Close Menu
  • News
  • Featured
  • Electric Cars
  • Luxury Cars
  • Reviews
  • Advice

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Motor Fortune about Electric Cars, Luxury Cars, design and More.

What's Hot

For Best Results, Skip the F Sport

June 5, 2026

Why the 7.3L Is the One To Buy

June 5, 2026

$8000 slashed from Hyundai EVs

June 5, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest Vimeo
Engine IconEngine Icon
  • News
  • Featured
  • Electric Cars
  • Luxury Cars
  • Reviews
  • Advice
Subscribe
Engine IconEngine Icon
Home»Luxury car»The Toyota 4Runner Trailhunter’s Snorkel Isn’t Even a Snorkel, So Be Careful
Luxury car

The Toyota 4Runner Trailhunter’s Snorkel Isn’t Even a Snorkel, So Be Careful

February 23, 2026No Comments3 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

The biggest car news and reviews, no BS

Our free daily newsletter sends the stories that really matter directly to you, every weekday.

The Toyota 4Runner’s lineup expanded with the current generation and now offers a dizzying nine trims, two powertrains, and two four-wheel-drive systems. New for the sixth generation is the Trailhunter, and for many enthusiasts, it’s love at first sight. The Toyota 4Runner Trailhunter’s Snorkel Isn’t Even a Snorkel, So Be Careful

The 4Runner Trailhunter is worth getting excited about; I sure was when it debuted! With 2.5-inch forged ARB Old Man Emu shocks with external piggyback remote reservoirs, and 33-inch all-terrain rubber from the factory, this thing comes packing. It also comes standard with a snorkel, but it’s probably not for what you think.

Up front, Toyota doesn’t even call that thing that comes out of the passenger-side front fender and up the A-pillar a snorkel. The Japanese automaker dubs it a “high-mount air intake.” Looks like a snorkel, right? Maybe, but there’s a big and important difference between a snorkel and a high-mount intake setup.

Confusing the two could be the difference between a fun adventure and a bad day that, at worst, could result in destroying your engine.

A snorkel is a sealed, high-mount air intake system that enables a vehicle to ford deeper water, increasing its ability to breathe higher. The keyword there is sealed, to ensure water doesn’t get into the intake system and drown the engine, which, at worst, could result in a seizure and a rebuild.

2025 Toyota 4Runner Trailhunter
2025 Toyota 4Runner Trailhunter
2025 Toyota 4Runner Trailhunter
Joel Feder

Toyota calls it a high-mount air intake because it’s not water-tight. The design simply moves the air intake point of entry higher off the ground, so if you were traversing dusty trails, the air grabbed and sucked into the engine will have a better chance of being clean and free of those dust particles.

See also  2025 Toyota Crown Signia Video Review
2025 Toyota 4Runner TRD Pro
Joel Feder

Plot twist: The 4Runner TRD Pro, which is meant for going fast over unpaved earth, whereas the Trailhunter is meant for going slow on unpaved earth, does not have a high-mount air intake.

Aside from functional confusion comes livability. The high-mount air intake is loud. Start the 4Runner, and you’ll hear the air suck into that turbo-four hybrid powertrain when the engine starts up. Every time the throttle is applied, a loud whoosh comes online. These noises are more hidden and in the background in other applications, like the 4Runner’s taller, boxier sibling, the Land Cruiser, because the intake is hidden under the hood and behind the firewall. Same deal with every other 4Runner trim, except the Trailhunter.

Look, I adore the fact that the Trailhunter gets skid plates that run from the front bumper back to behind the transfer case. I will tell you the Trailhunter’s suspension and tire pairing make it easily the most comfortable 4Runner out of the box. But whether you want to live with the intake? That’s up to you and whether you and your loved ones are down with the whoosh whoosh noises from the turbo-four. Functionally speaking, it won’t let you go through deeper water or really enhance your off-road experience at all. Buyer beware.

Got a question about how something works or a feature? Drop us a line at feedback@thedrive.com

As Director of Content and Product, Joel draws on over 15 years of newsroom experience and inability to actually stop working to help ensure The Drive shapes the future of automotive media. He’s also a World Car Award juror.

See also  Ford GT Mk IV becomes the fastest American car at the Nurburgring

Source link

4Runner Careful isnt Snorkel Toyota Trailhunters
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleMarket Insight: NVES debut winners and losers
Next Article 2018 Nissan Kicks compact SUV comes to US

Related Posts

Luxury car

For Best Results, Skip the F Sport

June 5, 2026
Luxury car

Carmakers Panic About Memory Chips, GRMN Corolla US Allocation Revealed, Tesla’s Unsupervised Robotaxis Hit Austin

June 4, 2026
Luxury car

Extraordinarily Capable, Just Shy About It

June 3, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Honda Civic Type R vs Audi RS 3: the ultimate hot hatch face-off

December 2, 2025

Lamborghini Diablo Buyers Guide – Exotic Car List

December 2, 2025

Jeep Renegade review

December 4, 2025
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Latest Reviews
Reviews

Why the 7.3L Is the One To Buy

June 5, 2026
Reviews

Hyundai Santa Fe Hybrid Reviews | Overview

June 3, 2026
Reviews

2025 Polestar 4 Review — Sporty And Relaxing

June 3, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Motor Fortune about Electric Cars, Luxury Cars, design and More.

Most Popular

Get a Car Wash Bundle for Under $13 During the Advance Auto Parts Spring Sale

March 20, 2026

Lucid Motors targets affordable EV market with new Cosmos and Earth models

March 15, 2026

Rivian Says Fight Over Apple CarPlay Is ‘Completely Obsolete’ Thanks To AI

May 30, 2026
From Our Sponsors

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from Motor Fortune about Electric Cars, Luxury Cars, design and More.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
© 2026 Engine Icon - All rights reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.