Sponsored

Scooby

Member
First Name
Rob
Joined
Sep 28, 2024
Threads
2
Messages
15
Reaction score
6
Location
United States
Vehicle(s)
2024 Tacoma
Guys, I’m not saying this new TSB list isn’t real. The only reason why I was asking if it was posted by Toyota to the public is because I’m going to contact my dealer tomorrow. If they say they haven’t heard of the list, I wanted to be able to show them the list from a Toyota publication so they don’t just tell me not to worry about it and not do anything about it. I’ll let you guys know what the dealer says tomorrow.
 

OlafTheNork

Active member
First Name
Frank
Joined
Jun 23, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
36
Reaction score
18
Location
Indiana
Vehicle(s)
2024 Tacoma Pro
IMO, "the diagnosis is in the known TSB VIN# range(s). Also IMO, within about another 3 months they'll probably issue a recall. I'm sure they are realizing the extent of the problem and are determining recall parameters. However, knowing what they know for the involved VIN ranges, they should issue a recall now instead of forcing customers of these expensive trucks to wait for a failure, especially if the event/codes are thrown while out of town or in the wilderness and the vehicle can't be driven. Then expand the recall when new VIN # ranges become known as just happened.

Else there will be a class action lawsuit. Time to turn up the heat on them, likely through the dealers. I have a Pro hybrid that is VIN # involved. I'm thinking about what to do and might send a lemon law or related certified letter to the dealer/Toyota (use up one of the three fix attempts and/or put them formally on notice) to get this fixed now/pre-emptively else they can pay for a tow out of the Stanislaus National Forest and all the attendant rental car, motel and finance costs.

Ford went through the same process in 2018 with their Ford Focus RS models where for a large VIN # range the factory put Mustang head gaskets on Focus RS engines. They were case-by-case at the beginning then went full-recall about 3 months later (after we made a big stink). Ford made it right and did a decent job swapping out the head gaskets (would have preferred a new engine). Somehow I think Toyota will trip over it's own hubris and screw up the process as they are now doing.
 

OlafTheNork

Active member
First Name
Frank
Joined
Jun 23, 2024
Threads
0
Messages
36
Reaction score
18
Location
Indiana
Vehicle(s)
2024 Tacoma Pro
I wish we didn't have to go through all this. Especially with the hybrid guts needing to be replaced as well as the transmission and torque converter. Sounds like they'll need to extend the warranty on the whole vehicle, too because so many other parts are impacted. Yikes.

And...we won't talk about the decline in the market value/saleability of the vehicle for an involved, covered VIN # while all this goes on. They better get their act together, and quickly. Sounds like I better write that letter, given what I/we know, so they can pay my towing, rental car and out of town motel costs, else they can claim "I knew the risk" and shouldn't have driven the vehicle "off road" and deny a claim for those other costs.
 

TacoFreak

Well-known member
First Name
James
Joined
May 23, 2024
Threads
2
Messages
1,153
Reaction score
1,198
Location
Crozet, Virginia
Vehicle(s)
2024 Tacoma TRD Pro
@OlafTheNork It can't hurt to contact Toyota and make your POV known. The more aware they are of how we perceive what is happening, the more responsive they may become. But I doubt that our feelings will be the main driver of how they proceed. I plan to contact my dealer to learn if they will provide a loaner truck to drive and what towing services I can expect if my transmission fails. As an individual consumer I really don't think Toyota cares all that much about me, but they no doubt care a lot about the aggregate perception of the reliability of their products.

Toyota is a huge company and their decision will be based on how accurately they can determine which trucks will fail. Right now we just have the ranges that Toyota knows are suspect. I think that a recall will depend on them determining ranges of VINs that are likely to fail and then recalling all of them. AFAIK that is the trajectory that the Tundra engine recall took and it was a long time before it got to a massive recall.

I know that puts us in a bad place, with new trucks which we now know can't be completely trusted. I hope that over time Toyota comes to a better understanding of which trucks need to have their transmissions replaced and which ones might be fine.

I don't agree that the hybrid drivetrains are a more complex repair however. The only component of the complex hybrid system involved is a simple electric motor, sandwiched between the torque converter and the transmission. So changing out that component is really no more involved that doing that to a non-hybrid.

As the affected VINs increase though a lot of us lose the perception that our trucks can be counted on. Most of us bought Toyotas because we thought that we could count on thousands of miles of reliable transportation. To learn that our new and expensive trucks can not be fully trusted takes away some of our trust, and that is a loss to both Toyota and to their customers.
 
