threads
Page 2 of 4
Toyota Trucks \  Rolling back the odometer

Rolling back the odometer

Toyota Trucks Make Specific
views 545
replies 38
following 25
 
ricky@3rdshift   +1y
In arkansas there is a point where milage readings are exempt, and don't matter. My 86 yota is exempt.
TwistedMinis   +1y
How about CA?
Uncle Fester   +1y
Just be careful stating that you drive it 2K miles as you had a non op on the vehicle. Fines might get worse, just drive it, get it registered. Once tagged then roll it over so you can legally say you drove it 2K miles.
simple-pleasurez   +1y
or claim you did a shitload of dyno runs on it.
TwistedMinis   +1y
The trucks actually been registered for the last 8 months.
TwistedMinis   +1y
I may just smog it before rolling it though.
dssur   +1y
if its a 6 digit vin you dont have anything to worry about, when it rolls over the state calls it "in excess of mechanical limits"

not like you will be selling it anyway.
crazygenius13   +1y
Don't trip pver the legalities of it, 2K miles is freakin nothing, you can do that in a weekend, going to Reso and back is 1200
TwistedMinis   +1y
This is true Pete.

Russ, my VIN is 10 numbers and letters. It looks like: RN-********
munk3yx   +1y
my truck you can go in reverse and it rolls back... if i had the money for gas i would do that lol but i have thought about it to. the thing i dont understand is. lets say you put a new engine, tranny, rear end, new suspesion, pretty a brand damn new truck how would that be against the law? If you told the person that you were saleing it to (if you sold it) That the truck has *** *** *** many miles on it before you redone everything and what the odometer reads now is with all new stuff. how is that against the law?