Tag

toyota fortuner squeaking Related Articles

This bombproof Toyota Land Cruiser is what every Fortuner wants to be when they grow up

Underneath all that bulletproof, bombproof sheet metal lies a J70 Toyota Land Cruiser.What looks like

Toyota is developing a hybrid Toyota Fortuner, but it’s not what you think it is

Toyota is working on a hybrid version of the Toyota Fortuner, purportedly codenamed 188D.

Toyota Vios GR Sport to Corolla Cross - here are the Toyota cars coming to Malaysia in 2021!

Read our roundup of the upcoming Camry facelift in this article. 2021 Toyota Fortuner faceliftSince the

New 2020 Toyota Fortuner facelift rendered

The facelifted 2020 Toyota Fortuner was caught undisguised on the streets of Thailand.

UMW Toyota Updates Hilux, Fortuner, And Innova

Optional VTS, BSM, RCTA, and rear DVRUMW Toyota Motor has introduced updated version of its IMV range

Closer Look: 2021 Toyota Fortuner 2.8 VRZ - worth the RM 31k bump from 2.7 SRZ?

Parked alongside the 2021 Toyota Innova facelift at UMW Toyota Motors (UMWT) Shah Alam headquarters is

Spied: New 2020 Toyota Fortuner facelift caught in Thailand, to get Toyota RAV4 inspired design?

Images of the supposedly new 2020 Toyota Fortuner facelift has surfaced on the net ahead of its official

Attention Toyota and Lexus owners! UMW Toyota Motor announces recall for 13,500 unit of cars - possible fuel pump issue

UMW Toyota Motor (UMWT), distributor of Toyota and Lexus in Malaysia has issued a recall to replace the

2021 Toyota Fortuner facelift open for booking: 204 PS/500Nm, ADAS, from RM 173k

UMW Toyota Motor has announced that the order books for the 2021 Toyota Fortuner facelift are now open

Live Photos: New 2020 Toyota Fortuner at the Bangkok International Motor Show

The 2020 Toyota Fortuner facelift made its global debut back in June with more power and 1 brand new

View More

Toyota Fortuner’s A-TRC is like a gaming cheat code for off-road newbies

The Toyota Fortuner is essentially a 7-seater SUV version of the Toyota Hilux.

UMW Toyota Motor recalls 12,997 units of Hilux and Fortuner for brake booster replacement

UMW Toyota Motor (UMWT) has announced a recall involving 12,997 units of the Toyota Hilux and Toyota

The MG RX8 is a Toyota Fortuner rival that is NOT rotary-powered

relationCalled the RX8, it is a 7-seater SUV that directly competes with the likes of the Ford Everest and the Toyota

Filipinos getting Toyota Hilux GR and Fortuner GR in 2021, Malaysia when?

could see the launching of the Hilux GR and Fortuner GR in the third quarter of 2021.

From RM 167k, new 2.8L engine, 2021 Toyota Fortuner launched in Malaysia

UMW Toyota Motor (UMWT) has launched the 2021 Toyota Fortuner in Malaysia via an online event just a

New 2020 Toyota Fortuner facelift launching on Thursday, coming to Malaysia soon?

Alongside the new Toyota Hilux facelift, Toyota will be introducing the Fortuner facelift on the same

Your guide to choosing the perfect 2021 Toyota Fortuner variant in Malaysia

UMW Toyota Motor (UMWT) kicked off this year with a pair of new models, the 2021 Toyota Innova facelift

3-row seat champs, 2021 Toyota Fortuner and Innova facelift to launch on 2-Feb

UMW Toyota Motor (UMWT) has announced on Facebook that the 2021 Toyota Fortuner facelift and 2021 Toyota

Ratings: 2021 Toyota Fortuner 2.8 VRZ – Decent in most aspects, except cost

In this article, we’ll dive into the 2021 Toyota Fortuner 2.8 VRZ and scrutinise it through the

Watch: The new 2020 Toyota Fortuner in action

After the introduction of the new 2020 Toyota Fortuner facelift, Toyota Motors Thailand just dropped

2021 Toyota Fortuner facelift teased, Malaysia launch soon

Alongside the Toyota Innova facelift, UMW Toyota has also teased the arrival of the 2021 Toyota Fortuner

Pros and Cons: 2021 Toyota Fortuner 2.8 VRZ - Floods aren't a problem, but your stuff might be

(SUV) segment may be a bit diluted now with the advent of everyone making small crossovers, but the Toyota

Scare off lane-hoggers with this aggressive bodykit for your 2021 Toyota Fortuner!

The 2021 Toyota Fortuner has been unveiled in Malaysia and order books for it has since been opened.

2021 Toyota Innova facelift set for world debut on 15-Oct

hours ago, Toyota Indonesia had uploaded a teaser post on their Facebook page.

New 2020 Toyota Fortuner facelift - 204 PS and 500 Nm, Malaysia launch in 2021?

Toyota has officially launched the new facelifted Toyota Fortuner in Thailand.

