Good advise, but not possible. The sales rep and sales manager assured me that they could make the delivery date.
After I got the refund I loaded the 97' and arranged with a dealer in Colorado to pick up a 2014 from them. Then early the next morning the local (in Illinois at that time) sales rep called, the 14' they had promised had been dropped off at the dealer late at night. So I off loaded the 97' traded it in and picked up and loaded the 14' complete with blue tarp covering the load of furniture and luggage and left the next morning. I am now 600 miles down the road in Nebraska, the new Tacoma is running well.
The next event will be 1,600 miles down the road in Oregon where a Leer topper is to be waiting for me. Will see how that works out.
Talking with the Toyota sales manager I was told that the confusion in delivery is caused by cold weather and trains. The factory in Texas ships the vehicles via train to distribution points (Chicago in my case) where the vehicles are then sent via semi-trailers to the dealers. In extreme cold weather (below zero) the trains have to be shortened. The hydraulic fluid feeding the train car brakes performs poorly in cold weather and the number of cars has to be reduced. During the time my truck was being shipped the temperatures got down to minus twenty-two (F). So the train car with my truck got sidelined somewhere along the way and was delayed. As I said, this is what I was told. Who knows how accurate a story this is, perhaps it is real or perhaps Toyota corporate was telling stories to its dealers. Regardless I would have expected Toyota to know where their train cars of vehicles were even if they were left on a rail siding in Kansas!