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A mouse got itself in behind the timing cover on my dad's Tundra. The mouse got et, the engine jumped time. Somehow the valves were OK. New belt and a bit of gore removal and it was back to normal.
Change the lower ball joints, timing belt and associated parts and it\u2019ll run for years. The 3.4 engines are tanks, really hard to kill and you\u2019ll easily find ones that are hitting 500k+
XV20 Camrys never die. My 97 is at 238k, recently just did spark plugs and wires, did valve cover gasket and water pump/timing belt at like 200k. Running strong and smooth. Regular maintenance on these cars is easy and cheaper than a car note.
it's usually the plan with all my cars until repairs become more expensive than payments. our last car was an 2006 vw jetta tdi. sold it a few years ago (18 years old). it was still running fine-ish but a lot of things were coming up. timing belt and water pump, suspension overhaul, wheel bearings, brakes and caliper rebuild, and it was getting quite a bit of rust all around. it would have lasted and gone for 5+ more years but with 2 young kids getting into sports and stuff and the winter weather we are getting in our new home, it was a smart move to get a truck. with the aluminum body and ease of getting parts for the truck for maintenance as well as the f150 and coyote community, keeping the truck running for a long time should be easy.
What I like about our Hilux is after 200k kms, is timing belt lang napalitan. The durability is impeccable.
This was the most frustrating repair I've ever done. I've done plenty of timing belt/chain jobs before but this one sucked.
You can't tell if the timing marks are lined up, the belt doesn't have marks on it and no where on line tells you how many belt teeth there should be from one mark to the others to check your work. I buttoned it up and was off a tooth on the driver's side, I could have set the truck on fire. It worked fine after I did the job a second time.
The timing belt on the 4.7 engine needs changing every 100k, which is stupid.
I think this is what has happened to a 91 Soarer I rescued from a field. Sounded WEIRD trying to start. Went to check plug leads and thats where I saw the chewed up and snapped timing belt.
Bare in mind that this car uses a "wet belt" timing belt, where the timing belt runs inside the engine within the oil. This means that unless oil changes are carried out frequently, small parts of the belt break off and clock up the oil pickups, starving the engine and killing it.
Regardless of servicing etc, that wet belt is still deteriorating as it is soaked in the hot engine oil.
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In March 2026 on PartReview, timing belt OEM Toyota were overall better than OEM FORD.
In March 2026 on PartReview, timing belt OEM Toyota were overall more popular than OEM FORD.
By vote balance, timing belt OEM Toyota surpassed OEM FORD:
By number of reviews, timing belt OEM Toyota surpassed OEM FORD:
In March 2026, according to PartReview, timing belt OEM Toyota and OEM FORD have not taken top places in car-specific ratings. You can help by adding your review about these manufacturers.
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For example, comparisons of timing belt OEM Toyota with: Gates, AISIN, OEM Volkswagen, OEM Honda, Continental, Mitsuboshi, Contitech, OEM Subaru, DAYCO, OEM Volvo.
Also available: comparisons of timing belt OEM FORD with: Gates, AISIN, OEM Volkswagen, OEM Honda, Continental, Mitsuboshi, Contitech, OEM Subaru, DAYCO, OEM Volvo.
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