So we got a 2012 Toyota Land Cruiser 4.6 VX-R
The Toyota Land Cruiser, quite possibly the most overrated vehicle in the world, or so most of us would like to think. So many of them ply the roads in the Middle East, tailgating everyone else, that most people have a love-hate perspective on them. We did drive the Land Cruiser before, but never really pushed it too hard off-road, because we weren’t experienced enough back then. But then, come 2012, there is an updated version with a new 4.6-litre engine option. This time, we were ready to take it off-road. Properly.
External changes are minimal, but what’s really obvious was that tacked-on lower lip on the front bumper, apparently standard on all V8 models here for some reason. Once we took a look at its approach angle, we knew we’d run into trouble.
We had Vivek “Oberoi” Menon and his gang with us in his 2010 Mitsubishi Pajero 3.5, leading the way through the sands of wherever we were, somewhere between Sharjah and Kalba.
Tyres deflated, traction control off, side-airbags turned off, and tiptronic gear in first, we set off into the unknown, not following any tracks, but rather, paving our own way.
The interior remains the same, a great comfortable place to hang out in during a day of offroading. That’s the advantage of a Land Cruiser over more basic offroaders such as the Toyota FJ Cruiser, the Jeep Wrangler or the Nissan Xterra.
The Pajero was doing fine, and so were we. We told Vivek “Why-This-Kolaveri-Di” Menon to take it easy with the routes, as we didn’t want to damage our Toyota. So we were taking moderate dunes, although some turned out to be steeper than expected. While we couldn’t feel it, we were later told by the Pajero occupants that they could see the front-end of our Land Cruiser digging into the sand a lot of times, which bothered us even more.
Still, the Land Cruiser was handling the soft sand with way too much ease, never bogging down with three people in the car, even in places where the weaker Pajero appeared to struggle slightly. And this was with an engine that had less than 800 km on it, barely broken in, so we could feel it wasn’t at optimum performance yet.
At one point, Vivek “Rajnikanth” Menon challenged us to climb a steep dune and see how far we could get. The Land Cruiser lost, obviously, because I backed off the throttle just as we were about to hit that slope in a bid to save that chin. We didn’t get very far up, and safely backed down again. I then let him take a spin with the Landy, and he side-sloped it with caution, getting annoyed at having to exercise caution.
Having done enough mild-to-moderate dune bashing for the day, we started heading out to the nearest petrol station to fill up the tyres again. Then, as a last hurrah, I decided to take drive it along the side of a firm dune. It turned out that dune was bumpier than we thought, and the Landy caught a few inches of air before landing on the dune again, still at a 30-degree angle. The strength of the body-on-frame chassis was obvious here, as nothing in the car rattled.
Then we continued to cruise along on the sand, when my buddy in the passenger seat says he could here a faint rattle. I figured it’s nothing, but we stopped anyway, and were shocked to see that, what we were trying to avoid the whole morning, exactly that had happened. The lip had ripped off, and was now hanging underneath the front bumper. I tore off whatever was left, threw it in the big boot, and caught up with Vivek “Mondeo-Is-The-Best-Car-In-The-World” Menon quickly, now that we could finally drive like a Land Cruiser was meant to be driven.
After we all stopped again to inspect the damage, we first laughed, then cried, then wondered if Al Futtaim Motors would ban us after this stunt. We then saw that there was pretty much no damage to the front bumper aside from bits of the screwed-on lip still hanging there, and it occurred to us that we could finally push the Land Cruiser properly.
The Land Cruiser is the first choice of various Middle East military forces, various United Nations missions, and various Taliban groups for a reason, and it was proven without a doubt. We drove around in circles for about three minutes, side-sloping like pros and speeding over bumps. Even Vivek “Pajero-Is-King” Menon agreed that it is better than his unibody Mitsubishi, both in power and in durability, as he briefly did his thing without restrictions. But it was time to go, and we were satisfied with what we had witnessed.
So you want to buy a V8-powered Toyota Land Cruiser? If you do not plan on going off-road, then there is no point buying a Land Cruiser, and we’ll point you straight to the Chrysler showroom to look at the Dodge Durango. But if you do plan to go off-road, do yourself a favour and get that “stylish” lip removed. It is tacked on with hundreds of hard-to-reach screws, so once you do get it off, just stuff it under your bed until it comes time to sell. You’ll thank us later when you’re beating the desert into submission.
Also, if you buy one, don’t tailgate people. And please use your indicators. More in the full review.
