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The Watercooler
Would you feel save driving a Toyota?
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<blockquote data-quote="GoingNorth" data-source="post: 348722" data-attributes="member: 1963"><p>I've driven several Toyotas and two Hondas to the 250-300 thousand mile mark. The upholstery used to fall apart before the drive trains did. Seemed to be that so long as you changed the oil frequently and followed scheduled maintenance; the darned things last forever.</p><p></p><p>My current 4 runner is eight years old, but I don't drive much these days so only have about 56K miles on it. It's in perfect condition in and out. When I take it in for scheduled service, the salesmen keep asking if I'm ready to trade in that "dinosaur" yet, LoL. I tell them why should I? It still runs great, looks good other than some scratches, plus...IT'S PAID FOR!!</p><p></p><p>My only objection is that being built on a truck frame (which makes the vehicle stronger and safer), well...it rides like a work truck. Fabulous winter car, though.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="GoingNorth, post: 348722, member: 1963"] I've driven several Toyotas and two Hondas to the 250-300 thousand mile mark. The upholstery used to fall apart before the drive trains did. Seemed to be that so long as you changed the oil frequently and followed scheduled maintenance; the darned things last forever. My current 4 runner is eight years old, but I don't drive much these days so only have about 56K miles on it. It's in perfect condition in and out. When I take it in for scheduled service, the salesmen keep asking if I'm ready to trade in that "dinosaur" yet, LoL. I tell them why should I? It still runs great, looks good other than some scratches, plus...IT'S PAID FOR!! My only objection is that being built on a truck frame (which makes the vehicle stronger and safer), well...it rides like a work truck. Fabulous winter car, though. [/QUOTE]
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Would you feel save driving a Toyota?
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