ALL vehicles go out of production, in a sense, in that TOOLING has a limited life. SOME tooling may be REPLICATED... and the new dies used to continue LONG runs of production of a common part, however, it doesn't matter, because service parts are generally mandatory 7, 10, 15 year supply obligation or self imposed policy within the automotive industry, especially with the imports. (Because they keep running longer, availability of service parts must be longer to provide replacement when something finally DOES go wrong.) Additionally, companies like Toyota are notorious for utilizing commonization methodologies in their application of sub-system components, electronic, mechanical, trim, etc... to the point that they are utilized across multiple platforms, even if ONE of the models goes out of production. EXCLUSIVE parts are generally made available for lengthy terms anyway as well, and there are always yards when you get 10, 15, 20 years out. I continue to maintain my '89 supra and '94 truck, and the parts will continue to be available for years to come. These are BOTH around the 15 year point since the model went out of production.
If you like the car, DON'T PASS on the grounds of "end-of-model-life". That factor is meaningless, in fact, sometimes, elevates a car's value. (Don't count on it, though...)
BUY IT! On the whole, these are very good cars.
-crisp
