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In 1973, Toyota coined the term liftback to describe the Celica fastback hatchback, and used the name Liftback GT for the North American market. [ 6 ] [ 7 ] [ 8 ] Like the Ford Mustang , the Celica concept was to attach a coupe body to the chassis and mechanicals from a high volume sedan, in this case the Toyota Carina .
The Toyota Celica Liftback Turbo was a Group 5 Special Production racecar version of the 3-door liftback first generation Toyota Celica GT built by Schnitzer via Toyota Deutschland to compete in Division 1 of the DRM. It competed in the German series in 1977 and 1978. Plagued by reliability problems, it finished twice and won a non-championship ...
Toyota Celica: 1970 2006 Toyota Celica Camry: 1980 1982 Toyota Celica Supra: 1978 1985 Toyota Celica XX: 1978 1985 Toyota Celsior: 1989 2005 also sold as the Lexus LS: Toyota Chaser: 1977 2000 Toyota Classic: 1996 Toyota Comfort: 1995 2017 Toyota Corolla Ceres: 1992 1999 sister car of Sprinter Marino Toyota Corolla II: 1978 1999 Japanese ...
File:1979 Toyota Celica.jpg: Riley derivative work: Mr.choppers This is a retouched picture , which means that it has been digitally altered from its original version.
Toyota MR2: 1984 Honda Civic CR-X: 1983 Mazda 626: 1982 Toyota Celica Supra: 1981 Mercedes-Benz 300SD Turbodiesel: 1980 Honda Civic: 1979 Datsun 280ZX: 1978 Toyota Celica: 1977 Mercedes-Benz 280E: 1976 Toyota Celica Liftback: 1975 No Award 1974 No Award 1973 No Award 1972 No Award 1971 No Award 1970 Porsche 914
The Toyota Celica GT-Four is a high performance model of the Celica Liftback that was produced from 1986 to 1999, with a turbocharged 3S-GTE engine, and full-time AWD.It was created to compete in the World Rally Championship, whose regulations dictate that a manufacturer must build road-going versions of the vehicle in sufficient numbers.
1976 Toyota Celica GT Liftback U.S. Model "Liftback" is a term for hatchback models in which the rear cargo door or hatch is more horizontally angled than on an average hatchback, and as a result, the hatch is lifted more upwards than backward, to open. [12] The term was first used by Toyota in 1973, to describe the Toyota Celica Liftback GT ...
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