The car industry for some reason does not understand this, but simple is better. We are going to pay for all the electronic rubbish that is in the new cars, electronics will end the life of new cars, the motor will still be basically sound, yes the whole car industry has gone mad. Yes I would buy a land cruiser.
@ms-jl6dl It's both. Government meddling and car industry greed. Funny how UK government wanted us to buy diesels for years with as little as £20 Road tax now its deemed the devil's fuel. Diesel has always and will always be a dirty fuel. Yes to much technology will kill cars .
This is not a simple vehicle, it just doesn't have hard stuff to use in front of you. Most people do this strange thing where they educate themselves to learn the new systems.
It has nothing to do with car companies. Toyota, like many other car companies produce and or make different types of vehicles based on demand and sales. Governments depending on the country will regulate safety and emissions among of variarity of things to allow the import and sale of a especific vehicle. In the case of the 70 series Land Cruiser it is a very basic vehicle and it is meant to be that way. Its use is mostly industrial in third world countries, Africa and Australia from mining, agriculture, emergency response, ambulance in remote areas, etc. Company employees that drive these vehicles they literally beat the shit out of them. They are driven day in and day out on bad roads or no roads not because they want to but because they have to. It is not meant to be a family vehicle or for domestic use.
People have been saying this same bs for decades now. Instead cars have become more reliable. You realise that electronics in cars are not a recent thing, right?
Great video Jonny. So, there's a reason why people love these things...... We did an 18,000 mile trip all over Australia, in a Toyota HiLux with a cab on the back. The suspension was hard. The sunroof was sealed up. No air conditioning. The wheels were steel split rims. The 4 cylinder motor developed an exhaust valve issue so it was running on 3 cylinders. The transmission leaked and required additional fluid every morning....but no warning lights came on and it just kept going. We camped in the bush for 6 months and when we left Australia we sold that HiLux for what we paid for it. It got the job done. That's why people who go into the bush or the desert, buy old school Toyotas and Nissans. You never see a Range Rover or a Mercedes SUV, except in Sydney. Great video. Thanks so much.
and you'll continue to see old school vehicles used for this purpose. The current generation of flashy trendy SUV's will have no cult following in the future.
U.S. I see lot of jeeps and Toyotas 1990s -2000s built but lot of new $100,000 -$150,000 U.S. $ raptors , bronco raptors , defenders , ram trx , rubicon 392 the oh look at me I'm an off roader , right you going to baja 1000 or moab ?
I ran a fleet of close to 200 of these cruisers in east Africa. While most of them ran the 1Hz N/A engines, we also had the V8s. the cost per kilometer for maintenance was a third when compared to the Landrovers in the same fleet. They are the best trucks on the market. One of our workshop cruisers had over 500,000km on the clock and the engine hand never been opened. Grew up with Landrovers but they don’t come close to these.
Definitely, my old 80 series had 500 000 klms on it and was running solidly when I sold it, still is now, simplicity is the key (low output per CC is also)
4.2 is for on farm only. Perhaps overlanding as well. Its reliability and easy to fix characteristics makes it attract for that purpose. Burning is underpowered. Dangerously so. Loaded and firing you cannot overtake safely. Go v8.
I bought a 1HZ (absolutely zero electronics) from Travis, and we LOVE it. Simple is best. Made in Japan, tried and tested, proven quality and reliability. Travis and the guys are brilliant. Great to see this excellent video.
@@brainwrongs I’m kinda surprised. I mean I know the UK climate destroys cars in general, but especially Toyotas like the Cruiser? These things take pretty much every kind of abuse that’s ever thrown at them. Perhaps all that abuse is simply the dry, unsalted kind.
Living in South Africa, I recently bought a 2016 76, station wagon, almost 300,000 on the clock, goes like a dream - instead of the rather expensive gearbox mod changing 2nd and 5th gears, I went for 285/75/16 tyres, running a 2 bar - a more comfortable ride, and the larger diameter tyre has given it longer legs on the open road: previously 2000 rpm, was 80 kph, now it is 90. I used to cruise at 100/105, now 110/120 is easy
@@dancarter482 agreed, the bigger tyres have reduce my consumption on the long open roads, and I run slightly lower pressures, si it has improved the ride too
We need more cars like this! Built to last, built to simple, reliable, repairable, we’ve become a throwaway society that assumes newer is always better and it’s not always the case!
I love the Troopie, and I love that Toyota is still selling them. This is absolutely what the world needs. Simple, robust, no nonsense engineering, with minimal electronics, and no DPF nonsense. It's absolutely fabulous. But, I think Toyota should go further. Let's have the first gen Yaris, the 1993 Corolla, and the early to mid 90s Carina E back as well. Rugged, reliable, and dependable vehicles that won't let you down. They're what we all need, and if we're honest, what most of us really want too. If the past is the new future, count me in.
Words can't express how much I want a 200 series facelift Land Cruiser! I'm so glad Toyota still make the old school 70 series. Goes to prove the mantra of, if it's not broken, don't fix it!!!
I went from a 3.0L hilux to the 79 series that’s featured in this video. I loved my hilux, but this landcruiser is an icon. Bullet proof and absolutely incredible on uk roads. The towing capability is phenomenal- zero regrets. Travis is an excellent businessman to deal with, absolute gentleman and a real pleasure to deal with.
@@TheLateBrakeShow you had the pleasure of driving my truck before me haha. Wonderful vehicles couldn’t be happier with it. Just like what I remember of them in Australia. A similar story I imagine a lot of current uk owners share.
I've owned both the 78 (troop carrier, 11 seater!) and 79 (dual cab). Both have well established reputations for reliability and offroad ability but I just wanted to say they are actually far more comfortable as a tourer than people think, and a very practical every-day vehicle. In my Troopcarrier, the seats all fold up and out of the way allowing me to carry loads, shift house, even transport motorbikes. Flip the seats down, and at the end of a night on the town with everyone drunk I frequently filled all 11 seats dropping people off home (tolerating serial killer jokes along the way). Doing 1,000km in a day on the highways in Australia, towing trailers or caravans, they sit really nicely on the road and eat up the kilometres. The GXL trim level has cruise control, you can pretty much set any speed you want in 5th gear and the v8 has the power to hold it without you needing to intervene and drop back to 4th. Even up steep hills, even with a small trailer on the back, the big v8 just idles along and you really can just set and forget. Plenty of people in Australia are touring the country in these, even on the freeway's, and living quite comfortably.
@@peem1244The new 4wd's I would call "laptops on wheels". The new Landrovers are a prime example of this junk. I love the very old Landrovers. The new Grenadier is pretty good but a new landcruiser would be my choice.
I have no need for a vehicle like this, but good on Toyota for still making them. For less developed locations that wouldn’t have access to rhe parts and equipment to repair a newer spec vehicle, these must be a boon.
Jonny, I think you should test drive the 300 series. The 70 series is just the type vehicle we adore in these parts of Africa. From business people, farmers, transport companies, tourists, the military, the police to politicians this is the vehicle of choice.
Just so everyone knows Carly is a terrible company, they sold these obd readers to users as a one time purchase and you purchase your specific brands functions and that's it. So I got one but it's now useless because they screwed over their customers and disabled everything unless you pay for a subscription. Just a warning for you guys who may not know, just buy a decent one time purchase one it'll save you a lot of money
Made my day! I've got a 12 year old Prado with 350k km on the clock. Still solid and as sweet as a nut. I did timing belt and water pump at 300k. Nice to know it might make a 1 megakm! Yeah! Love that car.