New 2021 Toyota Fortuner facelift coming to Malaysia - 2.8L turbo engine from Hilux?

A facelift for the Malaysian Toyota Fortuner is due soon.

2020 Toyota Urban Cruiser looks like a mini Fortuner but with mild-hybrid tech

Earlier this month, we reported news that Toyota is set to launch another crossover called the Urban

Next-gen Toyota Fortuner to debut in 2022 - hybrid engines, better ADAS, new tech!

Current-gen, facelifted Fortuner pictured.The Toyota Fortuner is in its second generation, and last week

Toyota GR Hilux and GR Fortuner to arrive in 2023? V6, 271 PS, 650 Nm

The Toyota Gazoo Racing name has been making waves in the performance car market with the revival of

Review: 2021 Toyota Fortuner 2.8 VRZ in Malaysia; as good as the Land Cruiser?

Think of the 2021 Toyota Fortuner - here in top-spec 2.8 VRZ guise - and it naturally draws comparison

Toyota Fortuner April Used Car Offers

View More

toyota fortuner squeaking Related Car Images

toyota fortuner squeakingtoyota fortuner squeakingtoyota fortuner squeaking
View More

Toyota Fortuner Related Cars

Toyota Fortuner Competitor Cars

Toyota Fortuner Comparison

toyota fortuner squeaking Q&A Review

What was life like in 1973?

Thank you for the A2A! (Cue Paul Simon’s “My Little Town). I was living in a rural part of Eastern Oregon. The lumber town was a squeak over 2000 population. There were three lumber mills and a planing mill. Other industries included ranching, and whatever else kept people showing up for work. There were more bars than churches in the town, and there were a lot of churches, and every Wednesday was youth night at all of them. There was a school dance every quarter, including a Halloween dance that I finally got to go to when I was a senior and could drive myself. I was earning money working on week-ends as a motel maid so I got lots of teasing from the jocks at school. I was a junior in high school at the beginning of the year, and a senior at the end. Fortunately I’d gotten contact lens, had a sewing machine, my hair was thick and my waist was thin (instead of the reverse that it is now), and I firmly believed that I was going to graduate high school and leave town. I got my driver’s license and was able to drive my dad’s red Toyota Land Cruiser to my various school events, which included pep band and school plays and work. I didn’t go to my junior prom because I didn’t get asked. The guy I thought was going to ask me to Homecoming when I was a senior asked someone else. When I was a junior, I had a huge crush on my lab partner and I allowed his disinterest in me make me cry. Decades later I learned he was gay. When I was a senior, I had a huge crush on my next lab partner. We dated, but peer pressure from his buddies ended it. I cried again for months. I used the money I’d save all of my live ($84.63 cents) to pay for tuition and bus fare to go to a high school music summer camp at the University of Oregon in Eugene, which was about a five hour bus ride, one way. I knew when I stepped out of the taxi that that was where I would go to college. (My dad still felt that I should have saved the money for college.) Of course my dad’s dad died while I was there and I wasn’t home to go with my dad, so I didn’t get to go to the funeral, which was in Maryland. (The first time I leave home to have an adventure, which I paid for all by myself, and this happens….). The television sets in the cafeteria were all showing the Watergate hearings. Doonesbury was my favorite comic strip (still is). In the start of my senior year, I got a job at the local movie theater, and had friends that I hung out with and talk for hours about movies after work, and would go “cruise the gut” for hours after games. Good times. Comet Kohoutek was visible by the naked eye. It looked like an airplane contrail to the south in the clear twilight blue sky. That fall I saw four meteors streak by to the north in the evening sky—the first one’s I’d ever seen. Again, thanks, Jason. I appreciate your asking because now I can put this into my collection of recollections.

Are there any German cars that rival the reliability of a Toyota or Honda?

No there are no German cars that compare to Toyota or Honda reliability. In the 60’ s German cars built an iconic image of having tank like reliability. During this time period, German cars were more reliable, and considered to be built to higher quality standards than their global competitors like Jaguar, Volvo, Cadillac, Ford and even Toyota. This made the myth of German automotive reliability that persists strongly to this day. Because of this myth I only bought German Cars( BMW, MERCEDES, AUDI AND VW). My family on the other hand only bought Toyota’s. Well the brunt of it was that my German cars had more often, than my families Toyota’s, some type of engineering glitch. When I saw how many times I had to replace parts on my cars that the Toyota’s never replaced I began to get annoyed . The Volkswagen Golf V I had was a chronic disease. The electrics failed around 35.000 km and was a small fortune to replace. Had issues with the turbo that had to be replaced twice before it reached 120.000 km. And, don’t think I neglected it, I didn’t . I never turned the key and drove off, I waited a few seconds to get the system working , the same when I stopped, 30 seconds to let the lubrication settle in the turbo so that it would not overheat. Also timely checks at the dealer. The Mercedes and BMW I drove, as company cars, had vast majority of the items that needed replacing ,over the years, that weren't maintenance items: Sensors, servos, switches, etc. They were built where you could see the German brand had no worries about the amount of work necessary to repair them. This never happened with the Toyota’s ....NEVER. Now, don’t get me wrong, I'm convinced that German cars are very, very thoroughly engineered--the thought on detail is definitely there--however there are some outright stupid conclusions on a regular basis and you end up with parts that don't work well in the real world or over the long term. German cars handle and drive beautifully, and they feel more solid than Toyota or Honda’s . For example,, let's take rubber sealings, the German make it an art form the way they are fitted. This is why their cars are quieter when handled at high speeds. Toyota….. not near , not even by a mile, as good.Toyota’s rattle and shake, and feels like they’re falling apart at high speeds. Now, would I buy a German car over a Japanese car....”OH hell yeah!!!” . They ride very smooth , nothing squeaks or cracks and its rattles are very minimal. Their handling is magical and they look great ,and they hold their looks over time. Not the same can be said about Japanese cars that look and handle like UFO’s. They are ugly and their drive quality…well, it gets you from A to B😉

