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Toyota 4Runner Review

By William C Montgomery
June 15, 2007 -

Research / Buy This Car

4runner-camp.jpgIn 2002, I embarked on a week-long trek across the High Uinta Mountains. On our first day out, I aggravated an old knee injury. So we borrowed a six-year-old all wheel-drive 4Runner and resumed our backcountry adventure by wheel. The 4Runner was ideal: rugged, reliable, capable and comfortable. Of course, Toyota didn’t get to be the world’s largest automobile manufacturer by leaving well enough alone…

In ’02, we flipped our mirrors back and threaded our way through narrowly spaced aspen trees to a lake at the bottom of a steep ravine. Skinned tree bark bore evidence that previous adventurers had attempted our road in wider vehicles.

img_0133.jpgToyota’s ’03 revamp of the 4Runner added significant dimensionality to its formerly svelte figure. For the fourth gen 4Runner, the company based the vehicle on the plump Land Cruiser Prado 120. The 4Runner is now six inches longer and 4.3 inches wider than afore. That might not seem like much on-road, but off-road, well, let’s just say small is beautiful. Speaking of which…

In ‘06, the 4Runner underwent cosmetic surgery. The procedure pumped fresh collagen into the SUV’s trapezoidal grille and fender flairs. The nip/tuck also tightened the fog lights into round lenses and implanted projector-beam headlights and LED taillights. The Sports Edition continues to sport a decorative (i.e. useless) hood scoop: an ineffective affectation that belies Toyota's rep for serious-minded design.

We took full advantage of 4Runner’s cargo capacity to mule creature comforts: tent, chairs and a cooler. For family duty, the leather-trimmed 4Runner fit the wife, kids and our Black Lab. Still, it was a bit “snug.”

img_0142.jpgThe obvious upside to the 4Runner’s Prado underpinnings: more elbow room for all concerned (unless you’re an adult banished to optional third row seats). The 4Runner’s cabin is amongst the best that Toyota-branded cars have to offer: supportive seating, soft-touch plastics, quality switch gear, flawless fit and finish and sublime ergonomics. Bonus! Even Nigel Tufnel would be impressed with a standard stereo’s power.

The Uinta’s Depression-era “roads” hadn’t been maintained since the Civilian Conservation Corps built them. The topsoil had long since eroded, leaving a highway strewn with boulders. We made full use of the 4Runner’s 11” of ground clearance, bucking and lurching our way to pristine lakes, without so much as a squeak or rattle.

11_07_4runner_ltd.jpgDie-hard (one hopes) off-roaders will appreciate the 4Runner’s standard Hill Start Assist Control and Traction Control, and [available] Downhill Assist Control. They’ll also get off (so to speak) on the pair of convex back-up mirrors mounted above the 4Runner’s cargo area, inside the D-pillars. It’s a smart, low-tech substitute for complex (read: trouble prone) rear-view cameras.

Mud-pluggers will be FAR less pleased with the 4Runner’s aforementioned Biggie-sized proportions, and ground clearance and approach and departure angles that are little better than a full-domesticated CUV. These changes render an unmodified 4Runner completely unsuitable for a genuine Rocky Mountain high.

And then… a miracle.  When we pulled onto a paved road, the 4Runner handled with the smoothness and quiet sophistication of a Lexus.

06_07_4runner_ltd.jpgThe latest 4Runner is even better equipped to handle extreme contrasts in road surfaces. Double-wishbone independent front suspension and four-link rear suspenders deliver creamy Camry refinement on tarmac. Sure, the big rig leans through corners like a four-wheeled La Torre di Pisa. But the SUV’s motions are controlled, predictable and rebound free. This truck tracks down the freeway as easily as it negotiates alpine trails.

My 4WD 4Runner Sport Edition (17” wheels, enhanced suspension) holstered the popular 236hp 4.0-liter V6, mated to a 5-speed automatic cogswapper. On the upside, the free revving 24-valve mill has lots of low down grunt (266 ft.-lbs. of torque @ 4000rpm) to motivate the two-ton leviathan. Soccer moms will have no problem getting the team to their Title IX practice. On the downside, 18/22 mpg.