This simplicity and utility is exactly why I decided on getting a '92 Cherokee XJ with the in-line 6 4.0 and 5 speed manual when need for a second car in the family emerged. I don't need new gizmos, small "efficient" (read: overcomplicated for their own good) engines, and touch screens.
Hi Jonny. Love these Toyota’s. We run a 1997 90 series drought in 1999 with 30k on it. Still going strong 25 years later with 325.000 miles on the clock still used every day for my wife’s stable yard enterprise towing horse boxes. Keep up the good work 👍
I loved my various LC70 series, in the UN we called them “buffaloes” because they carried everything! I was 10 years in Bosnia/kosovo and 12 in various crazy parts of Africa and there’s a reason why everyone there drives them, from Red Cross to Al Shabaab, they’re F brilliant.
I bought my single cab Series 79 V8 from Travis last Christmas and have absolutely loved it's solidity and back to basics pick-up simplicity. It took around three months from order to delivery and Travis kept me updated all the time. After driving it for 500kms I wondered why on earth I hadn't bought one when I was younger because after two Navarra's, which rusted out after 90,000kms, and a Grenadier, which I embarrassingly wrote off, this is the vehicle that is going to outlast me. The ride is bit bumpy when it's empty and its not speedy but who cares, this is what all pick ups should be like, immensely strong, dependable and easy to maintain. And being in West Cornwall, in the fishing industry, apart from compliments from fishermen mates I am amazed how many complete strangers have come up and said "love your pick-up", or "Wow, we used those in Australia/South Africa/ Zambia, amazing pickups, how on earth did you get one over here?". Good on you Travis for bringing them in to the UK.
Land Cruiser 70 series is one of the greatest creations in the world of vehicles. Reliability, durability, simplicity, easy to maintain and timeless design, which are not found in today's vehicles, are more important than electronic devices and features. Its V8 engine and manual gearbox make this vehicle even more lovable. It's a feeling that binds us to the vehicle. And the exhaust makes some of the best music I've ever heard. People who know the value of LC 70 series know that they can go anywhere without any problem.❤
Amazing episode! So yes please more Land Cruiser episodes. I would buy one tomorrow. Great to see that you can still buy a car like that today without all these annoying electronics and sensors that break. Miss the old school way.
I never knew that there were so many Land Cruisers available nor did I know that you were allowed to manufacture a Diesel without any dpf 😧 Thank you for the Toyota education. Oh and thanks Jonny I now think of Lands End trial every time I see a yellow Kia Picanto😂
It depends on the country. Aussie spec 70 series have had DPFs since 2016, but a lot of African and Middle Eastern spec cars still don’t (ME can even still get them with petrols), and for a while could even be had with 1HDs which haven’t been available in the Australian versions since 2009 (1HD is what you want if you want real reliability).
Toyota Land Cruiser is without doubt, the best vehicle ever made. I could never understand why so many people loved them. Until I bought a 105 series Land Cruiser. Every time you drive them. you just have to smile. Thanks for a great episode. Greetings from Australia.
They are incredible. And I am astonished that people around the globe have the good sense to build them, and buy them. They should be everywhere. Helping to save the planet. And no, I'm not joking. Old and simple lasts. And if it lasts, we don't have to build a new one.
I have no need for a Land Cruiser, I don't live in the Aussie outback, or a middle eastern desert but man I'd love one! There needs to be more cars like those available, I'm sick of plasticky, overly complicated, brittle, poorly engineered cars being forced upon us. Give me simplicity, reliability and longevity!
Enjoyed the Video, I live in Western Australia and see 70 series Landcruisers all the time in the bush on mine sites and in the Perth Metro area. The lack of unnecessary Technology is what is appealing, I have a 2006 Nissan Navara (316,000kms) which is the same as these Toyota Landcruisers I.e. levers to engage 4wd plastic interior rubber mats wind up windows no central locking, it’s used for bush/beach camping trips, towing my Caterham 7 Hillclimb car. PS I really want to replace the Navara (when it dies) with a 70 series.
Hello from Australia. I have a 2005 105 diesel manual 420,000k. I bought the car three years ago with 385,000k. The only faults currently is an AC evaporator leak under the dash board and a small leak from the power steering pump. All the other parts on the car are original except for the usual scheduled service parts such as the timing belt (and most likely water pump), steering dampener, shock absorbers, brake rotors (and obviously brake pads). The car is great for day tripping and camping in national parks.
I have a 79 series ute. Sure it’s a bit tractorish at times but it doesn’t ask for much and it’s happy to work hard. The utilitarian interior is hard wearing and a bit retro. Just put on some AC/DC and move on. Not everyone’s cup of tea but it does what it says on the box.
Yeah, that's the upcoming Prado / 250 series Land Cruisers. Though to be fair, the new 76 series does took a lot of inspiration from the 250 design cues (the one with circular lights).
I think that what many in the world know as a Prado is just a Land Cruiser in the UK since the other styles are not sold officially by Toyota. The commentary in the video is mostly consistent but not at that point. 😃 Since we get all three types in Australia, we know to make a distinction!
Never getting rid of my 76 series. Pre dpf so plenty of grunt, sensible mods only but most recent was the best...latest model gearbox upgrade which drops revs in 5th from 2500rpm/110kph to 2100rpm/110kph...or if you are really up for it, 2500rpm now gives 130 kph and that is on 265/75r16s.
The 70 series sold in South Africa are actually produced in Europe, in Portugal - in Ovar, since 2015. We see them a lot on trailers, on their to the port to get shipped out.
Hi Jonny, first of all can I say that I really loved this video - packed full of common sense. For many years I was a LR fan-boy doing tours for Land Cruiser owners. They came from all over Continental Europe and would stay for a week getting as muddy as possible. All great fun but the Toyotas would always show their class and competence by comparison to my LR. The idea of having a brand-new Land Cruiser with a big diesel engine (straight 6 or turbo v8) little or no electronics, manual 'box etc is very tempting. Thanks again for this intro into the world of 2024 Land Cruisers.
Worked for a chap that ran Cruiser Utes spraying around the Snowies here in the land down under. Unless you go for a Unimog nothing else could take spray rigs where we went. Although they do fall over quite easily with weight on top. He did get a V8 but was complaining about breaking something on the front end continuously, with the bigger engine squeezed in. But that was using them to extremes. The cost though is crazy, probably accounts for half of Toyota's profits.
Definitely want to hear your views on the 300 series. Some 25 years ago a friend in Grenoble bought one of these "no electronics" land cruisers to replace his Mitsubishi SUV for an adventure holiday (a couple of months away) in North Africa. He was a pharmacist and also a skilled mechanic so he was relatively safe from parts issues. It was canary yellow and he sold it for more than the purchase price when he got back to Grenoble. So great residual values on these long life vehicles.
As an australian who has lived in a mining town, I kind of take these for granted. I forget how unicorn they appear to the UK and US as they are so ubiquitous here. I live in an inner-city suburb now and there are still 2 x 79s and a 76 on my street, along with a couple of 200 series as well. As a side note my dad has a 100 series with the 4.5 turbo diesel six (around 400k km on it), and has just taken delivery of a shiny new Grenadier. He doesn't seem in a rush to sell the cruiser though...