How is the Toyota 4Runner?

Yes, the 4Runner is extremely reliable - especially ones that have the world-famous 2UZ-FE 4.7-liter V-8 engine. I had the good fortune of buying a brand-new, Lunar Silver 4Runner Sport back in 2004 It has been my daily driver ever since, and I have never had a single problem with the vehicle in almost 200,000 miles of driving. However, I must admit that I am meticulous about having all scheduled maintenance performed according to the manufacturer’s recommendations (like oil changes, transmission fluid changes, cooling system flush and fill, new plugs at 100,000 miles, etc.). I had the timing belt, water pump, and front pulleys replaced at 100,000 miles per my mechanic’s recommendations. I always use Mobil 1 synthetic oil, and I hand wax it two or three times each year. The only other things I have done have been to replace tires three times, brakes twice, and the battery twice. I frequently drive my 4Runner through the Rocky Mountains in Colorado, and I take it on 1,500-mile cross-country trips once or twice each year. It is very comfortable on long trips, with a surprisingly-quiet and smooth-ride, and it doesn’t have any squeaks or rattles. My friends and co-workers often comment on how much they like my vehicle, and some have even offered to buy it when I am ready to sell - but since it’s been paid off since 2007 and doesn’t have anything wrong with it, I think they’re going to be waiting for a long time. The 4.0-liter V-6 in new 4Runners is also a very good engine, but it doesn’t have the power of the V-8. If you are thinking of buying a 4Runner, I highly recommend them. I also recommend checking out the Toyota 4Runner owners forum. It’s a great source of information. Here is the link: ,Toyota-4Runner.org

What are some disadvantages to owning a Tesla electric car?

