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The 2T-G was replaced by the 4A-GE in most applications. Applications: Toyota Corolla Levin/Sprinter Trueno E20 through E70 series; Toyota Celica A20 through A60 series; Toyota Carina A10 through A60 series; Like the 2.0 L 18R-G, the 2T-G was considered the flagship engine of Toyota's 1600 class until it was superseded by the 4A-GE in the 1980s ...
After Toyota's takeover of Hino Motors in 1967, the Briska one-tonne truck was sold with Toyota badging for ten months. The engine code was changed from Hino's "GR100" to "G" for these cars. [5] The engine is a 1251 cc watercooled OHV inline-four with distant Renault origins and was originally developed by Hino for their Contessa passenger car ...
Other manufacturers may modify the engine after it has left the Toyota factory but the engine still keeps the original Toyota designation. For example, Lotus added a supercharger to the 2ZZ-GE in some versions of the Lotus Elise and Exige, but the engine is still labelled 2ZZ-GE, not 2ZZ-GZE. Examples: 3S-GTE 3S – Third model in the S engine ...
1991.5-1994 Toyota Crown Athlete G; 1989.5-1998 Toyota Comfort; MS Platform (3M, 4M, 5M, 7M engine) 1967–1988 Toyota Crown; 1989.5–1998 Toyota Comfort; GRS Platform (2GR, 3GR, 4GR V6 engines) 2003–present Toyota Crown Athlete; 2003–present Toyota Crown Royal Saloon; 2006–2007 Lexus GS300; 2007–present Lexus GS350; JZS Platform (1JZ ...
Toyota reintroduced the twin coupés in January 1977 with a minor facelift and also the new fuel injected version of the 2T-G engine with the Toyota Total Clean-Catalyst (TTC-C) emission control technology, with the installation of catalytic converter to pass the Japanese 1976 emission regulation, now called the 2T-GEU. [9]
18R-G on an engine stand. The 2-valve DOHC 18R-G and its variations were produced from 1973 to 1982, replacing the 8R-G and providing a performance engine which took advantage of the entire 2-litre limit of Japan's "small car" class. [7] While most 18R-Gs had a head designed and made by Yamaha, a very few had Toyota heads.
The 1.5 L 1A was produced between 1978 and 1980. [6] All variants were belt-driven 8-valve counter-flow SOHC engines with a single, twin-barrel downdraft carburetor.It used Toyota's Turbulence Generating Pot (TGP) lean combustion system to meet Japanese emissions standards at the time with only an oxidation (2-way) catalyst. [7]
The coupé range received the 1588 cc, DOHC 2T-G engine in March 1972; this model was known as the Sprinter Trueno, the twin of the Corolla Levin. Another facelift occurred in August 1972 and the 5-speed manual became available for the sporty SL/SR grades with 1.2 L 3K-B/BR engine.