Junkyard Outtakes Double Feature: Toyota Edition – More Spray Foam Madness And A Security Issue

2002 Toyota Sienna

Well, here we are again with more random engineering and other (mis)adventures spotted in the junkyard over the weekend.  Today’s features both involve Toyotas, curiously the last time we did one of these it also featured a Toyota, albeit a Matrix, perhaps our hero replaced his vehicle and figured it worked before, why not again.

Our first ride hails from 2002, which is over two decades old now.  Where did the time go?  Toyota’s first Minivan (after the Van and the Previa) that was actually popular and correctly market priced, these are still seen on the roads, but are definitely filtering through the junkyards, some with quite large mileages.  Most notably perhaps, the Sienna was the first Toyota minivan with two sliding doors.  However in this case, something happened to the driver’s side one.

2002 Toyota Sienna

What exactly happened we’ll likely never know, but presumably some sort of glancing impact that took out the mirror, tail light, driver’s door handle and scraped along the side perhaps somehow hooking the door to its detriment.  So what could be easier than heading to one of the numerous pick’n’pulls in the area and choosing your favorite color of Sienna left hand sliding door for around $100?  How about instead using a large sheet of a semi-rigid material from Home Depot or similar that’ll do the job just fine?  It even comes in the correct color!

https://www.curbsideclassic.com/blog/junkyard/junkyard-outtake-when-you-just-cant-find-that-roll-of-duct-tape/

While there, a can of expanding spray foam (the ever-appropriate door and window version is best) and a roll of black duct tape that’ll tie in with the roof rack and window tint should take care of things.  But it’s perhaps a little flimsy, no?  Might it rustle in the wind?  What about intruders?  At least in the Matrix featured previously the door was still in place, just in need of some weatherproofing.

2002 Toyota Sienna

So while at the big-box store, pick up a 2×4 to provide all the necessary bracing that might ever be needed along with serving as something akin to side impact protection.  Add in some scrap 1×4 lumber, half a sheet of OSB, a couple of zip ties, maybe a drywall screw or two, a little more foam (gotta use the can up), and the job’s done, high-fives all around, good as new, almost factory fresh, even the color matches the interior.  This may in fact have been MacGyver’s van.

1991 Toyota Camry DX

Looking almost as good as new is our second feature today, a 1991 Toyota Camry DX.  Resplendent in Almond Beige Pearl (Gold for us plebes), this example looks quite good and certainly belies its three decades on the road.  This one has a J-VIN, meaning it was built in Japan, however many of them were also built in Georgetown, Kentucky.

1991 Toyota Camry DX

This angle too looks good, in fact I’m finding these to be fairly attractive if somewhat anonymous cars whereas back in the day I wouldn’t look twice at them.  Relative rarity breeds appreciation or something like that.  I think if I had a choice of any second generation Camry at no charge to me I’d like one in white with the red burlap/tweed-ish cloth interior, twin-cam V-6 and 5-speed manual transmission, I guess the wagon option would be preferred but I could live with the sedan too.  I even like the hubcaps the V-6 models had, however coming back to earth this is just one of the more common 4-cylinder models as churned out by the millions.

1991 Toyota Camry DX

Lookey here, only 167,463 miles on this nugget.  Why oh why is it here, nobody knows and since it’s a Camry, nobody cries either.

1991 Toyota Camry DX

Oh No!  Someone bought themselves some (false) security by using The Club!  Silly someone, when The Man decides it’s time to tow the car and drop it at the junkyard, nothing will stop him, not even an almost perfectly dust-free interior, not a shiny great coat of Almond Beige Pearl paint on the outside, and certainly not The Club!