The good, the bad, and the ugly. I’m a fairly recent proud owner of my Model S P100D, but I do a lot city traffic driving, as well as some 2.5k miles + return journeys. TLDR Model S: ,Expensive to buy, extremely cheap to own, under warranty, at least so far (~12 months). Amazing to drive, somewhat poor quality car in terms of luxury compared to other cars in its price range. Software is amazing, autopilot above any other car. Should you buy a Model S/P100D? Yes if you’re after a toy, otherwise buy a Model 3 instead, or a fleet of them. P100D is for adult children with more adrenaline rush than sense(yours truly). High spec Teslas simply aren’t worth the money, unless you’re a very very confident driver and you want to win every traffic light drag race. If you still want one but don’t care about performance, buy cheap,, even if you want more, benefit won’t scale, and you’ll still have a car faster than 98% of all other cars, sports cars included. 4.2 seconds in a Model 3 AWD is on par with a Mercedes AMG Sedan, a Bentley GT pre 2019, etc. Futuristic: ,The most amazing realisation when you own a Tesla is that electric will become standard. For now, it’s very expensive, because scaling up and doing R&D costs money. There are problems for sure, the charging network, the service industry, the speed of charge, the cost, and so on. But it’s so incredibly obvious electric cars are so vastly ahead as a mass market product, there’s simply no question where the world will be in 30 - 40 years. It won’t be long before petrol cars will be a very old memory, and something generations to come will only learn about from stories. A word of caution,: This review is written by a man child with more love of fast cars than sense, the very audience for the ,P ,models. A lot of it applies to all the Tesla range, but it’s a review coming from someone after easy to own sustainable performance, not an economically sane family sedan, where I honestly think the Tesla would come off a lot better. Collection day photo of my pride and joy. Good The way it drives It really doesn’t feel like anything else you’ve ever set foot in. The power delivery and the AWD system is insane in the best of ways. This car knows no weather, and does not care much for road conditions either, you can floor it all the way whenever you feel like it. It’s perfectly stable at all times, and it feels incredibly safe, plus you can accelerate out of harms way whenever you need to. Is it a true sports car? ,No, absolutely not,. It’s a big heavy family sedan, with Porsche 918 Spyder vibes only up to 70mph, not much going for it beyond that. But if you’re in a busy city it’s a dream, you have on tap the launch power of a £1m+ exclusive hyper car for run costs of a Toyota Prius. This is the essence of what’s insane about it, any other brand you go to you would need to drop very serious cash, multiples of a Tesla price, to get anywhere near the same drive train quality. Here’s my friend trying the P100D for the first time. The speedometer reads in miles, so that’s a 0 - ~105kmh. It feels like you’re in the Space Mountain in Disneyland every single time. If you skid in a Tesla, you’ll be the first, that’s how insane the power delivery/traction system is. It’s not fun in the controlled drifts way, it’s fun in the “holy craaaap” way. You get used to it after 1 - 2 months, but 0 - 60 in 2.28s seconds or whatever makes all other cars obsolete in city driving, and unlike sports cars, it doesn’t cost you a small monthly fortune to be naughty in a Tesla all the time. Quite literally, nothing, not even a Bugatti, can hold a candle to you in city traffic. Seriously: ,List of fastest production cars by acceleration - Wikipedia,. When the worlds most expensive Ferrari or insert name here creeps up in front of you at the traffic light, it’s amusing and entertaining. Nobody can ever overtake you from a standstill, and there’s no such thing as an yellow light anymore, which come in quite handy if you can use them responsibly. That kind of launch power in a petrol car is a major event, it means launch control, good grip, no wheel-spin, good weather, dry road, even road surface etc. In a Tesla it’s business as usual, all day every day, every time you floor it you’re flying, you don’t even think about it, it feels like you’re playing an unrealistic PC car game. Driving a Lambo like car through the city at that speed of flow is impossible, any car with anywhere near the performance to 60mph would be too low(close to the ground) and too compromised to compete, you’d have to cause very serious damage to the car to keep up with the Tesla. “Really? Tesla vs Lambo? Reality check please”,. I’ll let you, ,judge for yourself, courtesy of DragTimes, Model S P100D vs Aventador SV Launch Control. I’ve tried that competition in person, in my own SV. Without launch control, the SV has a very unimpressive throttle response, there’s almost 1.5 seconds of delay in between flooring it and it starting to move. The Tesla simply flies. Here’s a cuter sample, courtesy of a dear friend and his son. Run costs are near 0 It’s not cheap to buy, but after that life gets a whole lot easier, unlike other cars(especially performance ones), which generally require a continuous forking of cash for things every month. Without oil to replace, break pads and discs to worry about, anti-freeze and a lot of the petrol engine saga, there’s almost never a reason to open up your wallet again. Mine was a fairly expensive, 6 figure price tag, high spec P100D. Ever since? £300 on a tire + replacement because of a nail, nada on all else, and still drove 2000km with a nail in the tire before it was found. I live near a supercharger which helps tremendously. Tires will wear out because of the acceleration, but they already behave much much better than other cars I’ve owned, and 4 tires every 2 years is something I’m happy with. Servicing is run on a 0 profit model,. Maybe the most amazing and understated feature of being a Tesla customer is the way they don’t try to rip you off in a service. Owning other brands, at even higher price ranges, has meant a very off putting routine of every 3 weeks visiting lets say Mercedes Service, for this reason or the other, all at a very very heavy premium. They always take forever, cost a fortune, and don’t care for you one bit, except for selling you stupidly expensive monthly care packages that don’t actually end up covering for anything.. If you call Mercedes, you go through 5 answering machines, and you have this back and forth test of patience with their absolutely idiotic phone system. It’s not possible to call your service technician directly, they never have a replacement car, and when they do it’s not even supplied by Mercedes, but a third party company, etc. If you want to get things done fast, they tell you to come at 8AM, you turn up and you’re casually told service technicians are not in until 11AM, things like that. The best or nothing as they say, so you truly get the ,nothing ,because it’s cheaper for them to make it happen. If Mercedes is the most incompetent car brand of all time at post sales, Tesla is the very best there ever was. If you call them from a known phone number in their system, by the time someone picks up the phone, they will know who you are and what care you’re on about. Mobile technicians are deployed, and there’s never a talk of cost estimates, because ,warranty means warranty ,in Tesla, and that’s pretty amazing. I had a door mirror replaced post a minor incident, no one ever talked about dollars. Government likes you buying EVs(at least in the UK) The purchase terms of an EV are very friendly, and the Tesla staff has been extremely useful in pointing out the correct channels. A £5k government contribution, no congestion