zelseman
Observer
It's about time for us to write a build thread on our 2006 Lexus GX470 that we have been adventuring in since 2020. The first few posts will be historical as we have put this vehicle together over the last few years. We were driving a 1986 Toyota 4Runner with no AC, sketchy power steering, and lots of quirks. The 4Runner served us well and took us down to Baja for a few months, but an upgrade was in order and the GX470 crossed our searches a few times.
We did a ton of research and found a couple of acceptable-looking ads and through a few hours of test driving, we were really disheartened when none of them worked out. On our way back home from a bunch of crappy test drives we decided to stop by the local dealership and just see what was on their used lot. We looked around and saw nothing promising until we noticed a black GX470 parked in the back of the service lot with dirt all over it. We asked and the salesperson kinda played it off and directed towards newer models. I insisted and it turned out that it was dealer maintained, around 130,000 miles, and had a check engine light for the SAIS system and the quote was $2500 to fix it. The vehicle drove beautifully and there were no symptoms from the SAIS code. We offered $9500 as is and the dealer jumped at it. We were the proud new owners of a 2006 Lexus GX470 with a grey interior and non-nav entertainment.
This is what the bone-stock GX470 looked like when we bought it in 2020.
We did a ton of research and found a couple of acceptable-looking ads and through a few hours of test driving, we were really disheartened when none of them worked out. On our way back home from a bunch of crappy test drives we decided to stop by the local dealership and just see what was on their used lot. We looked around and saw nothing promising until we noticed a black GX470 parked in the back of the service lot with dirt all over it. We asked and the salesperson kinda played it off and directed towards newer models. I insisted and it turned out that it was dealer maintained, around 130,000 miles, and had a check engine light for the SAIS system and the quote was $2500 to fix it. The vehicle drove beautifully and there were no symptoms from the SAIS code. We offered $9500 as is and the dealer jumped at it. We were the proud new owners of a 2006 Lexus GX470 with a grey interior and non-nav entertainment.
This is what the bone-stock GX470 looked like when we bought it in 2020.