@mclouj It really is quite strange how often I come across you in the youtube comment section. Your RB 182 stands out like a sore thumb 😆 I need to update my profile pic soon. Just shipped a Titanium 182 from Sydney to Perth.
My question (and I suspect of many others) is why aren't cars like this ALWAYS being made along side the best of the newest and best they offer?? Isn't there a place for them still??
It all comes down to demand and where to apply your finite resources. The 70 variants continue to have sufficient demand in some markets to make a case satisfactory to Toyota for continuation. That is not unlimited, though, as evident with the narrower rear track which was not widened when the front was widened to accommodate the V8.
Those utilitarian Land Cruisers are way beyond regular people's budgets, of course, but, as he says, if you want something that will work, and work, and work, requiring only scheduled maintenance in most cases, and if your business can afford it, there's very little to match it I would have thought. I have seen a few on the road recently here in Japan, and at first I thought that I had only recently noticed that people had been keeping their old Toyotas in very nice condition, not realizing that they were not "old". Well done, Jonny, another great review.
Here in HK, Until recently, we had crown comfort taxis. Also like late 80s. Used LPG Camry engine from back then. Indestructible Similar to Johnny's JDM nissan cab
In belgium you see a lot of these new 70 landcruisers on trailers in the seaports of zeebrugge and antwerp . Very strange , built in portugal or japan and shipped to belgium ,only for export outside europe if you look on the internet.
Absolutely love it. If only I had the money. Most modern vehicles are awash with technical wizardry which is aching to fail. Respect to Toyota for retaining a sensible section of the market - long may it continue. (Land Rover take notice).
I have absolutely no need for one of these in my life, but I'm so glad that they exist! I'd love a Troopy! That V8 derv makes a sweet sweet burble, I'd like to see you drive the 300 series Jonny, I wonder if Toyota have got the balance right with comfort and utilitarianism. If anyone can, its Toyota
My drive to work takes me the other way between Fremantle Port and a local Toyota dealer. Most days of the week there are a procession of brand new unregistered (dealer transport plates) 70 Series going fresh off the docks to the dealer forecourt - clearly they move plenty of units!
Great video Jonny, well done. As sexy as the V8 is, there has to be something said for a non-electronic straight six. I drive a 2007 Sprinter these days, 383,000 miles, 3rd engine and I literally drive with the code clearer plugged in all the time!
Superior Engineering here does a coil spring rear conversion... You can get anything for them.. portal axles, gvm upgrade 6" lift etc. The G wagon professional that were sold here, the ute carries more than the LandCruiser.. Ask me if you have a question about LandCruisers
As a sheep farmer in Co Donegal this (with a healthy dose of body underseal) would be the perfect yoke for day to day needs whe the HiLux eventually packs in. They’d sell like hotcakes in Ireland.
This is the only new vehicle I would buy today, I love how old school and simple everything is. I'd probably buy the crew cab pickup but on steels as the alloys look like land rover wheels lol
Can't exactly remember where I heard it ,but some Ozzy bloke famously said. "If you want to go into the outback take a Discovery, but if you want to get back out,take a Land-Cruiser.
My old boss at the Toyota Dismantling yard had a WRX STI type R 2 door first gen ,a hotted up R32 GTR ,A30 Supra but his daily was a JDM 3 Door Toyota Trooper turbo V8 Diesel in White on Old Man Emu Suspension ,35s all round ,beast of a truck
Hi Jonny. Thanks for this. I love these things more than I can explain. The v8s are lovely. I live in Kenya and drove one for a while and they bring a huge smile to everyone. My kids love them to bits. It's my dream car.
These are the back bone of Australia. However, not the last as they are still available today. I have one. Being ex UK, I know the rust issue so rust proof it. You’ll have a car for life. That motor if maintained, will turn 1m k’s, no problem. I know these like the back of my hand.
I like this double cab, worth every penny/cents. Every parent should buy one for their kid when they turn 18 years old and they will never need to buy another vehicle for the rest of the life. My children will have two of these. Saving for two.
Thanks for making this video. I had hoped someone would cover importing land cruisers into the UK and you’re the best person to do it. I bought a patrol in Covid and after getting work done on it at specialist garages who were also doing work on imported 70’s I’ve become obsessed with it.
Totally in love with the pure mechanical non-turbo Troopy. It’s like a simple Casio watch, with no bluetooth or touchscreen, but totally robust and lasts forever.
@@anthonyfarnan5935 I'm not so sure about this. The Ineos is amazing but if I was traveling through Africa/Australia, I'd definitely prefer a land cruiser. Although both cruiser and ineos are pretty much bulletproof, things can go wrong or break. Everyone has seen a land cruiser in Africa, which means you have a much higher chance of finding a part and/or mechanic who can fix it in an emergency. I'm not so sure with the Ineos..
Compared to even the simplest Diesels, the best thing about EV’s is the absolute lack of mechanical maintenance required, no oil changes, virtually no wearing parts. The worst thing about EV’s is electrical gremlins (which also occur with any diesel vehicle post 2000), constant online updates from the cloud, and battery life. …And what happens to the value of ‘simple diesel’ 4x4’s when 80% of vehicles are EV’s and diesel becomes hard to find or very expensive? How is that future proof?
The 2.8 is makes 80nm more torque than the V8. I just bought one, as you know they are autos now. It drives and tows better than ever. The V8 with clutch upgrade amongst other things depending on how far you go, can be tuned to make some very impressive power far beyond the 2.8, however forget about 1 million K's, the longevity goes as will the turbo etc. becomes a money pit
I have a toyota landcruiser. It is the older 4.2 turbo diesel. They make around 170bhp at the crank which, to be frank, is not enough for a car that weighs that much. It's bloody gutless really. I often think, I wish it made another 50 or 75 bhp more. If it only lasted to 400,000 miles, that would be fine. Nearly all of us do not need a car that can do 1,000,000 kilometers. Maybe in Oz or Africa, India, whatever. Not really in the UK. Still, if you want one, treat yourself!
Bit of a long one ....Whilst working out in Bahrain back end of the 90s, met a chap with a merc sl500 special edition for sale with delivery miles only. Asked him why its up for sale ? "Its a rag top no aircon hits 50degs here in the summer....I've been using the wks pickup with aircon for the last two years.The crew cab one...brilliant just goes to show... BTW he made his fortune as a welder out there...Said he had more money than sense.
Our 100 series 1HD-FTE redlines at 4k, and the trans shifts at 3800 if you don't force/lock it down. 24valve 4.2 turbo electronic pump. Awesome truck, beyond belief if not tried. You've driven these now so you now know.
Love these. A Land Cruiser towing a boat is the Aussie Dream. The big fat white new thing parked next to the 70 series at the end looked awful. Like the designer had no idea how to fill the space so just kept adding stuff.
I'm a Land Rover guy. Who's just spent three weeks driving a Land Cruiser in Australia. The Cruiser is in many ways much like a Rover that's been screwed together properly and built for normal sized people that have arms and legs. I though the rear track issue was being over-blown but it is really, really noticeable. The ground clearance on the back axle is abysmal compared to the Land Rover, and I really missed the full time 4x4 but I do kind of now want one. The Troopie is the only 4x4 van that there really is to replace my aging 110. First gear low range in the V8 70 series is awesome, but the fact that the manual is doing nearly 3000rpm by the time you get to 70 isn't ideal. The 79 I had used near enough double the fuel that my 2.4 110 would have done doing the same work, which would probably push me to the 2.8.