charge(otherwise, £11.50 per day), no fuel no matter how you drive, and barely any consumables(no engine oil, no break pad/disc wear due to regenerative breaking etc). Business owners choosing to purchase EVs are allowed to do so pre-tax, unlike all other types of cars, with a significantly decreased tax burden for benefits in kind, which will go to an even lower 2% in 2020. Leases are very competitive, so the conversation starts at half the APR your average dealer would begin talking to you. With ,New Inventory,, I have been offered an APR of <1%, which is a steal. There’s a lot of space There’s more trunk and frunk space than in almost any other car, and short of buying a semi-truck, you won’t get more load capacity buying from the competition. This is pretty cool if you have a family to carry around. I generally carry everything I need to carry, which my one laptop bag, in the frunk, so it doesn’t wobble around as I drive through the city like I’m auditioning for a role with McLaren’s F1 team. It’s really convenient, and you do feel the car has great light permeability, the sunroof is really fun, and the really big windscreen is pretty cool, there are barely any blind spots when driving, and it’s a great feeling of openness. The autopilot is incredible If you’ve never trusted your car to drive itself before, it takes some getting used to, but you’ll never go back. If you’re tired, drowsy, on your way back from work on a late night, it’s perfect. I am comparing it to one of my other cars, a Mercedes with Distronic technology, which will casually steer into adjacent lanes, not keep pace etc. Cruise control/distronic are highly useful on a motorway, urban use is a problem, though Mercedes explicitly warn you against using Distronic in the city. The Tesla is pretty spot on at all times, and I’ve done 2000 miles plus in a single journey on autopilot, taking over only for roadwork areas, where lane markings are confusing, and I’ve done it at 95mph/150kph, the car can be trusted. Hands off the steering allowed only up to 20 seconds, so for now it’s not fully autonomous, more of a “party trick”. If you ignore the car’s warnings to put your hands back on the steering, auto-steering will become unavailable for the rest of your current journey. If you drive at 150kph in autopilot and press the acceleration, auto-steering is also automatically disabled, so the car will penalise you for trying to be too naughty. Confusing lane markings, such as new lanes on old road, roadworks, etc, will nearly always confuse it, so watch out. Below is a video of me doing 150kph with the Tesla autopilot, intentionally driving at the max speed possible, on a completely empty road and perfect weather conditions. Great scenery too. Most of the interior is pawned from Mercedes The indicators and many elements of the steering column are borrowed from Daimler, because they are exactly the same as in my S class and I’m sure other Mercs. If you’re used to a Merc, you can jump straight into a Tesla, and your reflexes work instantly. The best part is that there’s no on/off in a Tesla, no button to press. You simply put it in drive mode and off you go. At the end you press the ,P, button at the end of your mode switch and done, no off button. That’s quite fun. , Bad The car feels really cheap In spite of its very generous price tag, the quality of everything you touch is on par with a car 1/4th of its price or less. Note, it’s a good looking car, and I don’t want to try and account for taste, but the interior looks like an entry level Ford or worse. Many people love the “minimalistic” approach, however they tend to be people who don’t have the experience of owning a Tesla or if they have a Tesla they’ve never owned another car of a similar price tag, so they cannot compare. Interior wise, it’s a 2.5 out 10 for the Tesla. It’s a little bit of an unfair comparison, as the price gap from a 75D to a P100D is mostly battery and tires, and they are not secretive about that in any way, but I still feel mass producing the interior could be done better, and in time I have no doubt it will. Over the years Tesla has always incrementally upgraded every detail about the car. This is about comparing a 6 figure priced car with other cars in a similar range. The consumption range is too dramatic. Being a wildfire traffic hopper can mean you have to charge every 2 days, up to 75%. It’s pretty incredible, but in Ludicrous+ the range calculator is another piece of decorative kit. The computer is simply pretty useless at adapting to individual driving habits, location, or recent consumption, instead of re-working your averages, it provides you with a false rolling instant value. E.g you’ve done 800Wh/mile until now, we’re still going to assume you are going to do 250Wh/mile until destination. That means in city traffic and power driving, you could get as little as 120 miles of range in total and Mr computer is largely useless at warning you in advance. The paintwork sucks, it’s really really crappy, and it gets dirty all the time, and it just looks cheap. It also costs £1000, which is insane, because it’s 100% not worth it. A paint job in a base spec Mercedes is another world apart quality wise. Same story for the rims and wheels, cheap stuff with cheap paint over it, sold in a very expensive wheel upgrade package. The car has out of the box LTE internet/connection, but it’s really poor, and as soon as you’re out of the home country, good luck. The number of times the GPS crapped out, or Spotify stopped working, too many to count, so it’s a completely unreliable connection. You can pay and add your own SIM card in the car, which improves life a lot. The steering wheel is way way too big and uncomfortable and nowhere nimble enough, that whole steering column could do with a massive upgrade. It makes it tiring for long drives, and manoeuvrability is terrible, the turning radius is only slightly smaller than the circumference of the Earth. The headlights are too powerful, to the point where other motorway users constantly flash you to warn you you’re on full beam, even when you’re really not. The car feels like its made of cardboard entirely, and the door feels like it weighs 500 grams, but not in a good way. No soft close, no nicety features, leather is very poor quality, no massage seats, no seat cooling, no proper seat settings(lumbar support etc). Cry me a river I know, but these are all common features in other cars of similar price. When you slam the door to close it, which you have to, it feels like you’re about to tear it in half. Other cars in this price range will always have soft close. The lights inside the car, both interior and the trunk/frunk are useless. I don’t know how they managed to cheap out on these, but it’s painfully annoying, dinner candles in the 15th century were much more powerful. There’s also no 12V socket in the trunk or frunk(seriously???). It’s completely missing on the nicety features you’d expect, like a decent set of air vents. Everything is cheap cheap cheap, and doesn’t really work at all in very hot weather, where you have to drive with the ol’ windows open technique. The cupholder system is a nightmare, and the storage space is pretty useless for a car of its acceleration. There’s nowhere to put stuff to prevent it from flying all over when you floor it, it’s very poorly thought through as a performance vehicle. If you don’t drive like you’re trying to beat Ayrton Senna theres plenty of space. The sound system is decent but could be better too, in spite of the Dolby Digital surround sound etc, it’s not on par even with the entry level sound systems in cars of similar price(S Class Coupe, Range Rover Autobiography, Aston Martins, Bentleys etc etc). The performance is inconsistent, after