it's due to chicken tax. These vehicles would outsell the ones made by your local American brands because they're far cheaper and more reliable. They see it as a threat to the automotive industry. The only other place that outlaws them is western Europe who have that environmentally friendly emissions regulations stick shoved so far up their back ends
I would be the first in line to order one with a manual if we could get these in Canada.
BTW, their gas consumption is out of this world! With Canada gas and diesel prices, this will require a fortune
In Canada you can order this if it's + 15 years old
@@1wun1 You can however they are usually $60k or more once they get here. Getting pricy for a 15 year old vehicle. Also buying parts would probably involve having them shipped in.
this was a cool presentation. thank you
Great video. Really loved the change of pace. Cool truck.
Stephen, Happy Labour Day and thanks for the fascinating surprise. These Land Cruiser pickups are also made with 4.0 V6 gasoline engines which could pass emission requirements.
If Toyota ever really wanted to go head to head with the Jeep Gladiator, they could surely do so.
Tacomas already outsell Gladiators by a lot.
i doubt if it will pass safety standards especially pedestrian.
why would toyota need to? they're more then willing to sell you a $60k taco or 4runner that's junk
The engine isn't really the main issue, it's the crash test ratings and the expense to get certified.
This is what an affordable, reliable, rugged Toyota would look like if Federal Governments would keep their hands off of our lives. Freedom from unnecessary regulations and overbearing oversight.
Government crap. We need these. Simple but reliable truck.
Not really government. Big auto businesses continue to lobby for the chicken tax to remain in place locking Americans, and Canada is dragged along, into a closed market. The big auto companies can then sell you what they want and can make most money in by following US laws that were intended to make more efficient, environmentally friendly engines like those found around the rest of the world, but they've rules lawyered to their advantage. If you want a change you have to annoy your representatives, get rid of ones that are too friendly to lobbyists and organise your friends into letter writing your senators, governors and even the CEO of those big firms that what you want is more choice in the market
It’s sad that we can’t get these In north America … at the right price they’d sell very well
It would put a huge dent in luxury pickup market, such as F150, RAM, etc. They will never sell them here, at least new.
@@anarsamedi7358 It would cripple the Big 3. They can't compete for reliability, so they banned the competition. Yes, I'm American. X3
Seeing people wanting these so much, I feel lucky having seen them from the time I opened my eyes here in Kenya. You will pick out one in every 20 vehicles on the road. Ambulance, military, police, tourists and farmers...here, they come in various versions (pickups and wagons).
That was interesting. I learned the 11 km circular road to drive out and the 30% ventilation cost to name a couple. Thumbs up!
Most reliable vehicle ever made.
Because it's simple. You can't sell it in many markets because it doesn't meet either safety or emissions compliance or both.
Because that whopping 128 HP isn’t enough to break anything.
@@Toe_Knee_69 You haven't watched the Arabs. They get the NA 70 series, boost them to the moon, crazy power, race supercars and rarely break anything.
@@chuggles03 all Toyota’s have relatively weak drivelines that snap like twigs as soon as the power goes up. And even with stock power from the more powerful engines available in this platform they are fragile. Aftermarket axles and suspension are very popular for a good reason.
About every other manufacturer has better offroad capabilities and a stronger driveline. But since mines are not off-road tracks Toyotas hold up just fine, and the rest of the car is far better then anything else available.
@@autobootpiloot you are trolling right?
You made one mistake. They're not 4 corner leaf sprung. The 70-series switched to front coil springs in 1999. So the front axle uses coil springs but the rear axle is indeed leaf sprung.
I think we should with hold judgment and anything we know. He mentioned the vehicle he drove had an inline 6… and it’s an updated 70. So is it a 1hz? Shouldnt it be a vdj? Or the new 4cyl?
Maybe this market is different to yours?
Mine spec will almost certainly be leaf allround
@@shanevonharten3100 so why are they missing the leafs in the front but plenty of radius arms peaking out under there... to go with the coil front end
@@lukescido9265 I can see radius arms on the ones in the workshop and the yard
@@shanevonharten3100 They’re not.