That’s perfectly understandable. I was only sharing it for posterity for any that would like the V8 to spin at something less than 3K on the highway. With 8 speeds it’s quite a bit lower. At the same time, it would be easier to swap a gear ratio or final drive to lower the highway rpm’s.
I wish they will also make something like the no electrics one or simplified electronics also for a hatchback. Supermini sized.. something like that that will have easy maintenance and easy cosmetics wear fixes is the dream. Like a first gen panda with the fundamentals of modern safty but not too much. 0 stars rating is ok just be as safe as a grande punto from 2006.
Would absolutely love a 70 series, always had land rovers but bought a 100 series cruiser a few years ago and have never looked back! Drives great, tows like nothing I've ever driven and is so well put together.
There's a company in Gibraltar that specialises in importing 70 Series LCs from Japan and modifying them for use by agencies such as the UN... maybe those are the lorries you keep seeing?
@@TheKnobCalledTone. I think you're right. l couldn't understand why such a small nation like Portugal, with high wages, would have a factory dedicated to producing 70 series Land Cruisers & Troopers...
wish we could get LC 70 series in the U.S. gas engine is fine ,my fav is the troopy just a basic utilitarian van the car camper overland tour wagon I could build , but here in the U.S every S.U.V. which most have no utility but to be a 3 row luxury, family school bus fully loaded and has to have ' independent rear suspension for that smooth ride and leg room for the 3rd row "
Here in Dubai, Toyota sells these in pickup form (79 series in 2 door or 4 door) but only with 2 engines: 4.0L V6 (the engine in high trim Prados) 4.2L inline-6 diesel like the one you drove, but diesel is rare here. Unfortunately, it can be only bought as a commercial vehicle, not for private use. So, as an alternative, people buy the Y61 Nissan Patrol Super Safari. Those are bought in SUV form (both 3 door and 5 door). The pickup version is available, but it's only for commercial use. These have a petrol 4.8L inline-6. No diesel here. It comes with a 5 speed manual or 5 speed automatic. The Patrol is just awesome. It's like buying a brand new car but it's from the '90s. It has that charm that only a few will understand just like the LC70/79. It's not exactly cheap to buy, they drink petrol like there's no tomorrow, but its got simplicity, reliability and has decent aftermarket support.
I have absolutely no reason to buy either, so won’t, but I am so happy they exist and hope those with a need for this kind of vehicle choose to buy one.
Interestingly, the 2.8L Diesel with the Automatic performs pretty similar if not better than the good ole' V8 especially when you're cruising and towing (we're talking stock to stock). If you do wanted to tune the engine, the V8 does have a bigger potential but the 2.8L isn't a slouch at all by able to get more power just by a slight ECU tuning so it can be a little cheaper.
Love those old school Toyotas , no adblue and no DPF rubbish , throttle cable , jobs a good un. I think theyre cool as feck - that 300 series thing though , no thanks , I’ll stick with the 80s tastic oldies!
I ran a Troopy for 6 months whilst working in Mali for six months, it was an absolute beast, it had been abused all it's life and didn't miss a beat. I'd love one of these.
We love this vehicle in Africa. I believe too in Australia. I build my 3000 hectare ranch in Mozambique with one of these. You would not believe what punishment they can endure. Viva Toyota! Respect!
The car industry for some reason does not understand this, but simple is better. We are going to pay for all the electronic rubbish that is in the new cars, electronics will end the life of new cars, the motor will still be basically sound, yes the whole car industry has gone mad. Yes I would buy a land cruiser.
It's not the car industry,it's politicians you voted for.
@ms-jl6dl It's both. Government meddling and car industry greed. Funny how UK government wanted us to buy diesels for years with as little as £20 Road tax now its deemed the devil's fuel. Diesel has always and will always be a dirty fuel. Yes to much technology will kill cars .
This is not a simple vehicle, it just doesn't have hard stuff to use in front of you. Most people do this strange thing where they educate themselves to learn the new systems.
It has nothing to do with car companies. Toyota, like many other car companies produce and or make different types of vehicles based on demand and sales. Governments depending on the country will regulate safety and emissions among of variarity of things to allow the import and sale of a especific vehicle.
In the case of the 70 series Land Cruiser it is a very basic vehicle and it is meant to be that way. Its use is mostly industrial in third world countries, Africa and Australia from mining, agriculture, emergency response, ambulance in remote areas, etc. Company employees that drive these vehicles they literally beat the shit out of them. They are driven day in and day out on bad roads or no roads not because they want to but because they have to. It is not meant to be a family vehicle or for domestic use.
People have been saying this same bs for decades now. Instead cars have become more reliable. You realise that electronics in cars are not a recent thing, right?
5:10 "if you want the V8, you'll have to be old school and have the manual shift"
Mate don't threaten me with a good time!
Great video Jonny. So, there's a reason why people love these things...... We did an 18,000 mile trip all over Australia, in a Toyota HiLux with a cab on the back. The suspension was hard. The sunroof was sealed up. No air conditioning. The wheels were steel split rims. The 4 cylinder motor developed an exhaust valve issue so it was running on 3 cylinders. The transmission leaked and required additional fluid every morning....but no warning lights came on and it just kept going. We camped in the bush for 6 months and when we left Australia we sold that HiLux for what we paid for it. It got the job done. That's why people who go into the bush or the desert, buy old school Toyotas and Nissans. You never see a Range Rover or a Mercedes SUV, except in Sydney.
Great video. Thanks so much.
and you'll continue to see old school vehicles used for this purpose. The current generation of flashy trendy SUV's will have no cult following in the future.
U.S. I see lot of jeeps and Toyotas 1990s -2000s built but lot of new $100,000 -$150,000 U.S. $ raptors , bronco raptors , defenders , ram trx , rubicon 392 the oh look at me I'm an off roader , right you going to baja 1000 or moab ?
I ran a fleet of close to 200 of these cruisers in east Africa. While most of them ran the 1Hz N/A engines, we also had the V8s. the cost per kilometer for maintenance was a third when compared to the Landrovers in the same fleet. They are the best trucks on the market. One of our workshop cruisers had over 500,000km on the clock and the engine hand never been opened. Grew up with Landrovers but they don’t come close to these.
Was the 1HZ noticeably more reliable than the V8?
Definitely, my old 80 series had 500 000 klms on it and was running solidly when I sold it, still is now, simplicity is the key (low output per CC is also)
4.2 is for on farm only. Perhaps overlanding as well. Its reliability and easy to fix characteristics makes it attract for that purpose. Burning is underpowered. Dangerously so. Loaded and firing you cannot overtake safely. Go v8.
I bought a 1HZ (absolutely zero electronics) from Travis, and we LOVE it. Simple is best. Made in Japan, tried and tested, proven quality and reliability. Travis and the guys are brilliant. Great to see this excellent video.
The Land Cruiser is possibly the last vehicle to be truly made to last. A true slap in the face to the current disposable car manufacturing.
Body on frame Toyotas return to nature in 15-20 years in the UK climate.
@@brainwrongs doesn’t pretty much everything do that in the UK?
