Comments by "Harry Mills" (@harrymills2770) on "Velocity" channel.

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  3.  @YungSteambuns  I think the 4.0-liter motor has plenty of power for the weight of the vehicle, already. The lift kit and oversized tires look pretty cool, but I don't think the difference in performance is enough to justify putting more strain on the engine and drive train than the Toyota engineers designed it for. I've got nephews who are/were into that stuff, and they spent a FORTUNE on trucks that they were so proud of they just HAD to show off. Drag races in a Dodge Mega-Cab that SHOULD have lasted a lifetime, but burned up inside of 6 months. You do all those mods, so of course you want to TEST them. The Amtal Rule states that you do not truly know the limits of something until you test it to destruction, and that's exactly what happens. I suppose if you were in rock-climbing contests on the regular, then by all means, modify to the extreme. But the Tacoma, as is, used as designed, and well-maintained, will last you a lifetime. I love the idea that Toyota's getting back into the COMPACT pickup market in this way. The Tacoma is a mid-sized truck. My favorite generation of the Toyota pickup is the late '90s, early 2000s. That 3.4-liter pickup was pretty much the pinnacle of size and power. I've got a '93, with the 3.0-L V6. I also have a 2012 Tacoma. So I missed that generation of trucks. The ONLY flaw in the 3.4-liter V6 was it didn't get great gas mileage. A 4-cylinder hybrid is going to get high 30s mpg, maybe low 40s mpg. Put the same size gas tank as the older vehicles, and you can bump the RANGE of the vehicle far beyond a pure gas-powered vehicle. My Tacoma gets around 20 mpg. If I could boost that up over 30, my current range of about 400 miles would rise to 600 miles on one tank. That's phenomenal.
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