Why yes, I am aware of the Toyota frame recall...
I have a 2005 Tacoma Double Cab. About a year ago, I got a phone call from the local dealer, who suggested that I bring the truck in for inspection due to a possible frame recall. This is not the dealer from whom I bought the truck. In fact, I had only been there once, for a transmission fluid change.
I was told that the frame would be inspected for rust. If surface rust was found, it would be cleaned, prepped and coated. If the frame rust was substantial, they would replace my frame.
I took a look under the truck and didn't find anything that concerned me. The truck had about 100,000 miles on it. A lot of the hardware was rusty, but the frame didn't look bad. My rear springs were covered with surface rust and were getting pretty noisy. I had been considering removing, disassembling and greasing them, but never got around to it. My factory installed trailer hitch was getting pretty nasty looking though.
I made an appointment for a Thursday, dropped the truck off and then went away for the weekend. I expected to pick the truck up on Monday and see something like POR-15 slathered all over the underside.
When I got home on Sunday night, there was a message on the machine from the dealer. I expected to hear "Your truck is ready". Ominously, I heard "You need to give us a call".
I called the next morning and they told me that, yup, they found rust on the frame, they would replace it at no cost and give me a loaner to use while they were doing the work. When I picked up the truck, I asked when they could do it and he told me that he would order the frame, it would take a couple of weeks to come in, and then about a week to do the work. I mentioned that the truck had a factory installed hitch that was really rusty. I asked if they would be replacing that too. He said no, but if I bought a new hitch, they would install it at no cost. Fair enough.
My only concern was that it was the third week of September and I use the truck to plow snow. I don't usually get decent snow until December, but the previous year, we got hit with a big storm on October 30.
Two or three weeks passed and I hadn't heard from them, so I called. I was told that Toyota approved the replacement, but the new frame wasn't ready yet. They would let me know.
A few weeks later, I called again. Still no frame. At this point, I didn't push the issue, as winter was right around the corner. I figured that I'd try to wait until the snow was gone.
One Thursday morning in January, I had just left my house in the truck, pointed toward New Jersey to look at a potential track car. My phone rang and it was the dealer. He said that my frame had arrived and asked me to bring the truck in. I asked when they would like to do it and he said, "Now". I explained that today wasn't an option (a big storm was forecast for the next day). I asked if we could do it on Monday and he gave me a hard time. He said that they had a list of people and they were doing them in order. He had one tech who was dedicated to frame swaps and he couldn't sit idle for a couple of days. We settled on the following Monday.
Over the next ten days, I plowed through two storms, bought a Miata and towed it home from Massachusetts. On the morning that I was scheduled to drop the truck off, I pulled the truck into my garage, removed the plow frame and then drove to the dealership with a new Curt hitch in the back of the truck. I chose a Curt because they are powdercoated and the Toyota one wasn't. I figured that it would be more resistant to rust.
For the next week, I was driving around in a brand new Camry, not from the dealership, but from Enterprise rental down the road, but Toyota covered the bill.
It took eight full work days for them to do the swap. I expected them to try to get me to pay for a lot of "while we're in there" stuff, but they only thing that he suggested midweek was new front brakes. This was not bullE36 M3. Not only did I know that the truck needed them, but I actually had all the parts already. I told him that I planned to do them myself and he didn't argue.
When I picked up the truck, the only surprise was that he told me that they couldn't install my new hitch because it wasn't a Toyota part. No big deal, I'd do it myself, but I was a little annoyed that the went so far as to reinstall the rusty old hitch (which is still on the truck...)
They gave me a full invoice, complete with part numbers, that was several pages long. In addition to the new frame and a ton of hardware, the list included new rear springs (yay!), new front lower control arms and ball joints, as well as fresh brake fluid, coolant and at least some transmission fluid. I forget whether or not I got new motor mounts too. I think it came to something like $9000 in parts. Total cost to me: $Zero. Overall, I was pretty happy with this.
The next morning, I noticed two small puddles under the truck. I crawled under the truck and found that both inner CV joint boots were leaking. I called the dealer and he started to give me a hard time, telling me that they had just given me a free frame on a 100,000 mile truck. I countered with the observation that they weren't leaking onto my new driveway when I dropped the truck off, they clearly took them apart, and now they were leaking. He talked to his boss and told me to bring it back in so that they could take a look. The next day, I dropped it off, and they installed two new front axles while I spent the day driving around in a brand new RAV4. Total cost to me: $Zero.
I installed my plow frame the next morning and was plowing my driveway the following day.
So now, nine months later, I have a 110,000 mile Toyota truck with a good body, nice interior, brand new frame, suspension and new front axles. I still like the truck and I'd like to keep it at least another five years. The truck has been an absolute workhorse for me and, should I ever have to shell out for a new engine or transmission, I promise to do it without complaining too loudly.
I would probably buy another Toyota truck.