The person who said to read the owners manual, obviously has never replaced the 120 amp fuse. It is held in with a screw from the bottom of the fuse box. It would never mention something like this in the owners manual.
Approximately 194 kmph (120 mph)
You don't it is a 100 amp fuse.
You have to replace brake shoes.
The fuse is probably underneath the hood in a black fuse box. Disconnect the positive battery terminal first! you might need a pair of pliers to take it out as they are large. Lind up the spades with the slots in the fuse receptacle and push down firmly and gentle til it slides back into place. Only then replace the battery terminal.
There is no RHD Tacoma. Outside of North America the Tacoma is replaced by the Hilux. The Hilux is not the same truck as it does not share the same platform. The Tacoma is a 120 platform, the Hilux is a Prado platform.
you should be able to find the fuse at your local pepboys. just buy it pop your hood and remove the fuse cover to the right of your engine compartment and there you will find the fuse usually the white, leftmost fuse ****WRONG INFO HERE****simply pop it out with a flathead s. driver or a fuse removal tool (supplied with fuse sometimes).*** ****It's actually harder than that. Remove the fuse cover and it will be on the left, only fuse that says 120. You will need to take off four nuts (not bolts) that are facing up vertically. Then remove the yellow cables that are underneath that. The fuse box will be able to lift up. Turn it over as much as possible to look at the bottom side. The last and hardest step is to remove the bolts that are horizontally holding onto the 120 fuse. These are a pain to get to, one more so than the other. Just use a wrench since a socket wont fit in the tiny space! Then replace the fuse and replace the pesky screws and fuse cover.******
120
First, locate the fuse box. Then, once inside the fuse box, locate the 120 amp fuse. Remove it by pulling it straight out. Lastly, place the new one in place of the old one.
Disconnect the battery. Remove the fuse board cover. Remove 3 bolts (10mm) retaining the fuse board. Lift the fuse board - underneath, either side of the 120 Amp fuse, remove the bolt (13mm) which is passed through the 120 Amp fuse legs.
had mine up to 120+
Yes....120 amo
A fuse rating is normally the 120% of the rated full load current. So, 4 amps times 120% is (4x120%) = 4.8amps