@@MrLurchsThings Toyotas seem especially bad, worse than body on frame Land Rovers which are terrible in themselves.
@@brainwrongs I’m kinda surprised. I mean I know the UK climate destroys cars in general, but especially Toyotas like the Cruiser? These things take pretty much every kind of abuse that’s ever thrown at them. Perhaps all that abuse is simply the dry, unsalted kind.
Living in South Africa, I recently bought a 2016 76, station wagon, almost 300,000 on the clock, goes like a dream - instead of the rather expensive gearbox mod changing 2nd and 5th gears, I went for 285/75/16 tyres, running a 2 bar - a more comfortable ride, and the larger diameter tyre has given it longer legs on the open road: previously 2000 rpm, was 80 kph, now it is 90. I used to cruise at 100/105, now 110/120 is easy
_Exactly!_ I ran 33/12.5 - 17's on my 80 series - averaged 25 to the gallon.
@@dancarter482 agreed, the bigger tyres have reduce my consumption on the long open roads, and I run slightly lower pressures, si it has improved the ride too
We need more cars like this! Built to last, built to simple, reliable, repairable, we’ve become a throwaway society that assumes newer is always better and it’s not always the case!
I love the Troopie, and I love that Toyota is still selling them. This is absolutely what the world needs. Simple, robust, no nonsense engineering, with minimal electronics, and no DPF nonsense. It's absolutely fabulous. But, I think Toyota should go further. Let's have the first gen Yaris, the 1993 Corolla, and the early to mid 90s Carina E back as well. Rugged, reliable, and dependable vehicles that won't let you down. They're what we all need, and if we're honest, what most of us really want too. If the past is the new future, count me in.
In Australia all diesels have had DPFs since 2016
Words can't express how much I want a 200 series facelift Land Cruiser! I'm so glad Toyota still make the old school 70 series. Goes to prove the mantra of, if it's not broken, don't fix it!!!
Ancient Australian proverb: "If you want to go into the bush, take a Land Rover; if you want to get home, take a Land Cruiser"
Only said by Land Cruiser owners 😂
@@robgw well, we’re still waiting for any Land Rover owners to prove it wrong!
And if you do have a problem most regional towns have Toyota dealerships every second cockie has a Toyotas on there farms
@@paulsz6194Well myself as a Patrol owner glad you're so far away waiting 😂😂😂 stay there ha ha
And if either get stuck, phone a Nissan Patrol owner..!
I went from a 3.0L hilux to the 79 series that’s featured in this video. I loved my hilux, but this landcruiser is an icon. Bullet proof and absolutely incredible on uk roads. The towing capability is phenomenal- zero regrets. Travis is an excellent businessman to deal with, absolute gentleman and a real pleasure to deal with.
Great to hear first hand from someone who's taken the dive.
@@TheLateBrakeShow you had the pleasure of driving my truck before me haha. Wonderful vehicles couldn’t be happier with it. Just like what I remember of them in Australia. A similar story I imagine a lot of current uk owners share.
I've owned both the 78 (troop carrier, 11 seater!) and 79 (dual cab). Both have well established reputations for reliability and offroad ability but I just wanted to say they are actually far more comfortable as a tourer than people think, and a very practical every-day vehicle. In my Troopcarrier, the seats all fold up and out of the way allowing me to carry loads, shift house, even transport motorbikes. Flip the seats down, and at the end of a night on the town with everyone drunk I frequently filled all 11 seats dropping people off home (tolerating serial killer jokes along the way). Doing 1,000km in a day on the highways in Australia, towing trailers or caravans, they sit really nicely on the road and eat up the kilometres. The GXL trim level has cruise control, you can pretty much set any speed you want in 5th gear and the v8 has the power to hold it without you needing to intervene and drop back to 4th. Even up steep hills, even with a small trailer on the back, the big v8 just idles along and you really can just set and forget. Plenty of people in Australia are touring the country in these, even on the freeway's, and living quite comfortably.
"Zero electronics." Music to my ears, and that's from someone who used to be an electronics engineer and fixes computers for a living.
Except the engine and under the skin.
@@Low760 No spark plug in a diesel that uses mechanical fuel pump and mechanical injectors. (Just glow plugs for cold start)
'...fixes computers for a living.', just about sums up the madness prevalent in modern life. Cheers, Alan. 👍✌
@@peem1244The new 4wd's I would call "laptops on wheels". The new Landrovers are a prime example of this junk. I love the very old Landrovers. The new Grenadier is pretty good but a new landcruiser would be my choice.
I have no need for a vehicle like this, but good on Toyota for still making them. For less developed locations that wouldn’t have access to rhe parts and equipment to repair a newer spec vehicle, these must be a boon.
It's for mining companies, hence why the new one is finally an auto, with the Hilux 2.8.
Less developed countries buy cars that have a starting price of $80k? Lol
@@boredguy2935yeah course u do
A manual V8 troopy would be my 'if you had to have one car for the rest of your life' answer.
Hi Johnny , yeah come back and drive the 300 pls 😊🏴
Agree. That's a yatch compared to these. @@GeorgeMurrayMuirhead
It’s the last of the Mohicans…😮
4xoverland channel is everything you need to know about the 70 series, old and new.
Til the engine fails.
Jonny, I think you should test drive the 300 series. The 70 series is just the type vehicle we adore in these parts of Africa. From business people, farmers, transport companies, tourists, the military, the police to politicians this is the vehicle of choice.
Just so everyone knows Carly is a terrible company, they sold these obd readers to users as a one time purchase and you purchase your specific brands functions and that's it. So I got one but it's now useless because they screwed over their customers and disabled everything unless you pay for a subscription. Just a warning for you guys who may not know, just buy a decent one time purchase one it'll save you a lot of money
Made my day! I've got a 12 year old Prado with 350k km on the clock. Still solid and as sweet as a nut. I did timing belt and water pump at 300k. Nice to know it might make a 1 megakm! Yeah! Love that car.
This simplicity and utility is exactly why I decided on getting a '92 Cherokee XJ with the in-line 6 4.0 and 5 speed manual when need for a second car in the family emerged. I don't need new gizmos, small "efficient" (read: overcomplicated for their own good) engines, and touch screens.
Ran a JDM 1991 LJ71 2.4 auto here in Malta for 6 years. Bought with 260,000 km, sold it with over 400,000km. Brilliant bit of kit!!
Hi Jonny. Love these Toyota’s. We run a 1997 90 series drought in 1999 with 30k on it. Still going strong 25 years later with 325.000 miles on the clock still used every day for my wife’s stable yard enterprise towing horse boxes. Keep up the good work 👍
I loved my various LC70 series, in the UN we called them “buffaloes” because they carried everything! I was 10 years in Bosnia/kosovo and 12 in various crazy parts of Africa and there’s a reason why everyone there drives them, from Red Cross to Al Shabaab, they’re F brilliant.
I bought my single cab Series 79 V8 from Travis last Christmas and have absolutely loved it's solidity and back to basics pick-up simplicity. It took around three months from order to delivery and Travis kept me updated all the time. After driving it for 500kms I wondered why on earth I hadn't bought one when I was younger because after two Navarra's, which rusted out after 90,000kms, and a Grenadier, which I embarrassingly wrote off, this is the vehicle that is going to outlast me. The ride is bit bumpy when it's empty and its not speedy but who cares, this is what all pick ups should be like, immensely strong, dependable and easy to maintain. And being in West Cornwall, in the fishing industry, apart from compliments from fishermen mates I am amazed how many complete strangers have come up and said "love your pick-up", or "Wow, we used those in Australia/South Africa/ Zambia, amazing pickups, how on earth did you get one over here?". Good on you Travis for bringing them in to the UK.
