Mechanical Design Vulnerabilities: The V35A-FTS 3.4L Twin-Turbo V6 (XK70) increases mechanical stress significantly compared to the legacy 3UR-FE. Turbocharger wastegate actuators are a known early production vulnerability. Failure Modes: Wastegate actuator failure (often requiring body-off labor). Early reports of main bearing failures. Plastic active grille shutter breakage. Mechanical Complexity: Extreme. Maintenance Complexity: High. Independent Support: Poor (Requires body-off for specific turbo service).
Recall: NHTSA 24V381000 (Engine debris/stall risk - major). NHTSA 23V480000 (Fuel leak fire risk). Legal: Significant monitoring of main bearing failure litigation.
A. Active Driving: TSS 2.5+. Includes Automatic Emergency Braking, Lane Tracing Assist with steering torque override, and Adaptive Cruise with stop-and-go. B. Driver Warning: Rear Cross-Traffic Alert, Blind Spot Monitor. High-frequency auditory alerts for lane deviations. Rating: Poor (Intrusive).
GPS: Persistent tracking via DCM. Behavioral Tracking: Real-time logging of acceleration, braking, and location data. Data Collection: shared with insurance data brokers (LexisNexis) unless opted out. Telemetry: Continuous 24/7 logging. Rating: Poor.
Proprietary: GTS+ required for turbo/hybrid resets. Sensor Recalibration: Mandatory for ADAS. SaaS: Subscription-locked Remote Connect hardware. Rating: Poor.
NO. The move to a twin-turbo V6 with systemic wastegate and bearing failures, combined with mandatory surveillance hardware, ruins the Tundra's reputation for 'million-mile' durability.