I live in North Bay and I used to work at a towing company and one day in 2016 I went back there to pickup a JCB and saw 25 of those trucks and my jaw dropped.
Great video. I always thought this would be a great internet video. I want to go work there now. It's insane how big their operation got compared to 8 years ago. Back then they still refurbed JCBs
I agree. this is the kind of truck we need for our kids learning how to drive. simple cheap & reliable.
My unit in Afghanistan drove up armored Land Cruisers. 5 were 100 series and one was the 70series personnel transport. But we used it mostly to haul equipment when training the Afghans.
Ah the forbidden fruit 👀
Trucks used to be simple until the water cooler cowboys wanted to adopt a new image. Damn shame.
Women started making the buying decisions.
@BillLaBrie :/
Nothing to do with consumers and everything to do with regulations.
As an Australian , I can tell you that the 70 series breaks down like any other brand.
But WAY less
And easy and cheap to fix
Breaks down? Haha righto mate. Never happened to me
I’ve had six of em since the eighty’s and yet to experience more than a flat
I just saw the 70 series at first I already liked the video 😂
Here in Colombia (south America) we have a lot of these cars, actually new ones with 2.8 diesel or 4.0 v6 or the v8, 2 or 4 doors and are very expensive but very popular and anyone with the money can buy it .
Thank God we have great governmommies that makes everything possible to prevent us from buying these gems!
They sell land cruisers, and 70 series in one of the car dealerships in Toronto. Happy hunting!
Very cool Stephen,yes these are great trucks ,I have a cousin in Australia who is in charge of maintenance dept and they have a fleet of thereon their site,4&5 gear are locked out ,low range only , they have a few variants like Miller industries builds, personnel carriers, ambulances ,etc, their site is open pit mining so allot have A/C simply the reason of daily temps being 35-40 and his supervisor vehicle has A/C and these vehicles take a beating that no road going version does the corrosive fine dust gets in everywhere and eats into parts, in the middle east they sell them new to the public and are quite well equipped with almost all the amenities,95% manual trans, 5% autos ,V6 gas or diesel inline 6 or turbo diesel 4cyl , no V8 diesels and not cheap to buy, i would own one in a minute i could get my hands on one 👍
Luved in Australia for a little bit. I guess it's that hard to get one. I see them in second hand markets throughout Sydney, Perth and rarely Melbourne. Are they really hard to get?
V8 diesel has been pulled out from production past mont.. that's why there's no new ones.
@@jironmeister wrong
Canada allows you to import these that are 15 years or older. So if you really want one you can get them from any of the Arab countries, Central and South America, Africa, Australia or Asia.
Don't they still have to pass Transportation Safety requirements? I was able to bring a 1970 FJ40 home to America, from Japan, but still had to pass a traffic safety inspection. Mostly lights, horn, passenger safety items, stuff like that. The engine and exhaust were grandfathered in under a similar 15 year program.
@@stillnessbetween5103 each state and province has their own rules regarding such things. So yeah, that can be a roadblock in some cases. In the states only fourteen require a safety inspection. But even within certain states, like Washington, only certain counties require emissions testing whereas others don’t.
From the Netherlands here. I am driving a 70 series Landcruiser (Troop Carrier) for more than 20 years now, with the natural aspirated 1HZ engine. Import of new cars is a long time forbidden because of European emission rules. Nowadays old diesels before that time are not allowed in the center of my home town (The Hague) anymore I had to convert it to a camper because these rules did not apply to a camper when you live in the city itself. Even new landcruisers of any kind (which meet the Euro 6 emission rules) are crazy expenses in the because of ridiculous taxes, e.g. a US 70.000 car will become a US 200.000+ car just because of CO2-taxes 😞.
G’day from Australia: These Type of Toyota have been on the roads of Australia since the mid 1960’sand are in fact the predecessor of the larger Prado, GLX and Sahara Land Cruiser Types. And yes they had Toyota V8 Turbo Diesel. Which incidentally has now been deleted in place now are 4 Cylinders. Yes they are tough and reliable and available for on the road registered. Far superior than most of the stuff coming out of Asia, China and the America’s. And that is why mines spec these vehicles in prefer to any other vehicle available.
