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Old 7th July 2023, 13:15   #1
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Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

I start writing this saga as I sit on a plane from Mumbai to Delhi. I will try to make you live through the journey of rebirth of my “SILVER RHINO” as I have experienced over the course of last few months. Please bear with me as this is going to be a long story.

This was somewhere around mid-June 2022 and I had been driving a 2016 XUV500 W10 AT for almost 3 years now. We had just completed a Mumbai – Uttarakhand – Mumbai drive with a group which had 4 cars – Land Cruiser Prado 120, Range Rover Evoque, a rental XUV500, and my XUV 500. While I was quite satisfied with my XUV 500 after returning from this trip, I felt that I should start looking for an upgrade if I had to plan for such long road trips so that these trips could be more comfortable for the family.

One a Sunday evening, while I was casually window shopping on the classified page of team bhp, I saw this very special post of a Land Cruiser Prado 2008 VX (2nd owner, 137000 on ODO, 4L V6 Petrol) which caught my attention and I sent a mail enquiring about the vehicle and shared my number in the mail, and I had almost forgotten about it. The next morning, while I was driving to office, I got a call from the owner of the vehicle.
We spoke for a few minutes and exchanged notes on the details of the vehicle. Based on initial inputs collected over call and looking at the pics of the car, this seemed to be a genuine deal and the current owner was selling due to the 15 Yr NGT rule in NCR. I was fortunately traveling to Delhi in the same week, and we decided to fix up a meeting to have a quick look at the car and discuss further.

The First Encounter:
Based on a quick drive and initial evaluation my observations were following:
  1. The bodyline seemed neat, a few scratches here and there but no major structural damage or rusting. Multiple panels were painted but that was expected given the age of car and NCR traffic. Paint jobs were not that great though. The front glass had been replaced at Toyota ASS.
  2. Though the drive felt nice (had to be – it is a Land Cruiser with 4L V6 petrol under the hood), following were a bit worrying:
    • Power Steering pump needed replacement – This was a known issue and current owner decided to skip this as he had to sell the vehicle anyhow and was not keen to invest further.
    • Steering Rack had very minor play, possibly linked to the steering pump.
    • Slight vibration in the brake pedal while applying brake at triple digit speed. This was possibly due to a non-OEM brake pad replacement which was done recently or a bad disk skimming job.
  3. Interiors had aged well, but not maintained very well. The leather seats had cracks and leather had faded at some places. Fortunately, none of the patch was torn. Head unit was aftermarket and OEM HU was preserved and available, trims around AC vents on the dashboard were broken.
  4. Right Rear Bumper fog light was broken, one wheel hub cap was missing, one roof rail cover was missing.
  5. Tyres were almost new, but were All Terrain and hence a bit of a road noise.
  6. The car was originally owned by the MD of Apollo Tyres, and the current owner was a CEO at an IT company in Gurgaon who himself is an enthusiast.
  7. Documents were complete, including original invoice and tax receipt which are required at the time of reregistering the vehicle in Maharashtra. The current owner agreed to get the NoC issued through his agent at his cost.

Overall, I got a feeling that the deal is genuine, and I decided to proceed further. Since I had to fly back to Mumbai the same day, I did not have much time for further evaluation. Hence, we both agreed that a friend of mine who is also an enthusiast will have a quick look at the car and we will decide the next steps.

In a few days, my friend planned to meet the owner and further evaluate the car. My friend upon a quick inspection was impressed with the car, and we decided to close the deal. While we agreed on the commercial terms and handed over a token amount, we wanted to take a professional opinion before taking the plunge. We did the following as next steps:
  1. My friend helped me in getting access to the vehicle history from Toyota. We were able to get a complete history of the vehicle since the car came on road till date. One thing was sure that the car had been maintained at Toyota ASS, and while regular maintenance schedule was done with a few minor repairs, nothing was seriously off in the car. There was a list of observations in the remarks section of the history which were primarily related to the steering, suspension, and brake work (which was performed outside ASS)
  2. Another friend (who also owns a 2007 LC 120) recommended to get the car evaluated at AutoMarc in Okhla as they are a Land Cruiser specialist in the NCR region. The car was checked by Mr. Virender at AutoMarc and as per him the only immediate thing that needed attention was the steering pump, rest all the observations from Toyota ASS could be ignored as the car was driving quite well. As per him even if we did replace the OEM steering pump and did regular maintenance, the car will be mechanically fit in under a lakh rupees. As a worst case, If we were to address every observation mentioned by Toyota ASS, the estimated cost could be ~ 3-4 lakh rupees. As per him parts can be arranged either at Toyota ASS or from suppliers from Dubai/Thailand

