I wish regular was that cheap here. Unfortunately is $4.05/gal.



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On the other hand, there are some of us who bought their LC used and cheap with the idea to abuse her till she cries for mercy.
We change the oil whenever we think about it (once a year?) with the cheap generic oil (yes the engine started smoking at 120k miles-- darn), replace worn-out parts (brakes, plugs etc) with cheap auto-parts from the corner store, never change any fluids, let the front axle mix fluids and run dry till it clicks during turns AND STILL DON'T do anything, 'wheel the crap outta it, scratch and dent the exterior and interior, and after maybe 3-5 years, sell it cheap, and buy another babied LC... and start over with raping 'er yet again...
Being a fugly American, I feel entitled to complain loudly that this Jap Crap is too expensive. Should I feel ashamed?
Lorax
Never thought I'd see the day where I counted myself lucky buying regular gas for $3.55/gallon
We get asked about buying a 80 series on a weekly basis. I always tell people that if they are stretching themselves financially to purchase the vehicle and they are not DIY, then pass and look at any other Toyota product like a 4Runner or something like that.
People come to us with a $2k modification budget and they are all excited. We look the vehicle over and it needs $2k of maintenance. Their bubble is burst and they don't know what to do.
The reliability of this vehicle comes from the 1st owner buying it, driving it for 100k miles, only change the oil, minor service that the dealer does and that is in. 2nd and 3rd owner is the one that get the sack of patatoes.
The good thing is that most part of the 80 is rebuildable. The catch is that there are very little parts that you can buy at Napa/Checkers etc. So the perception is that the 80 parts are expensive. They are not, compared to most other vehicles if you buy brand new parts. Go buy some Chevy Duramax filers, or Dodge truck brake pads. What aftermarket parts are available are normally are normally of inferior quality.
As Ashlan says, they are 12 years old, most have been neglected (compared to Mud overmaintained standards) and they need work. But if you spend the time and money, then they will be a nice vehicle to own. If you get in a 10 year old 100k mile Ford Expedition, compared to a Land Cruiser, it will not be the same. The original built quality and desing is what allows it to be used way beyond most of the competion.
But for the newbies, you have to buy it with eyes open, and not have your longtime obsession clouding your decisions. Be prepared to walk away from a bad one, be prepared to pay for a good one.
Really more industrial machine then truck.