I am not doing that.
Some dude was suggesting 80s only had that suburbanite usage and so it would be easy to get a reputatuon for reliability.
Which is ridicilous and ignorant to the global history of Landcruisers. They have proven themselves.
I'm not saying a US pickup would be bad at its job in rural conditions, I think there are great options all around in the 4X4 market. And the 80 is old by now.
So an 80 deserves its reputation but perhaps is not the best value for money right now. Yes in case of investment in a real nice one. But as an overland truck which you are going to properly use, probably not.
I think
@nickw was making that point in the context of the US, where Cruisers were sold as luxury vehicles despite their working-class underpinnings. I doubt the faux-plush leather interiors on the later 80s would hold up to much forestry work.
But I think the better analogy to the work trucks he alluded would be the 70-series pickups sold around the world to be used in agricultural and industrial settings. Toyota certainly doesn't bother with the pretense of "luxury" in those.
As for the 80 series, it seems like it's going the way of the 40 and 60 series in that it's approaching collectible status. Even a few years ago, you could find a nice triple-locked example for well under $10k and go beat it up on trails. Nowadays the factory lockers are more and more just becoming a way to boost value for collectors and would-be "overlanders," many of whom are wealthy young professionals allured by overlanding instagram accounts. I'd wager most will never use the platform to its full capability.
All the rank and file Toyota fans who used to buy these things on the relative cheap are now looking around asking "whoa, where did they all go?"
Well, if you think about all the ones that got hacked up and destroyed as crawlers, or were driven into the ground by clueless college kids, etc., this recent spike in value is really not that surprising.
I do think it's possible prices will come down again at least a bit when people star to realize how sluggish an inefficient they are, but that remains to be seen.