Toyota 3VZE Engine for Sale | OEM 3.0L V6 SOHC for 4Runner T100 and Pickup

SKU: pn302
In Stock

$3,995.00

Product Overview

  • Displacement: 2,958 cc (3.0L / 180.6 cu in)
  • Configuration: V6, 60-degree, SOHC per bank, 12 valves
  • Horsepower: 145 to 150 hp at 4,800 rpm
  • Torque: 180 lb-ft at 3,400 rpm
  • Condition: OEM used, compression tested and inspected
  • Availability: Call to confirm current availability
  • Shipping: Free freight to all 50 states, 5 to 10 business days
  • All 6 cylinders pressure-tested with results shared before payment
  • Head gasket condition specifically assessed, cross-contamination check mandatory before shipping
  • Oil and coolant cross-contamination check performed on every unit
  • Updated versus original head gasket status disclosed where determinable
  • Zero core charge required, your existing engine stays with you
  • Backed by a 15 day replacement warranty against internal defects
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Description

Engine Background

The Toyota 3VZE is the 3.0-liter V6 engine that powered the Toyota 4Runner, Toyota Pickup, and Toyota T100 from 1988 through 1995. It introduced V6 power to Toyota’s truck lineup, a significant step up from the four-cylinder engines that had previously powered these vehicles. With 150 hp and 180 lb-ft of torque, it was competitive for its era, though it was notably underwhelming in the heavier 4Runner and T100 applications.

The 3VZE is most honestly described as an engine with a significant and well-documented weakness: the head gasket. The root cause is a thermal expansion mismatch between the cast iron block and aluminum cylinder heads, combined with a 1990 redesign of the head gasket that removed asbestos from the material, asbestos being an excellent thermal seal. Toyota acknowledged the problem by extending the head gasket warranty to 8 years and 100,000 miles and ultimately redesigning the gasket with improved molybdenum coating and bore grommets. Engines with the updated Toyota redesigned gasket are significantly more reliable than those with the original design.

For buyers in the market for a 3VZE, the most important question to ask is: has the head gasket been replaced with the updated Toyota design? We assess this, and cross-contamination between coolant and oil, before every unit ships. Any unit showing coolant-oil cross-contamination is rejected.

When Replacement Becomes Necessary

  • Coolant loss without visible external leak, the 3VZE’s most common failure sign. Check the oil for a milky brown appearance (coolant in oil) or the coolant for an oily sheen.
  • White exhaust smoke on startup that does not clear after warmup, coolant burning in the combustion chamber from a failed head gasket
  • Overheating, can be caused by a restricted cooling fan (electric fan on 3VZE is a known weak point), blocked radiator, or head gasket failure
  • Oil consumption above normal, valve stem seal wear on high-mileage units
  • Knocking under load, connecting rod bearing wear, a documented secondary issue on high-mileage 3VZE engines
  • Hard hot start, a known 3VZE characteristic related to the fuel injection system on aged units

Known Issues We Document Before Shipping

  • Head gasket failure, the dominant 3VZE concern: the iron block and aluminum head expand at different rates under heat cycling. The original head gasket design (pre-redesign) could not consistently maintain a seal under this thermal stress. Toyota extended the warranty and redesigned the gasket. We specifically check for oil-coolant cross-contamination on every 3VZE unit and reject any showing contamination.
  • Connecting rod bearing wear: a documented secondary issue on high-mileage 3VZE engines. We listen for rod knock and inspect oil for metallic content before shipping.
  • Electric cooling fan reliability: the 3VZE relies on an electric cooling fan that can fail or weaken with age, causing overheating. We note fan condition where inspectable.
  • Crossover pipe restriction (performance limitation): the 3VZE uses a crossover exhaust manifold design that restricts flow. This is a known performance limitation on the engine and contributes to its modest output. We note crossover pipe condition externally.
  • Updated versus original head gasket: distinguishing the updated Toyota gasket from the original design requires either disassembly or service history documentation. We disclose what is determinable from external indicators and donor history.

3VZE Variants by Year and Application

Critical buyer information across the 1988 to 1995 production run:

Engine Years HP Valvetrain Notes
3VZ-E 1988 to 1995 145 to 150 hp SOHC per bank, 12 valves Cast iron block, aluminum heads. Head gasket issue. 4Runner, Pickup, T100.
3VZ-FE 1992 to 1997 180 hp DOHC per bank, 24 valves Higher output version. Used in Camry V6 and ES300/Lexus applications. Different block- NOT interchangeable with 3VZ-E.
5VZ-FE 1995 to 2004 190 to 205 hp DOHC per bank, 24 valves Replaced the 3VZ-E. 3.4L. Significantly more reliable. Popular swap into 3VZ-E applications.
INCLUDED- Long Block Cast iron block, crankshaft, pistons, connecting rods, SOHC camshafts (one per bank), aluminum cylinder heads, valve train, oil pan, front timing cover.
NOT INCLUDED Intake manifold, EFI fuel rail and injectors, exhaust manifolds (crossover pipe), alternator, power steering pump, A/C compressor, starter, distributor and ignition system, flywheel, accessory brackets.
Head Gasket Note Head gasket condition is assessed and disclosed before shipping. If a replacement is needed after installation, always use the Toyota updated redesigned head gasket- not the original design.
Core Note No core charge.

