Gen 1 Toyota Tundra

One more small thing. Both my Gen 1 Tundra trucks had a creaky dash. It was worse in the winter. Those things can drive me nuts. My solution was to buy 1/2" Caulk Saver at Home Depot and stuff it up under the dash by the windshield. Use a wooden spatula to get it tucked in nicely. It worked on both trucks.
 
Do you recommend the bypass kits proactively or just wait until the vehicle throw the relative code? I've looked into this a bit before, but kinda forgot about it
I bypassed my 05 Sequoia before it threw a code. When the SAIS goes, you can go into limp mode, which can be a major pain depending on where you are. I found a private seller on the Tacoma forum that also sells it for the 4.7, was under $50 a few years back. Hewitt, iirc, makes a vg one too, as probably do several others.
 
I bypassed my 05 Sequoia before it threw a code. When the SAIS goes, you can go into limp mode, which can be a major pain depending on where you are. I found a private seller on the Tacoma forum that also sells it for the 4.7, was under $50 a few years back. Hewitt, iirc, makes a vg one too, as probably do several others.

I have the Hewitt device in a bookmark somewhere. I have read that they can go into limp mode on you. I have a 05 4Runner with the UZ V8.
 
lower ball joints are pretty infamous for failure in the first gens. I'd have them looked at.

They are great trucks, lucky find!

I had a catastrophic LBJ failure on my 2000. About 8 miles up a two track in eastern Nevada. Collapsed the front end and broke the CV axle. Was able to get a spare in Ely and wasn't a terrible repair in the field.

I put 100k hard work miles lot of off-road on that 2000 Tundra , with an Eaton TrueTrac LSD and 4.56 gears it was the best truck I've owned. Sold it with 250k and a fresh timing belt, still going strong.
 
I had a catastrophic LBJ failure on my 2000. About 8 miles up a two track in eastern Nevada. Collapsed the front end and broke the CV axle. Was able to get a spare in Ely and wasn't a terrible repair in the field.

I put 100k hard work miles lot of off-road on that 2000 Tundra , with an Eaton TrueTrac LSD and 4.56 gears it was the best truck I've owned. Sold it with 250k and a fresh timing belt, still going strong.
That's a tough field repair. Glad you didn't have to have it towed out. Did you replace with OEM lbj?

They are fantastic trucks. I have a 2017 tundra, but would buy a clean 1st gen in a heartbeat if I could find a well cared for access cab with the 4.7L V8.
 
My ‘06 had 355k on it when I lost a head gasket and chose to replace it instead of repairing it.

Before that, fluids, filters, brakes, tires, shocks, tie rod ends, steering box and U joints are the only items I recall needing.

It was a fantastic rig.
 
That's a tough field repair. Glad you didn't have to have it towed out. Did you replace with OEM lbj?

They are fantastic trucks. I have a 2017 tundra, but would buy a clean 1st gen in a heartbeat if I could find a well cared for access cab with the 4.7L V8.
Nope, NAPA on the shelf (MOOG ?). I was lucky to have Inreach with me and a field partner in the next range over to go get parts for me. Repaired and back to camp the same day. it did destroy the fender, and I sawzalled out half of it so I could finish the work I was out there for.
 
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