I love those trucks! Could it be sold as an ATV? Put a wooden flat deck on it……beautiful!
In Canada I have a 2018 Tundra and 2014 Lexus GX460, in Trinidad where I winter I have a 2012 Hilux 3.0l diesel and a 2007 78Series Troop Carrier... I feel so blessed!!!
How lucky you’re
Back in the early seventies the mine I worked at on the West Coast of Tasmania two land cruisers replaced series three land rovers, it was years until the mine bought another land Rover, they are just the best
Another reason the normally aspirated engine is preferred is that depending on the mine, a lot of these trucks may have flame/spark/explosion proof conversions - that process is so much easier with a N/A all mechanical diesel engine.
Luckily we can get them here and the variety is wide going from 4,0 liter V6 gas to 4,2 diesel NA, 4,5 V8 turbo diesel and now the GD 2,8 turbo diesel engines with automatic gearbox. Dual lockers, single cab pick up, dual cab pick up, troop carrier body, 5 door and 3 door. Leafs on the rear and coils on the front for the pick up and fully coiled for the passenger versions! Aleluya!
@7:12 like the simple basic interior , Manuel crank windows, basic radio ,a/c heat its 1985
A company I worked for did conversions for mining contractors with these. They are just amazing. When they come out of a mine they are rusted and busted! I have seen some lighter duty reconditioned and are now on the road because in Canada, you can register it after 15 years.
Although 1hz is not offered anymore here in Australia we only get i4 and v8 diesels, this engine is my absolute favourite. Bloody thing is indestructible.. love the 1hd engines too
I have never suffered from envy or jealousy till now how. I wish I could drive that home here in the U.S.
Teased everytime I drive by on 17 and see them all parked up on the hill😢
I have one still. A 1992 MWB wagon. Typical Landcruiser blue grey paint with the FRP top. Mines the flash version, suspension seats and a factory roll bar 😊 Love it.
Gosh, I want one in the US so badly. Awesome video!!! You could have done an hour long video on these trucks! It would have been nice to know what really kills them in only 3 or 5 years. Do you mean the engine goes? The frame goes bad? I mean, how much mileage can you really get in a mine?
If only in the USA
yes ! Toyota has gas engines that are sold in U.S. , just basic 4x4 ,looks like they still have Manuel locking hubs , love a troopy van ....add a pop top ,the car camper ,overland rig I could build ,maybe the LC300 will be sold here again ,but a more utilitarian, than a 3 row luxury family school bus the LC200 was
Because we let women vote is why we can't have these.
These are huge sellers in Australia . We had the 150Kw 430 Nm V8 diesel initially. That engine ceased production late 2023. We now have the 2.8l diesel out of the Hilux/Prado. 150Kw & 500Nm . Miss that V8 diesel Roar
Enjoyed the video. Mine sites in Australia use the turbo V8 and some of the mines just bury the LandCuisers at the end of life, they never leave the mine site. Cheers
Drove these in Africa, they were rock solid. Friend brought one of these motors back and there was a bolt up kit available to put it in his 4 runner.
Awesome video I really enjoy niche work vehicles like this
These have been legal in Australia since the very first incarnation of them appeared for mining in 1956. These are the toughest trucks and over the last 45 years have hardly changed only by way of Different engines including V8s. The original FJ40 series was a little smaller but some are still going today. We get them in cab chassis, 2-door with tray, 4-door with tray and 4-door troop carrier.
I use these (turbo-v8 though) in Aus in exploration in/for/adjacent to the mining industry; we load them, pull with them, off road all day long, knock trees over constantly, etc. They are covered in dents, and when you lay underneath them there are no surfaces that aren't bent or damaged in some superficial way. After doing that for months we will then drive for thousands of kilometres fully loaded and pulling loads to get home. Hopefully we will have had time to get an oil change in between, which is usually all that's needed. ABS sensors, oil sensors, brake lines are still able to be damaged, but apart from that they tend to be fine.
