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The Toyota Soarer (Japanese: トヨタ・ソアラ, Hepburn: Toyota Soara) is a personal luxury GT coupé produced from 1981 to 2005 by Toyota and sold in Japan. It was available at both Japanese Toyota dealerships called Toyota Store and Toyopet Store, and it debuted with the Z10 series, replacing the Toyopet Store exclusive Mark II coupé, the Toyota Auto Store exclusive Chaser coupé, and ...
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Toyota Soarer: 1981 2005 also sold as the Lexus SC: Toyota Solara: 1999 2008 Toyota Soluna: 1996 2003 variant of the Tercel made in Thailand and sold in Asia Toyota Space Cruiser: 1984 1989 UK version of the Van/Tarago/Model F: Toyota Sparky: 2000 2003 a rebadge of Daihatsu Atrai 7: Toyota Sports 800: 1965 1969 Toyota SportsVan: 1995 2009 ...
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1JZ-GTE (non VVT-i) in a 1991 Toyota Mark II 2.5GT Twin Turbo Third Generation 1JZ-GTE VVT-i transplanted into a 1989 MX83 Toyota Cressida. The 1JZ-GTE is a twin-turbocharged version of the 1JZ, produced from 1990 to 2007. The first generation 1JZ-GTE employs twin CT12A turbochargers arranged in parallel and blowing through a side-mount or ...
TEMS (Toyota Electronic Modulated Suspension) is a shock absorber that is electronically controlled (Continuous Damping Control) based on multiple factors, and was built and exclusively used by Toyota for selected products during the 1980s and 1990s (first introduced on the Toyota Soarer in 1983 [1]).
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. Redirect page. Redirect to: Toyota concept vehicles (1980–1989)#Soarer Aero Cabin
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.