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Trucks were built in Toyota Shatai's Honsha Plant, while the vans were assembled by Arakawa Auto Body Industries (also in Honsha). [9] The Stout was Toyota's launch model in South Africa in 1961. It sold well until its discontinuation in 1979. [10] The RK45 Stout was the first Toyota to begin complete knock-down assembly in South Africa, in ...
As fitted to a 1989 Daihatsu Delta truck, the carburetted 4Y produces 70 kW (95 PS; 94 hp) at 4400 rpm (SAE net) [5] and 18.6 kg⋅m (182 N⋅m; 135 lbf⋅ft) at 3000 rpm. [6] Applications. 1987.09 - 1995.12 Toyota Crown (YS132, overseas specifications) Toyota Van (Town Ace overseas specification, Tarago in Australia)
The Toyota Stallion is a nameplate used on three different pickup truck models by Toyota: Toyota Stallion (K40) , a rebadged second-generation Toyota Stout for the South African market, 1965–1978. Toyota Stallion (F40) , a rebadged third-generation Toyota Kijang for the South African market, 1994–2000.
The "K" in the model code was shared, as was the chassis, with the Toyopet SK/RK Truck, a line which was later to become the Toyota Stout. The first Toyoace initially sold slowly, due to a price much higher than the three-wheeled trucks with which it was competing.
there are two lite stouts for sale with 12R engines on gumtree australia, google (Toyota Stout ute barn find rat restore cheap) and (Toyota Lite Stout Tray back Ute - 1967) if you google toyopet RK45 stout images you will find mine i am also yehright — Preceding unsigned comment added by Whysmee (talk • contribs) 07:10, 18 June 2012 (UTC)
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 ...
In the late 1970s, Ertl offered a series of plastic model kits of heavy commercial trucks, over-the-road trailers, tractors, plows, and farm wagons. Although these kits never achieved the hoped-for popularity, they led to the acquisition of AMT. In 1983, AMT was purchased by Ertl from Lesney, and renamed AMT/Ertl.
Model Products Corporation, usually known by its acronym, MPC, is an American brand and former manufacturing company of plastic scale model kits and pre-assembled promotional models of cars that were popular in the 1960s and 1970s. MPC's main competition was model kits made by AMT, Jo-Han, Revell, and Monogram.