FJ Cruiser three year review

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Joined
Mar 22, 2006
Threads
63
Messages
1,381
Location
Auburn, WA.
Website
www.yotatech.com
I have had my FJ Cruiser since July the 24th of 2006.
I ordered it back in March of the same year.

Though this review is a little late, I would like to share my thoughts on the rig.
It just turned 24,373 miles at 3 am yesterday when I gassed it up before work.

I called the dealer the other day as it is ready for an oil change and I asked about the plugs and he said wait until it turns 30K before getting the plugs done if it is running perfect.

I must admit it is running perfectly and the only thing that has been done to it is regular oil changes, lube, and a few air filter changes.
No squeaks rattles, or other pesky things have cropped up.
And I am only on the second windshield.
These flat windshields are more prone to chips/cracks than a normal slanted window.

The rig is far from stock though as it has the OME 2.5" lift, ARB front bumper, Warn XD9000 winch, Bentup sliderz, Dick Cepek Mountaincat mud tires sized over stock at 285x70x17, a Safari snorkel, Autohome Maggiolina AirLander roof top tent, ect...
And it still accelerates as fast as it did when it was bone stock.

The gas mileage when new was close to 21 MPG combined city/highway, now I am down to around 17 MPG combined city/highway with the above equipment on it.
The first set of mud tires where the biggest hit to the lower MPG.
In fact this is my second set of the same tires, the first ones were of the stock size, and I immediately went from around 21 MPG down to 19 MPG, so you can see the hit that put on the MPG.

The performance is the same though, it feels like a rocket ship to me after coming from a 2nd gen '91 4Runner with the 3.0 and an automatic transmission.

I have zero complaints on the rig.
I keep reading about blind spots, I do not see them.
But then I use to drive semi trucks part time long ago, and I drive rigs at work that require me to depend a lot on using mirrors to drive with.
I have the FJs mirrors adjusted accordingly to see properly out of.
Although seeing out the back is not the greatest due to the spare tire there, I really hardly use the rear window anyways to navigate the roads with.

The handling has been affected by adding the roof top tent to the factory rack as it sits a little to high, and on a windy day coming home from work I can get pushed around a little.
This is not due to the weight but more to the fact that between the top of the roof and the bottom of the tent is a good amount of space there that wind can move around trying to blow me off course.
Not bad on a calm day, but when windy can be a little nerve racking.
Working on that solution though with a vendor on this forum for a rack that will lower the tent substantially which should yield better handling when it is windy out.

Of all of Toyotas current lineup the FJ Cruiser is really the only rig I would buy brand new.
I do like the Tacomas very much too, and I would not hesitate to build one up for a daily driver/expo rig, but the FJ is my first choice.
The new 4Runner coming out does not do anything for me as it seems it is getting more plush each year.

The FJ Cruiser for me is a vehicle more back to Toyotas roots for an off road/expo oriented type vehicle.

4WD lever for the transfercase, no carpet, no leather seats, ect.
The two latter items make cleaning up the rig after a day of off roading, camping, dragging along the mountain bike and wearing dirty bike shorts/jerseys makes cleaning up the rig a lot easier.

I find the seats very comfortable in the rigs, and there is plenty of headroom.
Even when wearing my camping/safari hat.
I have heard the FJ Cruiser has more headroom than others in the Toyota lineup.

Seeing out the shorter/straight windshield has never been a problem for me, and seeing those three wiper blades called into action when the sky opens up still looks cool to me.

If anything were to happen to this rig I would replace it with a 2010 FJ Cruiser, maybe even the new green color which looks pretty good.

For my lifestyle though of back country camping, exploring, mountain biking, this is the perfect rig for me.

These rigs are pretty tough too.
Back in June of 2007 I was sitting at a red light in my town heading out to do the weeks grocery shopping.
All of a sudden I felt a slight impact, and I knew I had just been rear ended.
I jumped out and a Ford Ranger was folded up like an accordion in the front.
his truck was totaled.

Mine?
Rear bumper needed to be replaced, the tailpipe, the rear door, and a few trim items.
He hit me at about 25 to 30 MPH.
I drove home, he did not.
My rig was fixed, frame checked which was perfect, good as new afterwards.

The rig continues to start conversations with others when I am out on the road, at the store, or getting fueled up.

I am very happy that Toyota introduced this vehicle.
I am surprised that it is still being produced as it was only suppose to be a short run on these as a limited production model.
Nice to see that it did make it another year for 2010.

Anyways, I am stocked about this vehicle, and it and a few other things (Overland Journal) have gotten me interested in camping again after taking about a decade off from camping.
I use to go every other weekend with my two sons when they were younger from about May through September.

Here are a few pics of how the rig has evolved over the years.
Day I brought it home in the first pic, then the mods came very fast from being excited about this new rig from Toyota.

Overall I am 100% satisfied with what Toyota offered this rig up as.

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todd16.jpg


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Who needs rear seats?

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Hi Chris.
Details on it are in the camping section in a Camping Gear review thread I started last summer.

The pump works great!
My brother got a kick out of it too this last trip.
 
Amazing: Never seen one with all this camping STUFF on it.