The above two gave me a lot of clarity on what I am getting into with this project. Next was to evaluate TCO and following were the components:
  1. Cost of car ~ Deal was closed at 10.25 Lakhs
  2. Cost of shipping/driving the car to Mumbai from Gurgaon. This was coming to around ~ 30K – 35K whether I was to drive the car to Mumbai (considering fuel, toll, hotels etc) or ship it through a car carrier
  3. Cost of reregistering the car in Mumbai and Insurance. I had gone through this process for my Nissan Sunny XLD 2012 just a few months ago and reasonably confident that this will not be challenging to execute. As per my agent the cost of transfer was estimated ~ 3.25 lakhs including tax of reregistration in MH, Green tax as the car was completing 15 years soon, agent fees etc.
  4. Mechanical Repairs ~ 1 lakhs as per feedback from AutoMarc. While I had a reasonable clarity on the cost of repairs, but some part of my brain still had a “what if” doubt. I budgeted another lakhs for this "what if" element
  5. Cosmetic repairs, paint job and upgrades ~ while this had no limit, I was ready to spend around ~2 lakhs to make it look near perfect.

This was totaling ~ 15 – 16 Lakhs with a reasonable degree of confidence on the landed cost with a 10-15 % variability max.

All of this took about 6 week’s time and it was around July end, when I decided to procced with this projects. By this time, we also had a new member in our family – our new-born son. We took it as a sign and there was a lot of excitement in the air. We decided to proceed ahead with this project.

The NoC Story:
After discussion with the current owner, I made a part payment to him and he agreed to apply for the NoC. Balance payment was to be made once NoC would come, and we could conclude the transaction. The process started around 1st week of September and was a roller coaster ride, with all that could go wrong, with the original RTO (HR 55) being shut down, Agent losing the original RC in the process, Agent Tantrums and what not. I had plans of getting the car before Diwali as it was also my birthday around that time and who would not want a Land Cruiser as a birthday gift, but god was testing my patience and there was still no sign of this getting concluded. I was losing patience and started following up a bit more aggressively with the current owner to put pressure on the agent and get the documents straight. While the NoC came in, the agent lost the original RC in the process. To get the duplicate RC issued, the NoC had to be cancelled and this was about to get into an infinite loop. I discussed this with my RTO agent, and he suggested a way out where we could get B Extract from the RTO instead of getting the duplicate RC. The existing owner discussed with his agent and after some to and fro he finally had the B extract in hand. We finalised a date to meet up in Delhi and conclude the transaction.

The Transaction and Shipment story:
While the date to meet and conclude the deal was final, a big question was how to ship the car. Heart wanted to drive down to Mumbai, but brain suggested to hold on and get the car in best of shape before taking such a long trip especially with the current state of steering – it was quite hard due to the pump issue and the brakes juddering at high speed. I finally decided to ship the car through Agarwal packers. We met in Gurgaon and concluded the transaction, thereafter I parked the car at the hotel where I was staying in Gurgaon. While my schedule was quite busy due to work, I decided to meet my friend who had helped me during the evaluation of the car. We drove the car a bit around in DLF complex itself and called it a day post dinner. Two days later the car was to be picked up by the movers, and that morning I decided to make a quick early morning trip to Gurdwara Rakab Ganj Sahib in Delhi before the packers pick it up. It was a pleasant winter morning in the first week of Dec and I could even enjoy the heated seats. It was a breeze to drive the “Silver Rhino” on the smooth tarmac of NH48 from Gurgaon to Delhi. The car was finally picked up by the movers and I flew back to Mumbai. It took the movers roughly 6 days before they could deliver the car to me in Mumbai.