Land Cruiser 70 series is one of the greatest creations in the world of vehicles.
Reliability, durability, simplicity, easy to maintain and timeless design, which are not found in today's vehicles, are more important than electronic devices and features. Its V8 engine and manual gearbox make this vehicle even more lovable. It's a feeling that binds us to the vehicle. And the exhaust makes some of the best music I've ever heard. People who know the value of LC 70 series know that they can go anywhere without any problem.❤
What are you on about, here in Australia the V8 is regarded as one of the most useless 4x4s money can buy
Amazing episode! So yes please more Land Cruiser episodes. I would buy one tomorrow.
Great to see that you can still buy a car like that today without all these annoying electronics and sensors that break. Miss the old school way.
Between 1976 and 2007, we had 3 single-cab trucks on our farm in the Limpopo Valley, South Africa. They were absolutely indestructible!
Another perfect Sunday at work thanks to Jonny and team at The Late Brake Show!
Cheers v much!
As an Aussie, it's cool seeing love for these in the UK. They are *brilliant*.
I never knew that there were so many Land Cruisers available nor did I know that you were allowed to manufacture a Diesel without any dpf 😧 Thank you for the Toyota education. Oh and thanks Jonny I now think of Lands End trial every time I see a yellow Kia Picanto😂
We are assembling this in Portuguese Toyota facilities in OVAR!
I point at Picantos and shout “CANT” 👉
You should look Nissan Patrol and Nissan Patrol Nismo.. They make them for US, OZ and Middle East markets.. only found out about them last year.
They do have dpd though?
It depends on the country. Aussie spec 70 series have had DPFs since 2016, but a lot of African and Middle Eastern spec cars still don’t (ME can even still get them with petrols), and for a while could even be had with 1HDs which haven’t been available in the Australian versions since 2009 (1HD is what you want if you want real reliability).
Given the state of UK roads it probably makes more sense than many other things
Toyota Land Cruiser is without doubt, the best vehicle ever made. I could never understand why so many people loved them. Until I bought a 105 series Land Cruiser. Every time you drive them. you just have to smile. Thanks for a great episode. Greetings from Australia.
They are incredible. And I am astonished that people around the globe have the good sense to build them, and buy them. They should be everywhere. Helping to save the planet. And no, I'm not joking. Old and simple lasts. And if it lasts, we don't have to build a new one.
I have no need for a Land Cruiser, I don't live in the Aussie outback, or a middle eastern desert but man I'd love one! There needs to be more cars like those available, I'm sick of plasticky, overly complicated, brittle, poorly engineered cars being forced upon us. Give me simplicity, reliability and longevity!
Enjoyed the Video, I live in Western Australia and see 70 series Landcruisers all the time in the bush on mine sites and in the Perth Metro area. The lack of unnecessary Technology is what is appealing, I have a 2006 Nissan Navara (316,000kms) which is the same as these Toyota Landcruisers I.e. levers to engage 4wd plastic interior rubber mats wind up windows no central locking, it’s used for bush/beach camping trips, towing my Caterham 7 Hillclimb car. PS I really want to replace the Navara (when it dies) with a 70 series.
Hello from Australia. I have a 2005 105 diesel manual 420,000k. I bought the car three years ago with 385,000k.
The only faults currently is an AC evaporator leak under the dash board and a small leak from the power steering pump.
All the other parts on the car are original except for the usual scheduled service parts such as the timing belt (and most likely water pump), steering dampener, shock absorbers, brake rotors (and obviously brake pads).
The car is great for day tripping and camping in national parks.
I have a 79 series ute. Sure it’s a bit tractorish at times but it doesn’t ask for much and it’s happy to work hard. The utilitarian interior is hard wearing and a bit retro. Just put on some AC/DC and move on. Not everyone’s cup of tea but it does what it says on the box.
There seem to be a slight misunderstanding at 7:35? At least the picture is not showing the correct model?
That’s definitely the new Prado and not the new 70 they were talking about.
@@indiebekonn Travis was definitely talking about the updates 70 series
Yeah, that's the upcoming Prado / 250 series Land Cruisers.
Though to be fair, the new 76 series does took a lot of inspiration from the 250 design cues (the one with circular lights).
I think that what many in the world know as a Prado is just a Land Cruiser in the UK since the other styles are not sold officially by Toyota. The commentary in the video is mostly consistent but not at that point. 😃 Since we get all three types in Australia, we know to make a distinction!
Never getting rid of my 76 series. Pre dpf so plenty of grunt, sensible mods only but most recent was the best...latest model gearbox upgrade which drops revs in 5th from 2500rpm/110kph to 2100rpm/110kph...or if you are really up for it, 2500rpm now gives 130 kph and that is on 265/75r16s.
The 70 series sold in South Africa are actually produced in Europe, in Portugal - in Ovar, since 2015. We see them a lot on trailers, on their to the port to get shipped out.
7:59 shows the wrong land cruiser, that's a J250. GREAT VIDEO NONETHELESS! 2.8 1GD turbo will be a great engine and will last a long time, no doubt.
Johnny knows my automotive taste better than I do! 😂 incredible video!
Ha! Well it's a legend of a car and the fact it still is being made in this flavour is just brilliant.
Couldn't agree more!
I think he knows what we all like, that why he gets good reviews 👍
@@TheLateBrakeShowas far as I remember the 79 series was brought back a couple of years ago due to Australian demand
@@TheLateBrakeShowyou should see the Australian waiting list for the V8 versions!
Hi Jonny, first of all can I say that I really loved this video - packed full of common sense.
For many years I was a LR fan-boy doing tours for Land Cruiser owners. They came from all over Continental Europe and would stay for a week getting as muddy as possible. All great fun but the Toyotas would always show their class and competence by comparison to my LR.
The idea of having a brand-new Land Cruiser with a big diesel engine (straight 6 or turbo v8) little or no electronics, manual 'box etc is very tempting.
Thanks again for this intro into the world of 2024 Land Cruisers.
Worked for a chap that ran Cruiser Utes spraying around the Snowies here in the land down under. Unless you go for a Unimog nothing else could take spray rigs where we went. Although they do fall over quite easily with weight on top. He did get a V8 but was complaining about breaking something on the front end continuously, with the bigger engine squeezed in. But that was using them to extremes. The cost though is crazy, probably accounts for half of Toyota's profits.
Hey up mate I've got a couple of unimogs but favourite vehicle ever was a LC fj40
Definitely want to hear your views on the 300 series.
Some 25 years ago a friend in Grenoble bought one of these "no electronics" land cruisers to replace his Mitsubishi SUV for an adventure holiday (a couple of months away) in North Africa. He was a pharmacist and also a skilled mechanic so he was relatively safe from parts issues. It was canary yellow and he sold it for more than the purchase price when he got back to Grenoble. So great residual values on these long life vehicles.
To be honest the Mitsubishi Pajeros are pretty damn good vehicles in their own right. it's sad they were brought to an end.
I have a 75 series in the UK 😁 driven around the world for 10 years and home at the moment.
