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If you want to watch Toyota fan boys, then watch it, if you don't then steer clear.
Once they said outdated steering it made me wonder if they had any idea how steering and axles work.If you want to watch Toyota fan boys, then watch it, if you don't then steer clear.
They bent the Toyota's side step, jumped on it so they could open the door and proclaimed it was self healing, said the shocking outdated 2.8D motor would survive Armageddon, and of course Toyota won the comparison.
In the past Toyota did pay Top Gear an astonishing amount of money for the year long unbreakable Hilux series, it seems the trend continues.
If Toyota spent the money it spends on advertising on research and development instead, then some of the claims would be true.
As they say what would be a service item on a Toyota would be considered a catastrophic failure on any other brand.
The Defender with air suspension and off-road tyres came last in their off-road comparison the Defender may be many things but coming last in an off-road comparison is not one of them, probably no advertising in their magazines, combined with the jurnos lack of driving ability.
Now I will say what I really think.
Once they said outdated steering it made me wonder if they had any idea how steering and axles work.
Just because it has been around for a while does not mean it is outdated, it is the only system that works with a live front axle, the same as skid steer is the only thing that works with tracked vehicles.By modern standards it IS outdated steering. Just chosen for the principle application.
Interesting that you can tell people's experience level by what you read, but in my experience solid axels do as you say articulate better, but in my experience solid axels are more durable.I think for their test they were spot on. When you look at their ineos gripes, they were the same as any impartial experienced driver has. I can read what people say on this site, and tell their experience level. I drove all of these rigs, and nothing they are saying is inherently wrong, and frankly, all of the gripes are self inflicted wounds on the part of ineos. I mean, ball steering doesn’t have to be this bad. Etc etc etc… BUT, that’s all ok! The target market was never the same as these other products, and many of ineos’s errors seem to be from veering into the daily driver consumer market anyway. 50mm of lift and 35’s, and the ballgame changes. The more lift/tire on solid axles v independent, the more the advantage increase for solid axles. It’s not durability where solids rule, it’s articulation.
Honestly, the only real difficult stumbling block on the ineos that will not be rectified with time, is the stupid choice of axles. It’s nothing one cannot adapt to and work around in use but, there really was no reason for these pokey fucking axle lockers. Once you use Gwagon gear off-road, you know how nice it is to never stop momentum.
For consumer grade, they were right. The LC 250 I took out was great. I’m just a commercial grade buyer, so they didn’t entirely address my specification.
Yes, but it seemed obvious they didn't link it to the live/solid front axle.By modern standards it IS outdated steering. Just chosen for the principle application.
I thought that's how all mainstream media new car comparisons worked. The brand that supplies their vehicles easily and pays the highest advertising dollar generally wins the comparison or at least is second. The jurnos know that a controversal result will end in more views and revenue.If you want to watch Toyota fan boys, then watch it, if you don't then steer clear.
They bent the Toyota's side step, jumped on it so they could open the door and proclaimed it was self healing, said the shocking outdated 2.8D motor would survive Armageddon, and of course Toyota won the comparison.
In the past Toyota did pay Top Gear an astonishing amount of money for the year long unbreakable Hilux series, it seems the trend continues.
If Toyota spent the money it spends on advertising on research and development instead, then some of the claims would be true.
As they say what would be a service item on a Toyota would be considered a catastrophic failure on any other brand.
The Defender with air suspension and off-road tyres came last in their off-road comparison the Defender may be many things but coming last in an off-road comparison is not one of them, probably no advertising in their magazines, combined with the journo's lack of driving ability.
Now I will say what I really think.
How DARE you criticize ADAS! It’s precious and perfect and everyone with an ounce of intelligence LOVES it!!! Pistols at dawn, sir.Not seeing a lot of glowing reviews of the LC out there, especially the engine. I had no idea the killing the Toyota series was sponsored! Thanks for that nugget. These guys are not real off roaders, but at the same time much of what they said was silly. I guess I would review trucks differently. I would look at things like durability, usability, reliability off road and REAL capability. How about functionality and features? How about which car will survive bumping into something? How about ease of adding larger tires? Not, well the flimsy IFS rides better so I feel good. But the fan bois can be interesting. I feel like my favorite vehicles have always been brands where the owners are honest. And I feel like that here. If I say ADAS is stupid, no one will jump down my throat. Of the lockers could engage better. But if I go to a Ram forum and mention the fact I paid thousands of dollars for an override box to make the front locker ever work (you thought Ineos was bad) , or how smart bar/ Sway bar disconnects require a 4K cable replacement as they rust solid with in months for not being water proof.............At nearly a 100% failure rate and they will deny it....or hemi tick or....Xterra and 4 Runner were that way as well. Ineos and Montero owners have been the most down to earth.
I read what they write, and they write what they experience. Actually no better way to tell, that’s why we have people write reports…Interesting that you can tell people's experience level by what you read, but in my experience solid axels do as you say articulate better, but in my experience solid axels are more durable.
A solid axle is more durable than IFS by design.