What Ships and What Does Not

Toyota 4Runner (2nd and 3rd generation) 1988 to 1995- 2WD and 4WD
Toyota Pickup (Hilux) V6 1988 to 1995- 2WD and 4WD
Toyota T100 1992 to 1994- the 3VZE's last application before the 5VZE replaced it

Direct-Fit Vehicle Applications

3VZE engine Most common buyer search code
Toyota 3VZE Full engine designation
Toyota 3.0 V6 Displacement-format search
4Runner 3.0 engine Application-specific buyer
Toyota V6 truck engine Broad Toyota V6 truck buyer
3VZ-E engine Hyphenated code search
T100 engine T100 application buyer
Toyota Pickup V6 engine Pickup application buyer
3VZE replacement engine Replacement buyer intent
Toyota 3VZ motor Motor vs engine buyer

Used OEM Versus Specialist Rebuild

For a 4Runner, Toyota Pickup, or T100 with a worn or failed 3VZE, a documented used unit with head gasket condition specifically assessed and cross-contamination ruled out is the cost-effective path. Given the 3VZE’s known head gasket history, many buyers opt for a specialist rebuild with the updated Toyota gasket and refreshed valvetrain regardless. Specialist 3VZE rebuilds typically run $3,500 to $5,500 from established Toyota truck shops. For a high-value 4Runner or T100 restoration, the rebuild path is often the better long-term investment.

Inspection Workflow

  • Compression test logged across all 6 cylinders with uniformity reported
  • Head gasket condition specifically assessed via coolant cross-contamination check (oil and coolant inspected for mixing)
  • Year and donor application documented (4Runner, Pickup, or T100)
  • Updated versus original head gasket status disclosed where determinable
  • Connecting rod bearing condition assessed via knock listen and oil inspection
  • Electric cooling fan condition noted where accessible
  • External oil leak survey at valve covers, front and rear seals, oil pan

Pre-Purchase Buyer Notes

  • Plan a head gasket service at installation regardless of donor service history: this is the safest path on a 3VZE. Use the updated Toyota gasket design with the molybdenum coating and bore grommets. Inexpensive insurance against the engine’s known weakness.
  • Verify cooling fan operation: the electric cooling fan is a known weak point. Replace or service if there is any doubt about its operation. Overheating from a weak fan is a leading cause of 3VZE head gasket failure.
  • Refresh the timing belt at installation: the 3VZE uses a timing belt. Factory service interval is approximately 90,000 miles. Always refresh timing belt, water pump, and tensioner at installation regardless of donor service records.
  • Match year to your application: 1988 to 1989 3VZE engines were carbureted in some configurations; 1990-and-newer used EFI. Match fuel system to your chassis.
  • Plan for modest output: the 3VZE is not a strong performance engine even in fresh condition. Set expectations accordingly. For more output, the 5VZ-FE that replaced the 3VZE in 1995 is a significant upgrade but is not directly interchangeable.

Why Buy From Part Nests

  • Head gasket condition specifically assessed before payment, the 3VZE’s known weakness
  • Oil and coolant cross-contamination check performed on every unit
  • Updated versus original head gasket status disclosed where determinable
  • Year and donor application documented (4Runner, Pickup, or T100)
  • Connecting rod bearing condition assessed
  • Electric cooling fan condition noted where accessible
  • All 6 cylinders compression-tested with uniformity reported
  • No core return required
  • Free freight delivery to every state
  • 15 day replacement warranty against internal defects
  • Call (240) 306-7051 to speak with someone who knows 3VZE head gasket failure history, updated versus original gasket identification, and 4Runner versus Pickup versus T100 application matching

Additional information

displacement

2, 958 cc (3.0L / 180.6 cu in)

engine-code

3VZ-E

configuration

12 valves, 60-degree, SOHC per bank, V6

bore-x-stroke

87.5 mm x 82 mm

compression-ratio

9.0:1

horsepower

145 to 150 hp at 4, 800 rpm

torque

180 lb-ft at 3, 400 rpm

aspiration

Naturally Aspirated

fuel-system

Multi-point EFI

block-material

Cast Iron

head-material

Aluminum alloy

timing-system

Rubber timing belt- interference engine- MUST replace at installation

production-years

1988 to 1995

manufacturer

Toyota Motor Corporation

applications

Toyota 4Runner, Toyota Pickup (Hilux), Toyota T100

known-issue

Head gasket failures- cross-contamination check mandatory before every unit ships

replaced-by

5VZ-FE 3.4L V6 (1995 onward)- significantly more reliable alternative

condition

compression tested and inspected, Used OEM

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