you floor it a few times and accelerate all the way to motorway speeds, the car will cut you back significantly to prevent battery overheating. This happens very very quickly. In a petrol car, I can be wild all day long on a track, in a Tesla I’d be out of juice in one lap. The front windscreen is great for visibility, not so great for direct sunlight. Fortunately not often a problem in the UK. You get massive sun glares or condensation from battery heat all the time. I don’t know how you make something this bad, a 20 year old Vauxhall(Opel) Astra does better.It’s physically very hard to see in front of you on a sunny day, and it’s a basic thing in any other car. Not in a Tesla. The windscreen wipers are extremely feeble, and consequentially when you drive at speed/wind, they look like they are about to fly off, and barely work. They are too thin and cheap, especially for the massive windscreen they have to deal with. The GPS is completely useless through a busy city, it has no knowledge of traffic whatsoever, constantly takes you down poor routes, and so on. It’s a decorative piece unless you’re driving long range. Top end Teslas are not as fun for petrolheads Having a Tesla is quite fun for the engineer inside you, and for the futuristic geek inside all of us, but the inner child is left with a bitter taste of disappointment. If you’re a real car fanatic/adrenaline junkie, you might want to skip buying a Tesla, for now, because it’s dtill a heavy sedan with a big turning radius, so not the thing you would take to the track. Kills at the drag strip though. The straight line speed is fun for the first month, but the truth is 6 figures on a car will never ever make any financial sense, unless you’re buying a big semi-truck and your name is DHL. It’s a straight up vanity purchase, no two ways about it, especially in the higher echelons of Tesla pricing, but it’s missing any kind of excitement whatsoever. Not really the biggest problem in the world, but if you buy a toy for the entertainment value and smiles per electrons, Tesla is probably not your top choice. It’s absolutely incredible for the city though, probably one of the best daily drivers out there, for any amount of money. The interior, the lack of sound, the poor interior lightning, and the various details remove the sense of occasion and excitement, no matter which model you buy. Other cars for the same money would either give you serene luxury you would enjoy every time(S Class, Audi A8, Porsche Panamera etc), or full on boy racer noise and performance, as well as great luxury(Mercedes C63S/E63S/S63 Coupe). It’s also dangerously close to the price of a barely used Lambo Huracan, McLaren 570S or a Ferrari 458, which are extremely fun cars to own. With a Lambo/McLaren/F Car, you know you spent the money at all times, and at all speeds, it just feels amazing and even going to the supermarket is an occasion, in a Tesla it’s too civilised, which makes buying a top end Tesla even more unjustifiable, since you don’t really need drag strip record times for the city. Longer journey? Double up the time Longer journeys take much longer, anything above 500 miles requires serious planning&math. If you’re a statistics nut like I am(life of the party I know), it’s pretty cool, and a bit scary. The consumption in a Tesla increases far more than in a petrol car depending on your driving. I’m comparing a P100D with the average performance petrol car, which is why the mpg figures are quite low versus the average car. Motorway cruising at 70mph, ideal weather conditions. Tesla,: 200 - 240Wh/km ,Sports Car,: 20mpg - 22mpg or 14L/100km. Motorway cruising at 100mph(Autobahn in Germany, ideal weather conditions. Tesla,: 400 - 450Wh/km ,Sports Car,: 16mpg - 17mpg or 17L/100km. If you’re doing that kind of long range you want to keep a good speed, but you simply can’t or you’ll miss your next charge. In a Tesla, you are constantly calculating and optimising. Do I drive faster because the battery charges faster in the initial phase, so it’s fine to end up at destination with less charge? Do I keep pace? Have I accounted for wind? Why am I doing 300Wh/km at the same speed as I was doing 250Wh/km earlier? Oh, 1% elevation, hmm. All part of the fun. Like in no other car, you get to feel first hand how changes in weather conditions, elevation/incline, road surface changes, affect “fuel economy”, because Tesla is kind enough to give you a live rolling chart. As a rule of thumb, you will lose 40 - 50% of the excess miles. E.g if your next supercharger is 200 miles away, I would charge for 300 miles, and hope to have 50 - 60 miles of range left at destination. Even at constant speed, the GPS estimates are way off. You will always arrive earlier than predicted, with less range left, even if you autopilot at constant speed all the way there. Realistically ,you will need to stop every 250 - 300 miles,, and spend 40 min - 1 hour each time. Supercharger coverage is still a problem, for now It’s absolutely amazing that you can drive so far and for free, but it’s not something you can take for granted just yet. For one, the European coverage for Tesla is pretty scarce. You can get from A to B for most of it, but not efficiently. It looks good on a map but compared to petrol stations it’s nothing, for now. You incur a significant number miles added to your journey, just so you can pass through superchargers. On a 700 mile journey in a petrol car, you might do 1000+ in a Tesla, not even accounting for the charge time. If you’re in France/Italy, you will pay additionally for every charge, as you’ll go in and out of the same motorway to access the chargers. It can be as much as 2 -3 times the toll charges in a normal car, if you do this very often it could be meaningful. Superchargers are rarely located in places normal gas pumps are, and have no service industry around them yet. That means you may or may not get a toilet at your next stop, which in long range mode can be fun. If you’re lucky, you end up near a shopping centre. This is in Orange, France. The GPS on the car will tell you what facilities await at your next stop, so you can in theory pick and choose, but in practice this can add huge mileage to your journey. Most Superchargers in France have turned out to be “in the middle of nowhere”, in the courtyard of some hotel etc etc. It’s a little bit weird stopping for an hour at 2AM in complete darkness in the middle of a field. Value for money Looking at the competition, say S Class, spending £75k for a base model is a whole other world from dropping £140k on an S63 AMG, or a used Maybach, completely different planet. Looking at a Maybach vs an S560 is a visible, obvious, world apart difference, no one would wonder where the £££ went. In a Tesla, it’s the same car with slightly more range and acceleration. I know this falls more in the “cry me a river” segment of the market, but equally, you expect something for your hard earned dollar or GBP, which Tesla somewhat fails to deliver on. They are very upfront about it, more money = more power and more battery, but it’s a whole lot of money “just for that”. The option list is both surprisingly short and expensive. A little more software/equipment, some autopilot fancy gear that’s not legal yet, and a bit more battery, for “just” twice the price of the base spec. As a normal sensible consumer, this is somewhat extreme. It’s certainly the cheapest “city focused Lamborghini” you can buy, but beyond that the pricing structure really makes no sense in terms of value for money, and I would probably struggle to justify spending the same again. The sensible thing is to buy a mid range Tesla and save half the price-tag, and still get everything except the acceleration. Not being able to floor it in