The Assessment and Refurbishment:
This was the real test, where the actual assessment had to be done, quotations had to be taken and some more decisions had to be taken. I had established a connect with the service manager at Madhuban Toyota, Mumbai through the service manager at Randhawa Motors, Mumbai who used to maintain my XUV500. I got the car assessed at Madhuban Toyota and established a good equation with the service advisor and the service manager. The Advisor had worked in middle east in the past and was very well versed with Land Cruiser’s and this was a huge relief. A through assessment of the car was carried out and the feedback on the car was positive. Following was recommended:
  1. Power Steering pump replacement – This was required, and I had known this from day 1. I asked them to check if there was a possibility to repair, but the replacement was the only choice offered. Repairing was not recommended. The cost was ~ 70K
  2. Steering rack assembly replacement – There was a very minor play in the rack and no leakage yet. As per recommendation, this could be done a few months down the line and wasn’t the need of the hour. The cost was ~ 1.5 Lakhs. Repairing the rack could also be explored but that had to be at a FNG
  3. Upper arm ball joint boot was wearing out. The ball joint was healthy, and only boot replacement was required. Though a pair of upper arms was ~ 70K, replacing the ball join boots was ~ 3 K
  4. Front Brakes – The pervious owner had recently changed the brake pads (non OEM) and had also skimmed the disks, but this was done at an FNG and there was a bit of judder while applying brakes at triple digit speeds. It was recommended to go for OEM brake pads as the brakes were underperforming due to the quality of brake pads (also blame it on the size and weight of this Rhino. The discs had no further room for skimming to eliminate the judder and was suggested a replacement. While there was no risk at city speeds, this had to be done before I decide to take this for a long road trip. I decided to postpone this expense till the next service. Estimated cost ~ 35K including front disks and pads.
  5. Scheduled Maintenance – Service schedule for 140K ODO mark was proposed and the following was to be replaced – Oil, Oil Filter, AC Filter, Fuel Filter
  6. Ornamental elements – A few ornamental elements were missing which the previous owner had ignored as he anyways parting with the car. Wheel hub cap on one of the wheels, one of the Roof rail cover was missing, Both put together ~ 7K

The parts were not readily available and had to be ordered for which I had to deposit an advance. I deposited the advance, and the parts order was placed by Madhuban Toyota.

It took ~ 10 days for the parts to arrive and an appointment was fixed with Madhuban Toyota. The car was left at Madhuban Toyota and it took them 2 days to complete all the jobs that were agreed. Post repairs the car felt great, the steering was smooth, no whining sound from the steering pump and no unusual revving while turning the steering. The minor play in the steering rack also vanished, may be because the new pump was providing adequate pressure in the rack.

Now was the time to address the cosmetics, although it wasn’t very bad, but both the right doors which were repainted were showing up air bubbles in the paint, and there were a few scratches here and there on the body claddings. Before I planned further on the cosmetics, there was something that needed immediate attention. There was something wrong with the audio and the driver door speaker was jarring badly. I fixed up an appointment at Megasounds, Malad and met Ravi. I was very clear that I wanted to upgrade audio in a staged fashion.

Currently it was running on all 4 stock speakers and a Blaupunkt HU, which was a basic android touch screen unit – no android carplay/apple car play. The previous owner had replaced as the OEM HU did not have a Bluetooth/Aux jack and was a Pioneer unit with a cassette player and a 6 CD changer. The owner did hand over the original HU to me in case I wanted to switch back to OEM unit. Ravi suggested that we replace the front two speakers with components, and then go for an amp and a sub later as required. His recommendation was Helix and I went ahead with the pair that he recommended.