As an australian who has lived in a mining town, I kind of take these for granted. I forget how unicorn they appear to the UK and US as they are so ubiquitous here. I live in an inner-city suburb now and there are still 2 x 79s and a 76 on my street, along with a couple of 200 series as well.
As a side note my dad has a 100 series with the 4.5 turbo diesel six (around 400k km on it), and has just taken delivery of a shiny new Grenadier. He doesn't seem in a rush to sell the cruiser though...
@mclouj
It really is quite strange how often I come across you in the youtube comment section.
Your RB 182 stands out like a sore thumb 😆
I need to update my profile pic soon. Just shipped a Titanium 182 from Sydney to Perth.
@@gorsair7458 Just goes to show we both have excellent taste in youtube channels :D
@@mclouj you're clearly not wrong there 😅😆
My question (and I suspect of many others) is why aren't cars like this ALWAYS being made along side the best of the newest and best they offer?? Isn't there a place for them still??
Emissions and safety legislation being imposed by the EU & WEF
It all comes down to demand and where to apply your finite resources. The 70 variants continue to have sufficient demand in some markets to make a case satisfactory to Toyota for continuation. That is not unlimited, though, as evident with the narrower rear track which was not widened when the front was widened to accommodate the V8.
For the first time in my life, I now aspire to own one of these one day. I wish more manufacturers realised they have already done their best work.
Those utilitarian Land Cruisers are way beyond regular people's budgets, of course, but, as he says, if you want something that will work, and work, and work, requiring only scheduled maintenance in most cases, and if your business can afford it, there's very little to match it I would have thought.
I have seen a few on the road recently here in Japan, and at first I thought that I had only recently noticed that people had been keeping their old Toyotas in very nice condition, not realizing that they were not "old".
Well done, Jonny, another great review.
Here in HK, Until recently, we had crown comfort taxis. Also like late 80s. Used LPG Camry engine from back then. Indestructible
Similar to Johnny's JDM nissan cab
Yay! My daily is a 21 Troopy v8! My second one, absolutely love them.
In belgium you see a lot of these new 70 landcruisers on trailers in the seaports of zeebrugge and antwerp . Very strange , built in portugal or japan and shipped to belgium ,only for export outside europe if you look on the internet.
Absolutely love it. If only I had the money. Most modern vehicles are awash with technical wizardry which is aching to fail. Respect to Toyota for retaining a sensible section of the market - long may it continue. (Land Rover take notice).
I have absolutely no need for one of these in my life, but I'm so glad that they exist! I'd love a Troopy! That V8 derv makes a sweet sweet burble, I'd like to see you drive the 300 series Jonny, I wonder if Toyota have got the balance right with comfort and utilitarianism. If anyone can, its Toyota
My drive to work takes me the other way between Fremantle Port and a local Toyota dealer. Most days of the week there are a procession of brand new unregistered (dealer transport plates) 70 Series going fresh off the docks to the dealer forecourt - clearly they move plenty of units!
Great video Jonny, well done. As sexy as the V8 is, there has to be something said for a non-electronic straight six. I drive a 2007 Sprinter these days, 383,000 miles, 3rd engine and I literally drive with the code clearer plugged in all the time!
Blimey, that sounds awful. The straight six n/a diesel is the GOAT
@@TheLateBrakeShow They made that 6 with a turbo as well, still zero electronics and very sought after here in Aus.
Superior Engineering here does a coil spring rear conversion... You can get anything for them.. portal axles, gvm upgrade 6" lift etc.
The G wagon professional that were sold here, the ute carries more than the LandCruiser..
Ask me if you have a question about LandCruisers
Are superior in Oz mate
As a sheep farmer in Co Donegal this (with a healthy dose of body underseal) would be the perfect yoke for day to day needs whe the HiLux eventually packs in. They’d sell like hotcakes in Ireland.
I'm nostalgic for this era of engineering, appearance and dependability of not only Toyotas but all Japanese manufacturers.
This is the only new vehicle I would buy today, I love how old school and simple everything is.
I'd probably buy the crew cab pickup but on steels as the alloys look like land rover wheels lol
Can't exactly remember where I heard it ,but some Ozzy bloke famously said. "If you want to go into the outback take a Discovery, but if you want to get back out,take a Land-Cruiser.
There's a saying in Australia that goes "If you want to go Outback, get a Jeep. If you want to come back, get a LandCruiser"
My old boss at the Toyota Dismantling yard had a WRX STI type R 2 door first gen ,a hotted up R32 GTR ,A30 Supra but his daily was a JDM 3 Door Toyota Trooper turbo V8 Diesel in White on Old Man Emu Suspension ,35s all round ,beast of a truck
Hi Jonny. Thanks for this. I love these things more than I can explain. The v8s are lovely. I live in Kenya and drove one for a while and they bring a huge smile to everyone. My kids love them to bits. It's my dream car.
These are the back bone of Australia.
However, not the last as they are still available today.
I have one. Being ex UK, I know the rust issue so rust proof it. You’ll have a car for life. That motor if maintained, will turn 1m k’s, no problem.
I know these like the back of my hand.
I like this double cab, worth every penny/cents. Every parent should buy one for their kid when they turn 18 years old and they will never need to buy another vehicle for the rest of the life. My children will have two of these. Saving for two.
Thanks for making this video. I had hoped someone would cover importing land cruisers into the UK and you’re the best person to do it.
I bought a patrol in Covid and after getting work done on it at specialist garages who were also doing work on imported 70’s I’ve become obsessed with it.
only drive the LC 300 3.3 l GR Diesel version, they are great, drove one for 6,000 km in Central Asia
Totally in love with the pure mechanical non-turbo Troopy. It’s like a simple Casio watch, with no bluetooth or touchscreen, but totally robust and lasts forever.
Anyone who's considering the INEOS should just get one of these.
Ineos interior and ergonomics (not to mention engine and transmission) is light years ahead of this.
@@anthonyfarnan5935 On you mean the ergonomics in the RHD model where there's no room at all for you left foot? Bwahahaha.
@@GingerPiston That’s the only drawback re ergonomics. Still miles better than the Toyota, and light years ahead of the old defender.
@@anthonyfarnan5935 I'm not so sure about this. The Ineos is amazing but if I was traveling through Africa/Australia, I'd definitely prefer a land cruiser. Although both cruiser and ineos are pretty much bulletproof, things can go wrong or break. Everyone has seen a land cruiser in Africa, which means you have a much higher chance of finding a part and/or mechanic who can fix it in an emergency.
I'm not so sure with the Ineos..
@@SpottedCreeper original post said “anyone considering an Ineos”. It didn’t say “anyone considering driving though the Sahara”.
For us who do game driving here in Zimbabwe, these are the cars we use .. They can take you anywhere and everywhere, all terrain
79 series crew class V8 pick up, manual V8 available in rhd, costs approx GBP45,000 in the UAE.
In RHD
Compared to even the simplest Diesels, the best thing about EV’s is the absolute lack of mechanical maintenance required, no oil changes, virtually no wearing parts. The worst thing about EV’s is electrical gremlins (which also occur with any diesel vehicle post 2000), constant online updates from the cloud, and battery life. …And what happens to the value of ‘simple diesel’ 4x4’s when 80% of vehicles are EV’s and diesel becomes hard to find or very expensive? How is that future proof?