a Lambo through the city isn’t exactly the mass market problem solving Elon had in mind, but ironically it’s kind of all you get in the P100D. Conclusion:, You’re paying for a power train, battery tech, and technology. You won’t get a fancy car, if that’s what you’re after don’t spend that kind of money on a Tesla just yet. Go half the price and get a Lexus hybrid instead. The car is really amazing in one way, a little boring in another. Overall the best piece of commuting/city gear you could ever have, though P100 models are ultimately an expensive toy. Love of Tesla: ,Having “talked it down” so much, I do feel the need to re-enforce the insane capability of this car is very addictive. Even if you’re fortunate enough to have driven crazy cars, yes it would get more feel, but you would not have more acceleration and torque, and the lack of sound is replaced by the consistent “holy sh******t” launch power at every single traffic light. Update(after 12 months of owning it): ,The honeymoon phase is now long over. The performance is still there, the run cost is still brilliant, but Tesla as a company is sometimes showing some fairly ugly colours. Tires lasted quite well, got a comfortable few mm of thread depth left. If you knew how I drive, in Ludicrous Plus constantly, that’s an insanely impressive thing, nearly 20k miles later. Loss in traction is noticeable, and I’m certainly way more careful in the wet than I was on fresh tires. At some point the £1k replacement cost will be unavoidable, in the next few months. Range is a big lie. 10 - 15% lost to software updates,, restricting max charges further and further. I haven’t seen a number starting with 300 since the day I took delivery of the car. As detailed further above, do not trust the range of the car. Charging speed has decreased massively,. It used to be you would drive to the supercharger with 10% - 15% and it would bump straight up to around 114kw - 117kw pretty much straight away, and stay there till the battery was nearly 80% when you could go home. No longer, the car now only goes to 85, then slowly to 95 and so on. It may be a software update to preserve battery life, however you have ,less range and longer charges,. No yellow cornering on the screen which lots of other people report, but it’s definitely a pain in the a**, it randomly resets itself, as you drive, or as you follow the sat nav, for no apparent reason. Music cut offs etc for about 30 seconds while the screen reboots for no apparent reason. Suspension isn’t proving very reliable. 1 year in and squeaks and creaks from everyone single corner possible. Car went to service and got cleaned by Tesla engineers under warranty, all back to normal now, no squeaks and creaks. HEPA filter had to be replaced after 14 months, around £186 inclusive of VAT from Tesla. Not terrible and done same day, however it’s a consumable and not under warranty. Software updates coming constantly have actually made the car a lot worse. Now it barely ever reads speed limits properly. While the AP is fully trustworthy, it won’t change speed limits, so you have to pay attention a lot more or you might get a speeding ticket and those lovely points on your license. Completely new design delivered around 5 months ago, and I hate it with a passion. They’ve made it more Model 3 like, but it’s absolutely stupid, various things on the touch screen overlap, as if it wasn’t hard enough already to touch things accurately while driving. The Dolby Digital surround system constantly gets deactivated as an option for no reason whatsoever, which drives me crazy, and nothing I do seems to affect that at all, I have to remember to re-enable it every time I get in the car, which is not great for an audiophile such as myself, the sound system is pretty terrible anyway even if you go for the high end option, at least compared with proper in car audio systems. Would I buy one again? ,The answer is ,absolutely not,, I got carried away by very low interest and tax benefits, and Ludicrous acceleration, but the honest to god answer is that I simply don’t enjoy driving it at all, it’s far too basic, too plastic and too crappy for the enormous price tag. I don’t dislike the car, but similarly I never look forward to drive it, and all I keep thinking is I could’ve bought x y z make and model instead. It’s coming from a place where I am fortunate that run cost isn’t my number one concern, but it’s been the only reason why I kept it, it’s very hard to say no to driving around for an extremely small cost, again when considering the performance. Like I said above, buying it is pricey, after you pay close to nothing beyond insurance. However, for the buy price of the car, I personally want a lot more. Value retention, Luxury, exclusivity, convenience, and a feeling of being able to drive it endlessly, like an S class, where after 15 hours of driving you don’t get that “sticky” feel of having been in a car for that long, you feel quite good. None of this come with a Tesla, and 99% of Tesla owners are extremely fanatic, but the reality is the majority of them don’t come from a high vantage point, and it’s by far the most expensive car they ever bought. Yes it may be better than a Honda Accord, but for many times the price tag isn’t that implied? The worst Tesla experience so far After a bump traffic so light that not even the paintwork on the car is damaged, the steering felt really funny, so naturally I pulled over into a side road, and phoned my beloved highly competent Tesla assistance. They quite literally told me to f off, there’s no other way to put it nicely. They said it’s not their problem, that it wouldn’t be possible to tow it to a Tesla depot(even if I offered to pay for this separately), and that ,the car is no longer safe to drive,. Insult to injury and acid pour on it in the span of a 10 second conversation. I had the extreme luck this happened 2 miles from home, where it was manageable, had it been 3AM in the middle of nowhere, the messiah of all car companies would’ve had me stranded useless in the middle of nowhere, no their problem of course, the nearly 150k they billed me for the car just a few months earlier had long been forgotten from memory. Thanks to good friends, I made my way back home, and the next day after insurance told me they are happy to help/cover the costs, but the car should go to a Tesla garage since no one else can repair a Tesla, low and behold, it was entirely possible to pay and have the car towed. What in the actual f*ck? A very nice Joe shoes up 3 hours later with a tow truck, and while on the phone with his boss/colleague, he politely asks me to dictate my credit card details so he could further dictate them on the phone. I thought he was joking, but no, he was dead serious. I told him no way josay, take cash or no deal. One cash machine trip later, the saga ends, the car is loaded on the tow truck and off it goes. Or so I thought. The wonderful people at Tesla politely informed a ,new steering rack is required,, post my 2mph barely any paintwork damage hit, for the great price of nearly £4000 inclusive of VAT. How wonderful, the steering rack mechanism can be completely destroyed by softly blowing air towards it, the build quality is insanely poor, more so than any other car I have ever owned, including a 20 year Vauxhall Astra I drove for a long time, with 200k miles on it and no problems. The truth? ,I’m seriously hoping this was a bad assistant on the other end of the phone, because this has felt like a slap in the face, which after the latest massive price drop adds a little bit of insult to injury. I’ve got a car worth a lot less than what I anticipated it would be worth, and a service quality that seems to fluctuate a lot based on who you get on the phone.

