Comparing a Toyota to an RV is simply stating “yeah, but there are worserer stuff out there, so I’m fine.” Doesn’t hold water.
Has to be a logical clmparison is - is an underloaded Toyota safer than overloaded?
For the older Toyota equipped with them the answer is yes. It's a bracket to compensate for the lift and put the rod back within the window of travel, where you adjust it per the FSM. It's low tech but worked fine on my 1991.One other question I have is do these lift kits come with anything to reset the brake proportioning valve. If you move the axle away from the body the OEM setup is not going to work anymore. I know I had to rework that with my 6 wheeler before engineering would certify it in Australia but I have never seen it mentioned in the USA.
“Here hold my beer and watch me.......”
Tacoma and Hilux are the last hold outs to a simpler time, when the dinosaurs that would eventually fuel our truck were still roaming about. I remember the dealer salesman at Pangea Toyota lamenting the loss of Stegosaurus not more than 78 millions years before our test drive.Oh and just to add to the flames. I haven’t looked at any of the new “safe even when overloaded” Tonka Toy Tacoma’s lately but back in 2016 they didn’t even have disk brakes on the rear axle. Have they managed to rectify that throwback to the Jurassic design yet?
"Hey bro! Nice truck...so sorry to hear ….
there was a truck about that size parked in the handicapped spot at the beach parking lot Monday night. I assumed the handicap was emotional and went about my business.