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The Toyota Innova is a series of multi-purpose vehicles (MPV) manufactured by the Japanese carmaker Toyota since 2004, mainly sold with three-row seating.. The Innova is the replacement for wagon versions of Kijang (internally known as the Toyota Utility Vehicle), which was also marketed under different names such as Tamaraw FX/Revo, Unser, Zace and Condor.
A Toyota 1TR-FE engine, found in 2004-2015 Toyota Innova. The 1TR-FE is a 2.0 L (1,998 cc) ... Average fuel consumption using the JC08 method is 9 km/L ...
In 1987, Toyota began assigning dual letter engine codes to some of the "engine family" categories in some engine lines, particularly six-cylinder models. This can create potential confusion. E.g. 1MZ-FE – This is not a supercharged, narrow angle, fuel injected M-series engine, but a narrow angle, fuel injected MZ-series engine. Confusion is ...
Toyota Innova / Toyota Kijang Innova (2004–2016) AN50, AN60. Toyota Fortuner / Toyota Hilux SW4 (2004–2016) AN120, AN130. Toyota Hilux (2015–present) Toyota Hilux Champ (2023–present, AN120) AN140. Toyota Innova / Toyota Kijang Innova (2015–present) AN150, AN160. Toyota Fortuner / Toyota SW4 (2015–present) GUN Platform (1GD, 2GD engine)
In the second generation Toyota Innova, it generates 149 PS (110 kW; 147 hp) at 3400 rpm, and 36.7 kg⋅m (360 N⋅m; 265 lb⋅ft) of torque at 1200-2600 rpm when mated to a 6-speed automatic transmission, depending on target market and emission specifications.
Fuel cell vehicle using methanol Toyota Hilux FCEV concept: 2023 Fuel cell vehicle based on the Hilux Toyota FCHV: 1997 Series of fuel cell hybrid vehicles based on the Highlander: Toyota FCHV-1: 1997 First FCHV Toyota FCHV-2: 1999 Second FCHV Toyota FCHV-3: 2001 Third FCHV Toyota FCHV-4: 2002 Fourth FCHV Toyota FCHV-adv: 2008 Fifth FCHV Toyota ...
The Toyota Dynamic Force engine is a family of internal combustion engines developed by Toyota under its Toyota New Global Architecture (TNGA) strategy. These I3 , I4 and V6 engines can be operated with petrol (gasoline) or ethanol ( flex-fuel ) and can be combined with electric motors in a hybrid drivetrain.
By the end of 2006 there were about 15 hybrid vehicles from various car makers available in the U.S. [1] By May 2007 Toyota sold its first million hybrids and had sold a total of two million hybrids at the end of August 2009. [2]