Last edited:

Sponsored

TacoFreak

Well-known member
First Name
James
Joined
May 23, 2024
Threads
2
Messages
1,153
Reaction score
1,198
Location
Crozet, Virginia
Vehicle(s)
2024 Tacoma TRD Pro
Guys, I’m not saying this new TSB list isn’t real. The only reason why I was asking if it was posted by Toyota to the public is because I’m going to contact my dealer tomorrow. If they say they haven’t heard of the list, I wanted to be able to show them the list from a Toyota publication so they don’t just tell me not to worry about it and not do anything about it. I’ll let you guys know what the dealer says tomorrow.
My 2011 Tundra was covered by bed rust TSB and I learned how their system works by going through that. I showed the service manager a printout of the TSB but he had no interest in it. He said that he agreed that my truck should fall under the TSB, but that until he could connect my VIN to a specific range in the TSB there was nothing he could do. He searched their system for 5-10 minutes before he could match my VIN to the TSB and after that it was smooth sailing. There was never any attempt to deny that the TSB was real, but Toyota had to match my VIN for it to mean anything.

The catch for us is that until one of the shift solenoids throws one of those codes they are not going to do anything at all. If we get some codes or if Toyota expands the TSB to a recall we will be set. But until that happens we are simply stuck as far as I can tell.
 

MT-Taco

Well-known member
First Name
Allen
Joined
May 22, 2023
Threads
13
Messages
484
Reaction score
465
Location
Montana
Vehicle(s)
2013 Tundra, 2022 Corolla Hybrid, 2022 RAV4 XSE
Unfortunately, Toyota is probably playing a numbers game? If there’s a few hundred failures TSB? Thousands recall? And only Toyota knows the numbers.
 

TacoFreak

Well-known member
First Name
James
Joined
May 23, 2024
Threads
2
Messages
1,153
Reaction score
1,198
Location
Crozet, Virginia
Vehicle(s)
2024 Tacoma TRD Pro
Unfortunately, Toyota is probably playing a numbers game? If there’s a few hundred failures TSB? Thousands recall? And only Toyota knows the numbers.
That is all true. As long as the number of failures is reasonably small Toyota will just address this with the TSB. I think it would take a lot of failures for them to do a recall.

It took a class action lawsuit to get GM to recall all of their bad transmissions, and I think it affected over 800k vehicles. So they dragged that out for years and only did the recall when a judge ordered it.
 
OP
OP
Gfenza89

Gfenza89

Well-known member
First Name
Gary
Joined
Jan 19, 2023
Threads
17
Messages
513
Reaction score
440
Location
Pennsylvania
Vehicle(s)
2022 tacoma sr5
That is all true. As long as the number of failures is reasonably small Toyota will just address this with the TSB. I think it would take a lot of failures for them to do a recall.

It took a class action lawsuit to get GM to recall all of their bad transmissions, and I think it affected over 800k vehicles. So they dragged that out for years and only did the recall when a judge ordered it.
Guy posted on tacomaworld that he had his transmission and torque converter replaced and it didn’t fix the rough shifts or hard engagement into drive, reverse, etc. now that’s concerning
 

TacoFreak

Well-known member
First Name
James
Joined
May 23, 2024
Threads
2
Messages
1,153
Reaction score
1,198
Location
Crozet, Virginia
Vehicle(s)
2024 Tacoma TRD Pro
Guy posted on tacomaworld that he had his transmission and torque converter replaced and it didn’t fix the rough shifts or hard engagement into drive, reverse, etc. now that’s concerning
Yeah - definitely concerning but it does not make much sense unless it is a transmission control module problem. I would think Toyota would have figured that out already, but I could be wrong.

Your truck is the strange one to me, with crappy shifts but no codes. I will be interested to hear what the dealer has to say when you take it in.
 

Sponsored
OP
OP
Gfenza89

Gfenza89

Well-known member
First Name
Gary
Joined
Jan 19, 2023
Threads
17
Messages
513
Reaction score
440
Location
Pennsylvania
Vehicle(s)
2022 tacoma sr5
Yeah - definitely concerning but it does not make much sense unless it is a transmission control module problem. I would think Toyota would have figured that out already, but I could be wrong.

Your truck is the strange one to me, with crappy shifts but no codes. I will be interested to hear what the dealer has to say when you take it in.
Yeah we’ll see lol.
 

maxx075

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 24, 2024
Threads
4
Messages
392
Reaction score
414
Location
UT
Vehicle(s)
2024 TRD Off Road
I wasn't sure if it was a question or a statement from a man of few words. lol
He wants someone to tell him if his VIN is in the range. That's what a ton of people were doing when it first came out.

The internet has enabled the lazy to have their answers spoonfed to them.
Sponsored

 
 



Top