Contained in a kennel during a crash will keep them from possibly going through the windshield but they will still be thrown about. Have you considered a wire gate partition for the cargo area?
We went from a 4th gen V8 4runner to a 06 Land Cruiser to a 5th gen 4runner to a GX460.
I was never happy with the 5th gen. The trans/ wheel size/ gear ratio/ engine torque combo wasn't the best. Always seemed to hunt for gears on the highway when traveling at 65+mph. I'm not a big fan of the GX exterior but it has been a fantastic vehicle and I don't plan on replacing it for a long time. And if we did I would seriously look at a newer model year GX460, that is how happy we are with it.
I went 4runner-> J80 Land Cruiser-> 06 Sequoia-> I spent over a yr trying to figure out a Sequoia replacement. I didn’t want the 10-12mpg LC which was a big negative, zero interest in 4runner. The GX was interesting contemplated a new one actually but two buddies with 2017 and 2018 GXs with A/T tires stock size get a solid 10-12mpg! Its their biggest pet peeve. After 8 yrs of that in my LC I finally just nixed Toyota.
Bought a loaded 2019 Expedition instead. No I won’t be trail bashing it nor would the GX have been trail run. Dirt roads yes, snow yes etc. It crushes Toyota anything on the long pavement runs thats for sure. The Sequoia 15-16mpg stock rubber was pretty good tho. But 400hp and 21mpg averages between 70-80mph is awesome. Sadly I can’t see me owning another Toyota anytime soon. 30yrs of Toyota and no they weren’t magically cheaper or more reliable than the domestics my family and buddies ran. Just more expensive lol.
I wish Toyota would fix the air injection pump failures. It's an expensive repair that seems to happen often to the 4.7, 4.6 and 5.7L. I've heard it's easier to replace on the 4.6L but haven't confirmed this.
Resale doesn’t matter to me I keep cars a long time. All my Toyotas were considerably moreIf your buddies were getting 10-12 mpg on stock size AT's in their GX460's then something was very wrong with their vehicles. It is the norm to see 17-21 mpg with stock size tires and I have 32's and I still see 17.5 on the highway and 16 in town. I'll agree that you almost always give up good fuel economy with a Toyota product but you'll never see resale value and reliability in the domestics like you do with the Toyota. I've always had domestics and Toyota's alongside of one another as have my family members and the Toyota's crush the domestics in resale and reliability, the consumer reports and book values back this up as well. I like the new Expedition, it was on our short list last year and I am still open to adding one in the future but the eco-boost motor all but kills it for me at the moment and I fear it will be the only motor option in the upcoming Bronco that I am eagerly awaiting as well.
Resale doesn’t matter to me I keep cars a long time. All my Toyotas were considerably more
Expensive to keep than the domestics in the family.
Yup Maintenance on all my Toyotas exponentially more costly than the domestics in the family. Especially my LC which was a total cream puff cherry example of the J80’s. Sequoia was slightly cheaper but the Timing Belt service deal was / is a major negative compared to the competitionMore expensive to keep?
Yup Maintenance on all my Toyotas exponentially more costly than the domestics in the family. Especially my LC which was a total cream puff cherry example of the J80’s. Sequoia was slightly cheaper but the Timing Belt service deal was / is a major negative compared to the competition
Resale doesn’t matter to me I keep cars a long time. All my Toyotas were considerably more
Expensive to keep than the domestics in the family.
If your buddies were getting 10-12 mpg on stock size AT's in their GX460's then something was very wrong with their vehicles. It is the norm to see 17-21 mpg with stock size tires and I have 32's and I still see 17.5 on the highway and 16 in town. I'll agree that you almost always give up good fuel economy with a Toyota product but you'll never see resale value and reliability in the domestics like you do with the Toyota. I've always had domestics and Toyota's alongside of one another as have my family members and the Toyota's crush the domestics in resale and reliability, the consumer reports and book values back this up as well. I like the new Expedition, it was on our short list last year and I am still open to adding one in the future but the eco-boost motor all but kills it for me at the moment and I fear it will be the only motor option in the upcoming Bronco that I am eagerly awaiting as well.