Before 1979, If You Wanted a 4WD Toyota truck you had to build it yourself. Then Toyota sent 4WD trucks to these shores in 1979 and 4Runners followed in 1984. These rugged vehicles have made daily drivers, weekend warriors, and hard-core trail rigs for numerous wheelers. Patterned after the sturdy construction of the venerable Land Cruiser line, the early trucks were built on a fully boxed ladder frame.
In the '80s, trail rigs were largely composed of domestic fair. When you did find a Toyota truck out on the trail it was often smothered amongst a variety of Jeeps, Broncos, and Scouts.
But in time, all things change and those trucks and 4Runners came into their own and developed a modern prowess that continues today on trails everywhere. The factory suspension and body configurations have changed over the last 30 years, but with the help of a lot of innovative wheelers and some dedicated manufacturers, great changes have been made to suspensions, drivetrains, body mod styles, and off-road protection.
These days you'll find all manner of Toyota trucks, 4Runners, and pieces thereof out playing. Builders have diced and spliced their rigs to suit their trail needs, be it weekend crawling or an expedition-style camping vehicle. There are early-model stockers to full custom buggies sporting the skins or the guts from some Toy lineage. We've come a long way since we first saw Toyota 4WD trucks nearly 30 years ago. Plenty of those early trucks are still around and kicking, supplemented with the newer breed. We're betting the innovation continues.
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The earliest adopters of the Toyota truck often found themselves as lone Toys out on trail
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A typical mid-'80s Toy might sport a rough-riding 3-inch lift kit and 33-inch tires. Gear
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Those who thought the Toyota four-cylinder motors didn't have enough power could move up t
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In 1986, Toyota took away the much-loved front solid axle and replaced it with independent
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In the mid '90s a few guys started to take up the torch and convert their IFS trucks to a
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Crafty owners sourced longer packs from the local junkyard and combined them with relocate
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With lower axle gearsets and lockers came the ability to run larger tires, maintain a dece
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Owners that wheeled hard trails soon found a scary weak point in the steering linkage. The
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One trail advantage the Toyotas have is with breakover angle. With the transfer case on th
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Upgrades let Toy owners push their rigs onto tougher trails. Along with the aftermarket Bi
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The full Toyota beds were great for hauling camping gear and home-improvement supplies, bu
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One downside of driving a full-bodied vehicle on technical trails can be the lack of visib
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With the popularity of solid axle swaps (SAS), plenty of second-generation 4Runners became
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With the bigger rocks nipping at the expanses of sheetmetal and beds getting beaten, some
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With the gain in popularity of IFS swaps to solid axles, builders tried other ways to incr
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Around 2001, a few guys started dabbling with Toy truggies which usually consisted of a re
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The tubular Formula Toy debuted in 2003 and is part of a spec class rockcrawling series. T
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Owners are also churning out some cool hard-core Tacomas. Advancements have been made to i