cruiseroutfit
Well-known member
hello by the way the Greg you mention on your little adventure; was that Expedition 7 Greg?
Yes, one in the same. A man with a true appetite for adventure.
hello by the way the Greg you mention on your little adventure; was that Expedition 7 Greg?
cool thanks! please don't take offense to this; I value your opinion also but for him to have faith in a stock 200 (yes he had chains and another vehicle to help incase of stuck) is a good thumbs up for the 2013/14 200 series!
we took an upclose look at the 200 series at the auto expo. Obviously no way to examine capabilities there, but was really impressed with the rest of it. Sadly, it is FAR beyond my price range. But I can definitely see them becoming a popular adventure rig.
we took an upclose look at the 200 series at the auto expo. Obviously no way to examine capabilities there, but was really impressed with the rest of it. Sadly, it is FAR beyond my price range. But I can definitely see them becoming a popular adventure rig.
Let's face it: until Toyota starts to re-badge the RAV4 as a Land Cruiser, it will likely be a solid platform...it always has been. Not so true for the competition (or lack thereof): the Pathfinder started out as a decent truck but has grown soft. The Mitsubishi Montero (Dodge Raider)? R.I.P. Isuzu Trooper? Started out with solid F&R axles and morphed into a different, yet still capable "SUV" but that too is off the market. Regardless of what the buying market dictates (IFS, wood trim, leather seats, advanced traction controls), the Land Cruiser will always be built "right" (and hopefully always at Tahara). Has it even had a chance to disappoint yet? Yeah, that 60-Series...what a POS (joking). Without changing direction too much, even the 4Runner has remained true to its roots.
A new 200 is in the $80k range, far outside the scope of possibility for most BUT a 5-6 year old one is in the high 20's, low 30's which isn't too far off of where many start with other platforms. I'll likely buy in the next year depending on what happens with the business and shop space i.e. discretionary income![]()
I am kind of on the same plan...then, I look at my 100 series and go, why? What will make you take the plunge or look at stepping up to a 200? You have a very nice hundyJust curious...
Why here in America would you buy a 200 over a 4runner for an expo vehicle...more room in the 200 or the bigger engine?
for me the biggest reason to jump to a 200 platform is the safety; I have seen crazy crash LX and Land Cruisers from the middle east and would have to say the people inside would have survived. I'm sure my 100 series is still good and probably we are seeing these crashed up vehicles due to the availability of all the camera phones etc now a days.