So cool. Impressive rear spring pack on these!
I remember how excited you were to see one of these when in Smithers.
Great video.
A cool truck for sure. I know many want and like all of the bells and whistles; however, I am one of the few who like more of the basic truck and these are them.
I don’t see why you couldn’t buy one for personal use on your own property.
I’m certain it has to do with the contract Miller has with Toyota to sell them to Miller for such a low price.
They sell these things in Australia for $81000 CAD for same spec model with a 2.8 turbo diesel and automatic. Toyota stopped taking orders on the 4.5 turbo diesel v8 as its ceased production of that engine.
Although they are tough they require a lot of mods to suspension as the standard ride is bone jarring and the v8 is a boat anchor and requires re-map and exhaust to make any power and then the clutch requires replacement due to the torque increase.
Rear wheel track is narrower then the front as they widened it to accommodate the v8 ,which is a pain when driving though sand.
As a farmer ,I gave up on these things years ago ,way too expensive for what they are.
Really Cool, now that our import laws up here at 15years. The 4.5L turbo diesel 70 and 200 series and now import legel but just expensive. There's a couple of companies in canada importing but there damn expenive.
You could get a 2009 LC 78 Troopy or LC 200 now!
Wish I could get in US
Yeah, reliable simplicity is the term that is no longer available to us consumers here in north America... Sad, indeed.! 😒
ive had 4 of them here in australia all fitted with the turbo diesel v8 and i love them. by far the best sounding diesel cars youll ever hear once they have a 3-4' exhaust installed and they are solid, simple and so bloody fun to drive due to having solid axles and being a barebones car with a big v8 in it . but they are over $100k new in aus which is alot of money for a car with no electric windows unless you pay the extra for the gxl trim
I used to wonder where these trucks were going from the CP Railyard in Scarborough!! Thanks for the video!!!
I was halfway through before I realized it was for mines not mimes. I mean they’re all white like the face paint but I didn’t think mimes would need so many trucks.
70 Series encompasses several models. The pick up or truck chassis is the 79 Series. 78 Series is the troop carrier, 76 Series is the 4 door wagon, 75 Series is the 2 door wagon, etc.
I've been to a mine that had these. They get abused hard, they spend most of their life in 2nd gear at red line as they locked out the higher gears. Not uncommon for people to launch them into the air over huge bumps or smash them into the walls underground.
I own a 1987 70 series with 22R toyota engine. 530.000 Km and counting. It´s my everyday car. So many adventures in that car!
22r engine.
A very powerful engine 🤭
@@theworkshopmechanicchannel3296 When i´m off road, everybody sais "wow how capable is your Land Cruiser!" and i always think "if i can do this with the 22R.. the 4500 engine must be a monster!"
@@gmultimedio
I’m very been in the automotive trade since the late 80’s and it’s been years since I’ve seen a 22r engine.
I might add they are a very sturdy power plant
@@theworkshopmechanicchannel3296 here in latín América there are los of 22r still running. So reliable engine, so easy to repair!
Great video! Most innovative look at a cool 4x4 I’ve seen in a looong time. Keep up the great work!
Great vid. I have a cousin thats been down similar mines and he said if you couldnt take any other trucks down there because of the conditions.
They're very popular in Australia. Now come with a 2.8 litre turbo diesel and 6 speed auto transmission.
An electric truck underground? Sounds like the potential for uncontrollable fire to me, with all the damage they receive you know the battery case will take a hit!
Battery’s are easy to protect with some heavy protection underneath. A very thick sheet of plastic can be strong enough to hold the entire car falling down on a spear head. It’s just costs money and is heavy, that’s why consumer cars don’t have that protection. But it is very easy to do.