  • What is the Front/Rear Side Airbags of Toyota Fortuner?

    Here are the Front/Rear Side Airbags and variants of Toyota Fortuner:

    Variants2018 Toyota Fortuner 2.4 VRZ AT 4x22018 Toyota Fortuner 2.4 VRZ AT 4x42018 Toyota Fortuner 2.7 SRZ AT 4x4
    Front/Rear Side AirbagsY/NY/NY/N
  • Does Toyota Fortuner has Airbag Disable Function?

    Yes, Toyota Fortuner has Airbag Disable Function, which are: 2018 Toyota Fortuner 2.4 AT 4x4, 2018 Toyota Fortuner 2.4 AT 4x4 (IMP), 2018 Toyota Fortuner 2.4 VRZ AT 4x2, 2018 Toyota Fortuner 2.4 VRZ AT 4x4, 2018 Toyota Fortuner 2.7 SRZ AT 4x4.

  • What is the Screen of Toyota Fortuner?

    Here are the Screen and variants of Toyota Fortuner:

    Variants2018 Toyota Fortuner 2.4 VRZ AT 4x22018 Toyota Fortuner 2.4 VRZ AT 4x42018 Toyota Fortuner 2.7 SRZ AT 4x4
    ScreenTouchscreenTouchscreenTouchscreen
HOME