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As far as the warranty, I'm pretty sure they are covering it. Power steering pumps shouldn't go out this quick. Mud should even make it easier on the system if anything (less traction to overcome).
I am pretty sure the power steering pump failure is from the mud. I have a feeling this would count as extreme use.
Show me one Toyota advertisement where the vehicle is on the road. This is an off-road vehicle and Toyota markets it as such. They can quibble all they want, but I will drive it like it begs to be driven. Roads are for.
Show me one Toyota advertisement where the vehicle is on the road. This is an off-road vehicle and Toyota markets it as such. They can quibble all they want, but I will drive it like it begs to be driven. Roads are for.
The vehicle is simply not designed to be driven in mud up to the doors. I agree, that is not off-road, that is abuse. I am sure they list a fording depth somewhere that is intended to be a guide as to how deep you can submerge the vehicle in water. I am pretty sure that is not up to the doors and it is water, not mud.
I disagree, the wading depth in stock form is about 700mm, just like most other modern 4x4s like the RR or LR3. This is not relevant to mud.
It should handle deep mud with ease, which is why Toyota must honor the warranty. Most of the off-roading we do out here is mud-based rather than the rock crawling you guys do in the US. Not heard of a similar failure yet. Where is the power-steering pump on the 5.7 V8 and how would mud damage it?
I see all the arguments here but in the end....LC 200 is Toyota's flagship product. What happened to qualifying your hardware - Test Like You Drive a 4x4 Philosophy - prior to selling them to the public? Everyone on the LC 200 Chat Board paid at least 70K+ give or take for this SUV because most of us think highly of Toyota LC quality process at the Tahara plant where defects are the lowest in the industries. I don't think it is out right a mea culpa on this guy's part by taking his LC off road based on the LC off road legendary rationale.
So to hear that parts burnt/failed because the LC was trekking in mud bothers me a lot. I guess I will take a hard look in several years when I am ready for another off road vehicle.
I am sure they list a fording depth somewhere that is intended to be a guide as to how deep you can submerge the vehicle in water. I am pretty sure that is not up to the doors and it is water, not mud.
Yeah, 700mm = 28in. I was nowhere near 28" of mud.
I'm not going to open my door when my door is halfway up in mud.
As far as the power steering pump, I have no idea where it is. And Toyota confirmed that mud was not the cause, at least directly. Mud wasn't found anywhere near the pump itself. This is a defect item. I am not bashing Toyota for a single-unit defect, but I will if others have similar problems later on. Toyota is quick on the ball when issues are found on a large scale, such as the TSB on the driveshaft replacements.
Oh, and thank you Slee for the heads up on the bearings. I have a powerwasher at my house and after already spending 6 hours cleaning everything, I will jack it up and remove each wheel and perform a therough spraying of all joints/bearings/moving parts.
And yeah, I H8 MUD.
Never again![]()