I'm very familiar with these trucks , we have every version of them in middle east ! we have I6 NA Diesel , 4 cylinder turbo diesel , 4.5 turbo V8 diesel , and 4.0 V6 gasoline (same engine as old 4runner ) , they are super rough to drive but they are a joy ! and unmatched reliability
Super interesting video! I was just thinking they should look into making them electric, when you started driving one. It makes so much more sense than a diesel for the mining application; no emissions so the workers aren’t breathing in the fumes, super-low maintenance costs, and incredibly cheap to charge up too. I would think the battery pack will outlast the truck due to the abuse they take on site, so that could be reconditioned and put into another reconditioned truck I guess.
An EV could be the dead Canary in a mine?
I knew someone who got a hold of an ex mining LC and managed to plate it (temporary transit?) and drive it to a customer in the US. Maybe the client was a collector.
We heard some stories about LCs "going missing" from mines and somehow making their way onto the road. Or some mines that went bankrupt and ended up selling them to the public. So there's definitely a few out running around in the world.
@@TruckKing 50 cals mounted in the back riddled with holes
@@TruckKingthere are a few of these mine trucks at the Land Cruiser museum in SLC
@@TruckKing once they're 15/25 years old, you could effectively "import" it as grey market.
Any difference in taxes or tariffs would have to be paid given it wasn't imported originally for road use.
Any necessary mods required to make it street legal would have to be done (likely minimal unless done as part of the customization for mine work). And then the import paperwork and mechanical certification documents go to the licensing jurisdiction, where it would be legally certified and licenced for road use. After that, it's just another truck.
In western Australia those Cruisers fitted with a twin turbo and are unstoppable street legal trucks because Any car that was legally produced and sold without airbags can still be driven.
I saw these in their parking lot the last time I was in north bay. I had to resist the urge to climb the fence I wanted one so bad lol.
Excellent episode!!! 😁
It is indeed a tough truck built like the old Land Rover defender 110. It does well in rough terrains that can pull other trucks.
I recently took delivery of a new.
I only started driving it last Saturday.
It’s got 300 kilometres on it.
V8 diesel
Toyota Canada: Please make a street legal version !!!
I'd buy one. Can always import one from Australia.
I can only imagine if this were to be sold in Canada, it would literally outsell and kill any F150/Dodge Ram sales
@@urgeeked3977 Nope, it`s extremely underpowered, barely pushes itself uphill. As a daily driver f-150 is w-a-a-ay better: faster, more comfortable, can tow etc., etc. For average people TLC 70 with 1HZ is not a realistic option at all...
They can’t… they Government won’t let them😢
Canadian/Amercian government will never let that happen. Toyota Canada is helpless here.
Great vid. Something completely different and very interesting. Thanks for sharing your experience.
Thanks for watching
They are really cool.. Total work truck.. Love to get one of them.
I work on a northen mine of the nunavik and we drive those every day. These are pretty indestructibles! They take a lot of beat every day very tough trucks
these would be a amzing option for hunting ranches in south tx and mexico to keep on a private ranch and use as ranch vehicle for 20 plus years at a time and im sure miller could build special hunting beds and attachments each land owner would want
Here in Zambia 🇿🇲 the average price is about USD 88,000.
The last few V8s are still coming but you can't order one anymore. You can now only order the 2.8L
Another thing for the African market is Adblue and DPFs are excluded.
There is also a company called Access that specializes in Land Cruisers for the mining industry. They are in Rouyn-Noranda on the Québec side and I think they also have something in Sudbury. There’s even a brand called "electric cruiser" which has a différent logo very similar to the original one. They own the Toyota dealership in rouyn, and also sell other heavy equipment including hino trucks
Amazing video! I’ve driven by this place a few times and was always wishing I could get my hands on one! lol
The fact we have to buy the garbage sold by the automakers now makes me sick.
Please do a full video from in the Mine. FASCINATING!!!!
I wish North America would have these available for sell…. Thanks for the great video
I hate how the government has so much over reach
That's the best hardtop Land Cruiser 1HZ. In Papua New Guinea, the 1HZ has powered the country ever since the 70s. Load, reliability and durability. The longest running LC70 clocked over a million km and still running 👌