The OEM speakers were Oval 6X9 inch units with a special frame, and the components were 6.5 inch round, hence a custom frame was created out of plywood to carry out the installation. The installation was done neatly, now was the time to test the output. The output was quite disappointing as the sound was muffled. And the rear OEM pair was sounding much better. Ravi tried tuning the setup using the equalizer but couldn’t do much about the output. The Helix pair will probably need a suitable amp to fire them up nicely, but this was not happening immediately. The good thing was that atleast I was getting clean sound now and there was no jarring.
Now was the time to focus on how cosmetics can be improved. I took it straight to Jatin at Wagenwerkz, Marol. Though I wasn’t too happy with the quality of work that was done by his team on my XUV500, I was a little unsure if I will go ahead with him with this project. Having seen him deliver some excellent projects in the past and knowing that he does have an eye for detail and owns up the outcome and does the job again if need be, I decided to take a leap of faith and trust him with this projects.
I was not planning to do anything major on cosmetics, and had initially thought of repainting the right side/front bumper and left side body claddings. When I Met Jatin, he proposed that for a much better outcome and a fresh look we should consider an overcoat, but I wasn’t sure. Anyways, I had some time at hand to decide as Jatin was finishing the Alfa Romeo and Impala which were due to participate in a show in Baroda. He had asked me to give him the car in the first week of Jan as he will be done with the current projects by then. It was perfect as I was to go on a vacation with family around the same time.

After some more discussion with Jatin, we decided that we will go ahead with a full overcoat including alloy wheels repaint and Ceramic Coating. Jatin indicated that the car should be ready by 14th Jan. I was happy and started imaging a quick trip around Mumbai in Prado as my wedding anniversary was approaching in Jan third week. Things usually don’t go the way when you desperately want them to go your way – it was already third week of Jan and the car was still being prepared to be painted. I was in no mood to put pressure on Jatin and wanted him to do things right. Jatin asked if I wanted some variation in the silver shade and gave a few ideas from the Mercs that he had finished in various shaded of silver. I also discussed with him if we should explore a dual tone option, where we choose a darker shade for bumper and claddings and a lighter shade for the body panels. I started exploring if I could see any reference images of LC120’s painted in dual tone but could get only one reference pic which wasn’t looking very appealing. We sampled a few shades and decided to proceed with Skoda Brilliant Silver. I also suggested that we paint alloys in black, but then Jatin suggested we keep them silver as silver will make it look more sophisticated. Finally the car was painted around 20th Jan and I received some initial pics. The shade had come out nicely, and I was glad that I could not see any waviness in the panels which was my biggest worry as they look ugly and give the car a very aged look.

It was then time to paint the alloys, bumpers and other external trims, which was also carried out in the next few days. The paint job was over in the next 4-5 days and now was the time to put the car together and start the finishing work. The process had slowed down a bit but was I was glad that with every incremental update the Silver Rhino had started looking better. The most challenging part of putting the trims back were the claddings around the car. Toyota has a very complex variety of clips which holds these claddings together. Every cladding has at least 5-6 types of different clips which are different shaper and colour depending on the placement. I was able to finally crack the code and ordered the required set of clips from a marketplace in Dubai. In the meanwhile, Jatin proposed that he fabricate the clips with screws and metal sheet and proceed with finishing the car and he would replace them with OEM clips once the shipment arrives from Dubai.
An additional light bar, dash cam and led projector fogs were also retrofitted while the car was being finished. The broken AC trims which I had sourced from Amazon US were also replaced.

Finally, after about 40 days of hardwork, the car was ready to be delivered back home. I was travelling for work while the car was getting ready, but Jatin’s team kept sharing updates with me and I was glad the outcome was shining more than I had expected.

Waited for about a week for the ceramic coating to curate, and subsequently went to a 3M outlet in Mulund for a foam wash and rear windshield polishing as it had some wiper marks and scratches.

Now was the time for some more tender love and car for the interiors and I decided to go with the following:
  1. Steering wheel leather wrap by Orchis, Powai – A very well executed and neat job done by Orchis. It took 3-4 hours to remove the steering wheel, and then fabricate the leather wrap and hand stich the entire thing.
  2. Seats cleaning and refurbishment – While the interiors had aged well and looked graceful, I wanted to just give it a basic cleaning and try to polish the faded out areas to make it look neat. After a bit of research, I zeroed on a product by Furniture Clinic – Leather recolouring Balm which was available on Amazon US. In a few days, while a friend was visiting Seattle, I could manage to get this product delivered to his hotel and he was glad to bring it form me. Along with it I also ordered for a rubber seal refurbishment oil by 303 which was much needed for a 15 yr old vehicle. Once the product came in, I decided to spend a weekend to clean and polish the seat and the results were quite good I must say. The faded white patched disappeared, the cracks were less visible and overall the interiors were looking fresh and beautiful.