The 2.8 is makes 80nm more torque than the V8. I just bought one, as you know they are autos now. It drives and tows better than ever.
The V8 with clutch upgrade amongst other things depending on how far you go, can be tuned to make some very impressive power far beyond the 2.8, however forget about 1 million K's, the longevity goes as will the turbo etc. becomes a money pit
I remember seeing a load of these getting loaded/unloaded when we landed in Gibraltar last year and being wowed that they’re still available.
I have a toyota landcruiser. It is the older 4.2 turbo diesel. They make around 170bhp at the crank which, to be frank, is not enough for a car that weighs that much. It's bloody gutless really. I often think, I wish it made another 50 or 75 bhp more. If it only lasted to 400,000 miles, that would be fine. Nearly all of us do not need a car that can do 1,000,000 kilometers. Maybe in Oz or Africa, India, whatever. Not really in the UK. Still, if you want one, treat yourself!
Bit of a long one ....Whilst working out in Bahrain back end of the 90s, met a chap with a merc sl500 special edition for sale with delivery miles only. Asked him why its up for sale ? "Its a rag top no aircon hits 50degs here in the summer....I've been using the wks pickup with
aircon for the last two years.The crew cab one...brilliant just goes to show...
BTW he made his fortune as a welder out there...Said he had more money than sense.
Our 100 series 1HD-FTE redlines at 4k, and the trans shifts at 3800 if you don't force/lock it down. 24valve 4.2 turbo electronic pump. Awesome truck, beyond belief if not tried. You've driven these now so you now know.
Love these. A Land Cruiser towing a boat is the Aussie Dream. The big fat white new thing parked next to the 70 series at the end looked awful. Like the designer had no idea how to fill the space so just kept adding stuff.
Definitely not my Aussie dream. Nor is driving this shit box.
I'm a Land Rover guy.
Who's just spent three weeks driving a Land Cruiser in Australia.
The Cruiser is in many ways much like a Rover that's been screwed together properly and built for normal sized people that have arms and legs.
I though the rear track issue was being over-blown but it is really, really noticeable.
The ground clearance on the back axle is abysmal compared to the Land Rover, and I really missed the full time 4x4 but I do kind of now want one. The Troopie is the only 4x4 van that there really is to replace my aging 110.
First gear low range in the V8 70 series is awesome, but the fact that the manual is doing nearly 3000rpm by the time you get to 70 isn't ideal. The 79 I had used near enough double the fuel that my 2.4 110 would have done doing the same work, which would probably push me to the 2.8.
In Australia there’s a garage that’s swapped a ZF 8HP into this platform. They have a bunch of vids here on TH-cam.
@@kylem324 I really like driving a manual though :D
Even though an auto is better in almost every off road scenario, often by a considerable margin.
That’s perfectly understandable. I was only sharing it for posterity for any that would like the V8 to spin at something less than 3K on the highway. With 8 speeds it’s quite a bit lower.
At the same time, it would be easier to swap a gear ratio or final drive to lower the highway rpm’s.
Your videos are very well made.
I loved the music selections and voice over work.
Really great shots too, it's so professional.
I wish they will also make something like the no electrics one or simplified electronics also for a hatchback. Supermini sized.. something like that that will have easy maintenance and easy cosmetics wear fixes is the dream. Like a first gen panda with the fundamentals of modern safty but not too much. 0 stars rating is ok just be as safe as a grande punto from 2006.
I loved Travis’ quite obvious enthusiasm for the trucks!!
And the video’s details revealed throughout the half-hour just backed up why 👊🏻
Thank you. Really glad you enjoyed the episode.
Jonny's face when the subject of leaf springs arose.
He's like 'a pair of whaaat? Oh, parabolic'
Would absolutely love a 70 series, always had land rovers but bought a 100 series cruiser a few years ago and have never looked back! Drives great, tows like nothing I've ever driven and is so well put together.
They are currently being built in Portugal. I often see loaded lorries of brand new 70 series Land Cruisers.
Portugal has a Toyota factory??….🤔
Nope japan
There's a company in Gibraltar that specialises in importing 70 Series LCs from Japan and modifying them for use by agencies such as the UN... maybe those are the lorries you keep seeing?
@@TheKnobCalledTone. I think you're right. l couldn't understand why such a small nation like Portugal, with high wages, would have a factory dedicated to producing 70 series Land Cruisers & Troopers...
@@TheKnobCalledTone. Toyota assemble the Land Cruisers at a plant near Oporto (Ovar).
Great video. You definitely need to return to drive the 300. Shame a shorty 71 wasn’t shown.
Great content Jonny, would love to see you test the 300 series. Not in the market for any of these vehicles but I’m glad they still exist in 2024
I own 70 series Landcruiser its 35 years old and i have it for 16 years now, great car. (FJ70)
wish we could get LC 70 series in the U.S. gas engine is fine ,my fav is the troopy just a basic utilitarian van the car camper overland tour wagon I could build , but here in the U.S every S.U.V. which most have no utility but to be a 3 row luxury, family school bus fully loaded and has to have ' independent rear suspension for that smooth ride and leg room for the 3rd row "
That straight 6 1HZ engine in the troopy is an amazing engine. Its the non turbo version of the old 80 series engine.
Here in Dubai, Toyota sells these in pickup form (79 series in 2 door or 4 door) but only with 2 engines:
4.0L V6 (the engine in high trim Prados)
4.2L inline-6 diesel like the one you drove, but diesel is rare here.
Unfortunately, it can be only bought as a commercial vehicle, not for private use.
So, as an alternative, people buy the Y61 Nissan Patrol Super Safari. Those are bought in SUV form (both 3 door and 5 door). The pickup version is available, but it's only for commercial use. These have a petrol 4.8L inline-6. No diesel here. It comes with a 5 speed manual or 5 speed automatic.
The Patrol is just awesome. It's like buying a brand new car but it's from the '90s. It has that charm that only a few will understand just like the LC70/79.
It's not exactly cheap to buy, they drink petrol like there's no tomorrow, but its got simplicity, reliability and has decent aftermarket support.
I have absolutely no reason to buy either, so won’t, but I am so happy they exist and hope those with a need for this kind of vehicle choose to buy one.
Interestingly, the 2.8L Diesel with the Automatic performs pretty similar if not better than the good ole' V8 especially when you're cruising and towing (we're talking stock to stock).
If you do wanted to tune the engine, the V8 does have a bigger potential but the 2.8L isn't a slouch at all by able to get more power just by a slight ECU tuning so it can be a little cheaper.
Love those old school Toyotas , no adblue and no DPF rubbish , throttle cable , jobs a good un. I think theyre cool as feck - that 300 series thing though , no thanks , I’ll stick with the 80s tastic oldies!
Can someone explain how a diesel with what must be Euro 2/3 standard of emissions gets to be ULEZ compliant?!
It is euro v if it's sold in Australia.
I ran a Troopy for 6 months whilst working in Mali for six months, it was an absolute beast, it had been abused all it's life and didn't miss a beat. I'd love one
of these.
We love this vehicle in Africa.
I believe too in Australia.
I build my 3000 hectare ranch in Mozambique with one of these.
You would not believe what punishment they can endure.
Viva Toyota!
Respect!
Excellent video Jonny. I bloody love that these types of cars are still on sale well done Toyota. This is what the world needs more of, simplicity.