Our 4Runner was a primal machine, bereft of electronic trickery or safety nets. We admired it for that.

img_132.jpgThe 4Runner now offers standard ABS, Vehicle Stability Control and Electronic Brake-force Distribution. The latter balances the amount of brake pressure applied to each disk depending on cargo load distribution. For example, if you put The Big Show (don’t know, don’t ask) into the back seat, the 4Runner will adapt to the extra 500 lbs. by channeling more braking force through the rear binders.

When we returned the 4Runner, I looked back with admiration, as one does with a faithful steed at the end of a long journey. Respect.

As an off-road machine, the current 4Runner is severely compromised. Toyota baked all of its mud-plugging goodness into the FJ Cruiser and relegated the 4Runner to highway and light trail duty. In other words, the 4Runner is now a refined, rugged looking, long-legged station wagon that gets miserable gas mileage. It's a terrific machine, but what's the point?


Toyota 4Runner Review Car Review Rating

50 Responses to “ Toyota 4Runner Review ”

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  • Dayveo :


    Thats to bad. What is the point?!

  • Bill Wade :


    I have an 05 4Runner and this editorial is spot on. Toyota needs to be careful because their vehicles are starting to sink into the morass of blandness.

  • AKM :


    I must say that hearing the words “adventure” and “cooler” together always makes me chuckle.
    95% of 4runner users thread only suburban mall parking lots, so I guess Toyota just aimed the revised version at that crowd. That may be just as well…

  • wludavid :


    @Bill Wade: “Starting”?

    The Uintas are beautiful, btw. I used to live near the Wasatch range.

  • ZCD2.7T :


    I rented one of these a month or so ago when I needed 7 (8, in a pinch) passenger seating for my daughter’s birthday outing.

    I’m almost embarrassed to say that I really kinda liked the 4Runner. Why embarrassed? I’ve always been anti-SUV, for the reasons the reviewer stated. Nonetheless, the V-8’s (it was a Limited w/V-8) power, sound and refinement, the high seating position and the smooth, quiet on-road ride seduced me. Can’t say I’d actually BUY one, but it certainly is well-suited to its purpose.

    Oh, and it’s a FAR, FAR cry from the cramped, noisy interior, rough-ride and poor ergonomics that plagued all previous generations of the 4Runner.

  • SherbornSean :


    There is so much critism of GM and Ford for “too many models.” If the 4Runner has ceded its role as an offroader, then the difference between it, the Rav4, the Highlander and Sequioa is minimal. Ditto the RX, GX, and LX. Can’t wait until Scion gets their versions.

  • BlueBrat :


    I would like to know how this compares to the Sequoia actually. I rented a Sequoia once and it was highly impressive, but like everyone is starting to say, what makes the two models different from each other?

  • AKM :


    And doesn’t the Land cruiser slot somewhere between all those? I must say that Toyota’s SUV lineup totally confuses me…not that I’m interested in one anyway (except for the FJ). Lexsus is even worse, as their darn alphanumerical nomenclature seems to make no sense.

  • GMrefugee :


    Yah, I echo SherbornSean's observation.

    With the FJ taking up the offroad mantle and 4Runner compromised into a tall, inefficient wagon, seems like the 4Runner and Highlander are now vying for the same customer except the Highlander has the efficiency highground.

    Talk about overlapping product plan. Seriously, lets talk about it.

  • Claude Dickson :


    I own a ‘99 Forerunner. The truck is VERY rugged. The truck never left me stranded on the side of the road until the last two years: one time a spark plug had worked its way out of its socket from vibration over the years and the second time the starter went. It has over 130K miles and it still going strong.

    Would I buy another one? No. Even with the anemic engine offered back when I got the car, the gas mileage is miserable and I no longer go off-road at all. The FWD is not working right now primarily because I only used it 1-2 times a year.
    And I haven’t had it fixed because I only use it 1-2 times a year.

    A tough truck that has provided great service so far, but is simply too much truck for how it is presently being used. If I get rid of the 4Runner, the likely replacement is an Audi A3. And yes, I know the GTI is the same car for less. But I had the exterior styling of the GTI and every encounter with VW dealerships give me the willies.

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