The transfer story:
This part was rather smooth, thought a two stepped process as the car first had to be transferred and re registered in Mumbai, and then I had to wait for the RC to be delivered to me so that we could submit the application for part 2 which was to submit green tax for lifeline extension. As I am writing this story the car has been transferred to Mumbai with a new identify and has also been given a lifeline extension till 2028.

The Landed cost so far including all of the above is ~ 15 Lakhs and my bond with the silver Rhino is growing stronger with each passing day!

Stay tuned for some more stories about the Silver Rhino which I will share soon.

Meanwhile, sharing some pics in chronological order : Receiving the car from previous owner, Work performed at Wagenwerkz, and the final outcome.
Attached Thumbnails
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Last edited by KarthikK : 15th May 2024 at 11:36. Reason: Minor typo correction
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Old 8th July 2023, 12:00   #2
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Congratulations on the new ride, hope to see travelogues done with the amazing machine!
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Old 8th July 2023, 13:02   #3
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Theres no match for this beast even today, wonder how mighty he may have looked in 2008.

I wonder when our country will receive the lateral upgrades over Fortuner. The Patrols, the Palisades, the Tellurides, the Prados et al.
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Old 8th July 2023, 13:26   #4
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

She looked absolutely stunning. Its always good to read about such stories when great cars are bought and cared by the great owners
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Old 8th July 2023, 20:38   #5
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Thanks to your unwavering commitment that has given a new lease of life to this mighty Prado. It somehow feels good when someone buys and restores an automobile that you drooled over in your teens. Though a fuel guzzler, this hulk on four wheels can run forever. A worthy upgrade to your XUV indeed! Congratulations.
Happy and safe riding.
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Old 8th July 2023, 22:33   #6
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Commendable job, applaud your determination. The plan to refurbish a legend is obviously a decision driven by heart, good that you could do it at reasonable rate and with balance 5 years of vehicle life. I had once contemplated a similar plan but couldn't muster courage to take the plunge.
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Old 9th July 2023, 06:58   #7
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Beautifully restored. A properly elegant beast. The decision to keep the alloys in stock colour was best. The fender assist mirror does not seem to be the one specifically made for the LC120 series Prado. Please check the attached photograph to see the one for Prado 120 series. Happy Motoring and yes I assure you, she will keep you happy for a long time
Attached Thumbnails
Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol-images-25.jpeg  

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Old 9th July 2023, 11:03   #8
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

What a lovely thread to read. Congratulations on your lovely purchase. This really needs a heart decision than brain to get hands on such a timeless machine. You have got a good deal I would say after checking the costs you have shared. Toyota priorities are not for Indian market if you see the line ups they have here and worldwide. This should change at least in the coming future.

One thing I want to understand due to which I am a bit hesitant to buy a car from North region ( read NCR / Delhi / HR ) is the transfer of the vehicle. You have also faced challenges in the process. So there should always be someone close to you to keep check on things / documents while you can not attend to this personally? Because one of the guys in my circle had faced this issue when he bought an Innova from Delhi region.

Second thing is dealers reliability if one can’t find direct seller.

Please keep posting updates here and let all of us enjoy this machine along with you.

Have wonderful time and thousands of miles and enjoy the power and space.

Cheers.

Last edited by KarthikK : 15th May 2024 at 11:34. Reason: Minor typo corrections
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Old 10th July 2023, 11:25   #9
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Hi Raj,
Congratulations on the Prado. Having owned one of these in Qatar and now a 2010 Fortuner in Mumbai, I love these machines. Just out of curiosity, who was your SA at Madhuban Toyota Kurla? Swapnil Shirke, the deputy service manager, is a good friend of mine.

