In the interest of full disclosure, I had a '08 TRD OR access cab that I special ordered with a manual. While I loved the 6-speed, it very quickly developed a squeak ( which continued to get worse ) every time the clutch pedal was depressed. I took the truck to the dealer several times and their excuse was that it was the dust from the dirt road I live on, that was causing the squeaking... The dealer was able to lube it each time I brought it in and the squeaky clutch pedal would disappear for a week or so but it would always resurface. Needless to say, the squeaking got pretty old. Now maybe I just got a bad truck and/or maybe this has been addressed on the newer trucks, but I would want to know if I were in the market.
Other than the squeaky clutch pedal, I loved the manual transmission in the Tacoma.
Does anyone know if its hard on the autos to manually downshift and use the motor for grade braking on long downhill runs?
I don't know why it would. That's exactly how I drive mine. In fact, I do a lot of "manual" shifting with my automatic, especially when towing. When approaching a long grade, for example, I'll try to drop it down to 4th or even 3rd before it goes there automatically. Since I have a SGII that shows ATF temperature, I've found that by manually shifting, the transmission, it doesn't heat up as much.
The biggest problem I have with automatic transmissions is that modern automatics are so complicated they are hella expensive to repair or replace. And the worst part is, as the vehicle gets older and is worth less, the transmission still costs the same to fix.
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A $3,000 repair bill on a $20,000 truck is bad, but a $3000 repair bill on a $5000 truck makes you wonder if it would make more sense to just invest that money in a newer vehicle.
I'm a die hard manual transmission guy and I only reluctantly got a 4x4 with a slushbox in 2009 so my wife could drive it (funny thing is, 3 years later she bought a Jeep Wrangler with a manual.)
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I despised the A340 automatic in my '99 4runner. The loss in power and MPG was particularly noticeable to me since my previous vehicle had been a Tacoma with the same 3.4 V6 and a 5 speed manual.
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When I decided to get rid of the '99 because it didn't have enough power or range to tow my little teardrop, I seriously considered getting an Xterra for the simple reason that I could get it with a manual. But after thinking about it and test driving several vehicles (including an FJC with the 6 speed manual) I grudgingly had to admit that for my uses the automatic was the better choice.
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As much as I'd love to believe that the manual is better, absolutely every objective side-by-side comparison I've read regarding the Tacoma 6 speed and the 5 speed auto (which is the same transmission I have in my 4runner) has said the auto is the better one.
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Not sure why Toyota even bothered to offer a manual transmission in the Taco if they weren't going to make it a good one. Maybe it's just that the engine/tranny combo was designed to work best with the automatic (which they figured would be the transmission most people would choose) and the 6 speed manual was added in as a half-assed afterthought.