Ok, so back in early 2017 I purchased a 178,000 mile Salvage Title Toyota Tundra. I love everything about the truck, and the last 15k miles have actually gone really smoothly (I'm at 192,000 now). Immediately after purchase I put a water pump and timing belt on it, so if nothing else fails I should be able to get at least 90,000 miles out of it.
It wasn't a good deal, and I likely wouldn't make the same decision again. I rushed into purchasing the vehicle instead of waiting for a non-salvage example, and I shouldn't have done that.
The rebuild of the truck was pretty good. Externally and in the engine bay, it's very hard to tell that the truck was in accident.
Airbag wise is a different story.
The side airbags and curtains did not deploy. The seat belt charges did. The front airbags both did. The previous owner lied to me about replacing the airbags, he simply said "just replace the airbag control module and you'll be good."
So, I need two seat belts, steering-wheel airbag and passenger-side airbag and airbag control module.
I've got a passenger side airbag for $50. Score!
I can get seat belts and airbag control module repaired and reset for $200. This is nice because they also replace the winders so saggy seatbelts will be fixed as well.
I can probably get a new steering wheel airbag for $100.
The problem is this: all the airbags are part of the Takata recall. Toyota won't replace them if they don't exist, so I've got to have them in order to be replaced. We all know how quickly the Takata Airbag recall is going...
Option 1) Get the system in good working order for around $400-$500 with shrapnel airbags, reset control module, and new seatbelt retractors with pretensioner charges reinstalled.
Option 2) Get the shrapnel airbags and seat belts $250, let Toyota replace the airbags and airbag control module as part of the recall.
Option 3) Get the rebuilt seatbelts for $150, don't worry about anything else.
Important Note: If tomorrow the motor of this truck blew up, I'd pay for it's replacement ($3000). If I wrecked it badly, it would be a total loss ($7000 invested).