Last edited by KK2001 : 10th July 2023 at 11:28.
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Old 14th July 2023, 11:21   #10
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Quote:
Originally Posted by raj_1787 View Post
rebirth of my “SILVER RHINO"
What a menacing machine! Congrats for your awesome purchase! It just makes so much sense to plonk money into these timeless machines when cars like Maruti's cost 15+ lacs onroad. This is so much SUV for the money
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Old 22nd July 2023, 17:24   #11
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Congratulations on the Prado. I have one too.

Your's looks very clean. Very nicely done.

The Prado is incredibly capable for an old horse and quite comfortable too. The 1GR FE is super smooth but does lack some performance (comparing to a x3 3.0d) I know it's not apples to apples. Fuel burns a hole too. I get about 16-17 l/100kms in the city and about 10 l/100 kms on the highway.

Adding some pictures of my dirty bird.

Enjoy one of the best engineered cars of all time. Pre-Recession toyota was something else.

Cheers
Attached Thumbnails
Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol-20220611_183343.jpg  

Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol-20220206_161241.jpg  

Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol-20220206_162615.jpg  

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Old 23rd July 2023, 17:57   #12
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Quote:
Originally Posted by aveoman19 View Post
Beautifully restored. A properly elegant beast. The decision to keep the alloys in stock colour was best. The fender assist mirror does not seem to be the one specifically made for the LC120 series Prado. Please check the attached photograph to see the one for Prado 120 series. Happy Motoring and yes I assure you, she will keep you happy for a long time
Thanks aveoman19! The observation is correct, the fender mirror is'nt OEM nor is the one meant for Prado. But I wasn't able to get the one meant for Prado, I was getting one at Boodmo priced at 25K and this one was on Amazon for 1K. I will be on a lookout and will replace when I am able to source the one in the pic at a reasonable cost

Quote:
Originally Posted by Guru_Shikhar View Post

One thing I want to understand due to which I am a bit hesitant to buy a car from North region ( read NCR / Delhi / HR ) is the transfer of the vehicle. You have also faced challenges in the process. So there should always be someone close to you to keep check on things / documents while you can not attend this personally? Cause one of the guys in my circle had faced this issue when he bought an Innova from Delhi region.

Second thing is dealers reliability if one can’t find direct seller.

Pl keep posting updates here and let all of us enjoy this machine along with you.

Cheers.
Thanks Guru_Shikhar! It is just a matter of chance that these issue crop up. I had transferred my 2012 Nissan Sunny XLD last year, and the NoC from Delhi came in like a breeze. Yes it is always good to have someone follow up locally in case things go south.

Quote:
Originally Posted by KK2001 View Post
Hi Raj,
Congratulations on the Prado. Having owned one of these in Qatar and now a 2010 Fortuner in Mumbai, I love these machines. Just out of curiosity, who was your SA at Madhuban Toyota Kurla? Swapnil Shirke, the deputy service manager, is a good friend of mine.
Hi KK2001, The advisor was Vilas and was a part of Swapnil's team but looks like Vilas has quite. When I went last for brake disc and pads replacement the car was handled by Aakash and he handled the job well. He reports to Swapnil and Swapnil reports to Ravi. I have a good connect with Ravi as well.
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Old 10th August 2023, 22:45   #13
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Very well planned and well executed purchase. Cannot get any better at this price, with a large margin. Wish you at least a lac happy miles ahead with this beauty.
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Old 15th April 2024, 00:13   #14
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Quote:
Originally Posted by raj_1787 View Post
I will try to make you live through the journey of rebirth of my “SILVER RHINO” as I have experienced over the course of last few months.
Spotted your “Silver Rhino” today Sir!

Looks fabulous with the repaint job !!

Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol-img_7305.jpg

Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol-img_7306.jpg

Last edited by Aditya : 15th April 2024 at 04:57. Reason: Attachments fixed
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Old 15th April 2024, 09:08   #15
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Re: Rebirth of the Silver Rhino | 2008 Toyota Landcruiser Prado 120 | 4.0 V6 Petrol

Hi CEF_Beasts, that’s parked at my residence
Were you visiting this place, or do you live here?

Would love to catch up!
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