You have to read back a page or 2.
You have to read back a page or 2.
discussion was our low hanging radiators in the 3rd gens.
fact remains, we had many more problems with our 90 4runners radiator than i have had on my 98. we were constantly repairing pinholes in it. and we replaced it at least once in the 9 years we owned it.
in the 3 years and 20k miles ive put on my 4runner, ive yet to have a single issue with the radiator. at 165k, its still factory too. i just seen no reason putting money down on something that isnt a known weak spot. do they fail? of course, but not enough to warrant swapping it out with an expensive all copper or aluminum unit.
2005 Lexus LX470 - Stock for now...
1998 Toyota 4Runner SR5 V6 4x4 + a bunch of goodies. Lifted, Locked, Illuminated and Armored. Winner,"Best Offroad Truck" - 2010 Pismo Jamboree. It's been upside down and still drives me to work.
I realize that the discussion was regarding the low radiators, but the radiator in question failed on top, not on the bottom from getting smacked. Hence, why I was wondering why the two were related or how it somehow proved his point.
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