toyota hi lux MK3 the next classic or just a work truck

toyota hi lux MK3 the next classic or just a work truck

Author
Discussion

leginigel

Original Poster:

428 posts

191 months

Tuesday 17th May 2016
quotequote all
Just got this on the road

leginigel

Original Poster:

428 posts

191 months

Tuesday 17th May 2016
quotequote all
Now looks like this Is it a classic or just a old truck ?

KevinCamaroSS

12,287 posts

287 months

Tuesday 17th May 2016
quotequote all
It's just an old truck, there are thousands of pick ups out there.

AdamIndy

1,661 posts

111 months

Tuesday 17th May 2016
quotequote all
An old truck it may be but they are great. We had a petrol one at work that just would not die! Doughnuts in the snow, towing lorries etc. Awesome bit of machinery and never gave a seconds bother until the brake master cylinder gave up the ghost.

Not sure on the values these days but when we sold ours, prices were mental! It was a Cat c, not very tidy and we got £2500 for it. "Upgraded" to a later diesel now(D4D) and it's nowhere near as good. Still good, just not in the same league as our old wreck!

leginigel

Original Poster:

428 posts

191 months

Tuesday 17th May 2016
quotequote all
A lot of light commercial's are becoming very popular at show's,only time will tell.

KevinCamaroSS

12,287 posts

287 months

Wednesday 18th May 2016
quotequote all
Indeed they are popular, I owned a Hilux from new for just over 12 months, then somebody else decided they wanted it....... This was 15 years ago when I lived in Hungary.

powerstroke

10,283 posts

167 months

Thursday 19th May 2016
quotequote all
leginigel said:
Just got this on the road
Nice , yes a classic there will never be anything as well made or simple to work on
these were the last of the solid axle hiluxes

powerstroke

10,283 posts

167 months

Thursday 19th May 2016
quotequote all
leginigel said:
Just got this on the road
Nice , yes a classic there will never be anything as well made or simple to work on
these were the last of the solid axle hiluxes

vanordinaire

3,701 posts

169 months

Thursday 19th May 2016
quotequote all
The strange economics of the UK secondhand car market means that most modern cars now reach a point where their value drops below that of replacement of some major component such as a cat, egr valve, ecu, electronic handbrake, or even a set of tyres and at that point, most cars are scrapped the first time something major goes wrong and don't ever reach the point where age and rarity starts to increase the value again to a point that it is worth repairing them.

There are a few situations where this is avoided:
1)Where the car is 'special' and rare enough to always have a value.
2)Where the car is tough enough not to require any major expenditure during the 'low value' phase.
3)Where the car has an intrinsic value due to it's ongoing functionality that won't drop below a certain level.
4)Where the car is generally owned by the type of owner who has different economic values from the norm and will never throw anything away.
5)Where the car inspires an emotional attachment which overcomes common sense.

Your Hilux ticks several of these boxes so yes, it will probably become a classic. You've possibly inspired me to spend a bit on my old pickup to get keep it going a few years more and hopefully get over that economic hump that may or may not kill it off.

300bhp/ton

41,030 posts

197 months

Thursday 19th May 2016
quotequote all
I think it will be a classic. But is probably a little too recent currently. Another 10 years or so and yes.

anonymous-user

61 months

Thursday 19th May 2016
quotequote all
Nice truck, always wanted one of those!

Stig

11,822 posts

291 months

Thursday 19th May 2016
quotequote all
I have one! It used to belong to my Dad (RIP). Recently stumbled across it at a local 4x4 specialist, so immediately bought it back and gave it a good dose of TLC. Brilliant, brilliant things.

Before...



During...


After





Mechanicals were all fine. Just a brake refurb and replaced plunger and contacts in starter motor (common problem). Oh, and got the classic LCD clock working again. I also replaced the aftermarket stereo with an original AM/FM radio smile

I'll never part with it.



Edited by Stig on Thursday 19th May 18:04

leginigel

Original Poster:

428 posts

191 months

Sunday 22nd May 2016
quotequote all
Mine with 170 thou only needed a brake refurb and prop uj replacement to go though the mot the rest was body work.I purchased this has it was one owner for new and from the same dealer and colour has I purchased when taking my now wife on our first date.

leginigel

Original Poster:

428 posts

191 months

Sunday 22nd May 2016
quotequote all
That's in nice condition Stig,do you use it.I live about 5 miles from my yard and love going across county,I pick up logs for my log burner and go down the café but after a new 4x4 it a bit hard to park and even harder on my back,just about right for a classic !!!!

Stig

11,822 posts

291 months

Tuesday 24th May 2016
quotequote all
leginigel said:
That's in nice condition Stig,do you use it.I live about 5 miles from my yard and love going across county,I pick up logs for my log burner and go down the café but after a new 4x4 it a bit hard to park and even harder on my back,just about right for a classic !!!!
I do indeed. Trip runs, picking up building materials - the usual workhorse stuff really, but it's relatively low miles and hasn't had a massively hard life so far hence the condition.

Keeping it that way is more of a challenge though smile

abbotsmike

1,033 posts

152 months

Tuesday 24th May 2016
quotequote all
vanordinaire said:
The strange economics of the UK secondhand car market means that most modern cars now reach a point where their value drops below that of replacement of some major component such as a cat, egr valve, ecu, electronic handbrake, or even a set of tyres and at that point, most cars are scrapped the first time something major goes wrong and don't ever reach the point where age and rarity starts to increase the value again to a point that it is worth repairing them.

There are a few situations where this is avoided:
1)Where the car is 'special' and rare enough to always have a value.
2)Where the car is tough enough not to require any major expenditure during the 'low value' phase.
3)Where the car has an intrinsic value due to it's ongoing functionality that won't drop below a certain level.
4)Where the car is generally owned by the type of owner who has different economic values from the norm and will never throw anything away.
5)Where the car inspires an emotional attachment which overcomes common sense.

Your Hilux ticks several of these boxes so yes, it will probably become a classic. You've possibly inspired me to spend a bit on my old pickup to get keep it going a few years more and hopefully get over that economic hump that may or may not kill it off.
Ref: Land Rover Defender.

Bit crap, but does a job, does it well and gets under your skin in a way that makes you never want to not have one.

leginigel

Original Poster:

428 posts

191 months

Thursday 26th May 2016
quotequote all
When any talks 4x4s the land rover always has to come up why ! Forget the origin question and change to are Land rover classic YES and here's mine

leginigel

Original Poster:

428 posts

191 months

Thursday 26th May 2016
quotequote all
Is this better than a Hilux? Got to be more fun.