Some photos by Salma Sultana, Sree J.P. and Vivek “SLR” Menon.
Comments
MuscleCar
Do you have pictures of the land cruiser, with and without that front bumper lip?
Mashfique Hussain Chowdhury
It’s in the gallery.
gs 2
cruiser for life…..liked the ‘tailgating’ , ‘indicator’ and ‘vivek menon part’……:D
haroon
we do desrt safari . we know land cruiser how stronr it is how much we use it off road.. its only 4 wheel
sami
Is this English!
Sayed
You can’t say that “The interior remains the same, a great comfortable place to hang out in during a day of offroading” in a GX.R ofcourse. Everything looks so oddly put in the GX.R from the inside.
Chris
Nice review. Car is still fugly.
vivek
Irritatingly enough, I loved it! It was definitely much more comfier than my Pajero, and its robust chassis proved every bit better than the unibody Mitsu..My Pajero costs only a third of that of the LC, and is a very capable off-roader beyond all doubts; but nevertheless, the body-on-frame LC truck clearly leads the way in terms of off-road abilities, features, power, comfort and durability.
royer
🙂
Ironman
Vivek “lol” Menon 😉
rana
so in other words, is it 3 times better than the pajero? 😛
vivek
not sure by how many times..but it is better 😀
bunkie79
Hi I have the same lc posted on my ride pics. When I saw the bumper I asked the sales guy at Al futtaim whether it will hinder off roading and he said while they were given a demo on the dunes with this vehicle by toyota the bumper was in place. He suggested I get it removed at the service center incase I intend to do serious offroading.
By the way he said that for the new land cruiser there is no breaking in speeds and I can go upto 140 and not restrict myself to 100 kmph as they normally do. Quite comfortable and stable to drive. I will go offroading after completing first 5,000 kms when I will remove the front bumper
bunkie79
looks better without the front lip bumper
vivek
I have company!
bunkie79
Hi did you use the multi terrain option.
Keep the gear in drive position
Press and turn the knob from H4 to L4 on the right of the steering wheel. Then gain turn the knob besides the gear box/ cup holder and move it to get multi terrain. crawl control turn assist is besides this knob
Mashfique Hussain Chowdhury
I tried looking for it, but never found it. If it requires L4, then it’s not really of much use in the sand, especially since we never had to use L4. Still, I’ll go check it out now, since I still have the car!
bunkie79
Hi Mash,
Sorry got the sequence wrong.The gear has to be in nuetral position not drive .
Nuetral
H4 to L4
knob by the cup holder to select the terrain
Drive
Mashfique Hussain Chowdhury
Yep, found it. I tried D first, then N, which makes more sense when shifting into L4. The multi-terrain menu popped up, but then again, I was in a car park. Thanks.
JMabini
really love the tags with Vivek. It made my night and I can smile before I sleep tonight. Sadly though I can’t buy a Landcruiser but the reviews is enough to feed by imagination.
Thanks Mash and Viviek
bilal
Hi Guys!I connot afford the land cruiser, as am looking for a good comfortable SUV that wont shake in the high way speed, and powerful through the offroading. i love the Wrangler exterior design and i will appreciate if you can give me ideas about it. and please do recommend me for a specific SUV that has the feature that i mentioned if the wrangler has the negative signs.
Thank you so much for your help
Looking forward to hearing from you guys
Ironman
Hi Bilal,
Register at the myride forums on this website where you’ll get plenty of opinions and recommendations from fellow members suiting your budget and other requirements. Cheers!
Usama
Are you sure is it 4.6 VX-R?
Based on my knowledge, since 2011 all VX-R come with 5.7 engine, and the oldest 4.7 for VXR only.
Not 4.6 engines.
The 4.6 engine for GXR only.
Can you make sure about your title 4.6 VX-R? And provide us the price and dealer name please.
Note: I checked with Al Futtaim Motors they don’t have 4.6 VX-R.
Only 5.7 for the VXR.
Marouf Hussain
There is a 4.6 VX-R. Al Futtaim are probably just trying to sell off the leftover 5.7L models.
marc
more and more reports are popping up online that there may be a new LC (300 series then i guess) launched towards the beginning of 2015.
Mash, any further insights possibly?
Mashfique Hussain Chowdhury
Only rumours so far. Apparently this one isn’t selling as well as they’d hoped, so a change is in order.
marc
agree, numbers went down constantly.
so let’s see..
cheers, m