I have an 07 with 36K on it. Never a problem.

Only thing I dont like here in Colorado is the front is not good to put chains on....tooooo close to the upper a - arm. I put them on the back. Works OK but not excellent.
 
HI Pat, thanks.
First thing I noticed there is no gauge cluster on top of the dash.
Expensive to add it in later if you want that, but it is kind of a cool novelty item.

Also they do not mention if it has the rear locker or not which you would want with 4WD.
I can not tell from this pic here if it has the locker switch.
You would have to blow up the pic to see if it is down there along with any other switches like ATrac.
ATrac can be added cheap though with only buying a switch "if" the rig has a rear locker in it.

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Corey,

It has a switch that says RR Lock...that's the important one?

It has a lot OEM goodies..but I'm more concerned that it'll wheel ok.

The Atrac is simple to add? You think it's a decent buy for $28000?

Thanks for your help
 
Just my $.02 (that wasn't asked for) but lookes pretty stripped/bare bones for that asking price to me. :cheers:
 
Yeah Pat, I am not sure what they are going for, but like Knoll mentioned, it is bare.
You can do better.

RR is the rear locker, and ATrac can be added with the switch if no ATrac was optioned in.
 
Just my $.02 (that wasn't asked for) but lookes pretty stripped/bare bones for that asking price to me. :cheers:

:confused:

Man...It's got a roof rack, sliders, front brush guard, spare tire cover, fancier wheels (17")power windows and locks, dvd player(which is useless unless your taking the hide in the backseat..:popcorn: ) tinted windows, ac, all the skid plates. It has 11,000 miles

Corey's reveiw has me feeling comortable about this..if he's 3 years into this and his little or no complaints...I think thats a good indicator of the quality of the product. I called another dealer in NJ and told him about this truck, and never missing a beat said he'd rather sell me his FJ's...but I'd be nutz not to grab this one, which I found kind of odd....but I felt better

Thanks Corey and continued good luck with your FJ :beer:
 
Like I said and Corey agreed it's pretty lacking on factory options. It does have a couple of the mall cruiser additions but if you plan to use it you will be replacing all of them and the ones that matter are missing. Little things like the off-road package, convenience package... I've never seen one that didn't have the cluster or rear AC inverter... It's your call, your truck; again this was my $.02 that you didn't ask for. Just trying' to help. I Love mine and ordered it when they first came out. My only complaint about mine was my choice of options that I paid factory prices for and replaced very quickly. Things like the factory rack that isn't very useful, the factory skid that is worthless, factory rock rails... These are all bits that you can buy aftermarket for about the same as dealer asking sometimes less and are far more useable. In no way have I dissagread with Corey I'm just tryin' to say that from what I've seen out there for that asking price you could do better. Again not what you asked but trying to help out a fellow mudder. :cheers: Good luck and happy cruisin.
 
Thank you guys for the input..I'm going to wait to find one with what you said.

Corey...love that new bike rack, it completes the look. Will the stock roof rack be any problem with the weight of the tent and the occupants combined? The tent and awning stays on year round? Aren't you worried someone will take it?

Great Rig with all the goodies :clap::clap::clap:
 
Thanks Pat.
I wanted a good bike rack that could take abuse off road, and the salesguy where I bought my mountain bike goes off road on FS roads quite a bit, and he said this was the one to go with.

Stock roof rack can hold 160 lb when moving down the road.
When parked, it can handle 500 to 600 lb.
I do not recommend the stock rack for a roof top tent though, even though that is the way I run mine.

The tent is to far up in the air, and when it is windy out, I can get pushed around a lot on the freeway and have to limit the top speed to around 60.

BajaRack is working on one that makes the tent sit much lower, and that is probably the rack I will go with later on.

Not worried about theft, that is what the AR15 is for :D
I have full coverage on the rig, and I have had to add in all of the extra stuff bolted to the rig to make sure it is covered in case of theft or an accident.
 
Another +3yr review.

Got mine July 29, 2006 (June '06 build date) AT with rear locker stock, added ATrac switch.

Now has +77K on the ODO.

Had ring/pinion in both front and rear replaced (I was one of the unlucky first year builds). Bad metallurgy was the scoop on this (well documented elsewhere). Approx 27K on the ODO.

Had front driverside hub replaced shortly there after. I think something in the hub was not properly torqued back when they tore down my front end. So chocking that up to dealer error.

Had a second r/p go bad in the rear at about 56K miles and dealer replaced under warranty. No real cause determined - broken teeth were the symptoms, but I never got a look at the damaged parts.

Engine/tranny/tcase are fine and wheeling almost monthly offroad. Changing oil (Mobil1 since about 20K) every 5K, change diff oil every 30K. Recently changed plugs at 75K and they didn't look too bad.

My average city mileage is 13.5-14 MPG, but I've got a heavy foot and heckuva lotta steel welded and bolted to my truck--steel wheels, steel bumper & winch, sliders, skids from front to rear, steel rear bumper and 100lbs of tools. I get upwards of 17 on long road trips. Running 33" Wrangler Silent Armors daily and 34" Super Swamper LTB's offroad.
 
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