Talk:Toyota Sequoia

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I bought a 2006 Sequoia Limited on Dec 29, 2006. I paid $3,500 under invoice. I really like the Vehicle. I get about 16 miles per gallon, mostly highway driving.

I may have been to aggressive in removing your posted links. Put them back in if you feel they meet wp:el. Daniel.Cardenas 21:31, 25 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]
Reply: I'm new to Wikipedia, that was my first post, including the links. I hadn't read the guidelines before posting the first time. After reading them, I reduced to only one link. This site is really cool. It kind of surprising to me to see someone really on top of editing the page.

--Roy

Diesel[edit]

Anyone want to create a section for the upcoming diesel model?

http://forums.motortrend.com/70/6543162/the-general-forum/toyota-tundra-diesel-confirmed/index.html

ThanksMantion (talk) 02:44, 11 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Was a diesel model ever released? It seems the idea was confirmed by Toyota and then dropped anyway - which is why I'm always hesitant to put in future claims.  Stepho  talk  10:37, 7 July 2013 (UTC)[reply]

the first vehicle from a Japanese marque in the popular mainstream full-sized SUV class in North America[edit]

Seriously? Landcruiser never made it to US??

The Landcruiser (or it's Lexus counterpart) sounds like a contender to me. I'd just strike that part of the sentence out. Thoughts from other people?

wheel rim sizes in mm[edit]

Cariboukid (talk · contribs) and myself have a disagreement over whether wheel rims should have a metric conversion or not. The particular sentence under contention is:

Exterior differences include door handle colors (color-keyed for the SR5; chrome for the Limited and Platinum), diamond-cut 20 in (508 mm) aluminum alloy wheels for the Platinum trim, and varying power-heated remote-controlled side mirrors.

I prefer metric in general and have no problem with US articles having most measurements being shown in imperial then metric. However, wheel rims are nearly universally done in inches. The only vehicle I can think of in my own country (Australia) with metric wheel rims was the Lada Niva and most owners threw away the metric rims and bought custom rims that took tyres in inch sizes (buying new rims was cheaper than finding super rare metric rubber tyres). To my knowledge, the US is in the same position as Australia regrading tyres sold in inches. So, should wheel rims have metric conversions in this article or shall we assume that practically all users are okay with inches in this restricted context. Note: vehicles lengths, widths, etc should still have metric conversions because vehicle lengths in inches is not universal outside of the US. Or perhaps I should take the question to the automobiles project because the same arguments for and against would apply to most vehicle articles.  Stepho  talk  03:10, 10 June 2014 (UTC)[reply]