![]() I think they still sell a hard-copy printed shop manual from Helm for several hundred dollars. They don't allow you to share that information and they don't allow you to let others use your subscription. $15/day or two days is fairly reasonable for a TIS subscription and TIS has publicly said they don't mind you downloading the information for later personal usage (but they don't make the format/file naming easy for you to do that). I think what Haynes really does is wait 3-years b/c most people don't care about doing their own repairs while they can get it fixed for free under warranty. ![]() the brakes and suspension are close enough to a 10th gen where directions from there oughta be damn near verbatim for what they would be for an 11th gen. ![]() Usually they wait until the generation is halfway through its life, at least in my experience (most of the time, they wait until the generation ends depending on the popularity of the car). Haynes won't release anything until later, because they don't want to have to reprint the book for mid-year changes (for example, they release a 2014 manual right away, then the rear center armrest comes out in 2015. I won't post anything here, just because if Toyota catches us sharing information from the TIS website, it is going to raise hell here for the owners of the forum. ![]() what I did was a two-day subscription and then screen capped what I needed or planned to need in the future). Only option right now is self-exploration (as many of us have done) or Toyota's TIS website (which you have to subscribe to.
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