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The Toyota Mark II (Japanese: トヨタ・マークII, Hepburn: Toyota Māku Tsū) is a compact, later mid-size sedan manufactured and marketed in Japan by Toyota between 1968 and 2004. Prior to 1972, the model was marketed as the Toyota Corona Mark II .
It inspired future generations of performance-oriented coupes and sports cars offered, to begin with the Crown hardtop coupé in October 1968, the Corona Mark II GSS, the Celica GT, and the Carina GT in 1970 and the Toyota Corolla Levin and Sprinter Trueno in 1972, while a 2.0-litre DOHC engine continued to be offered in subsequent Corona GT ...
Toyopet Corona Mark II / Toyota Corona Mark II (1972–1976) X30, X40. Toyopet Corona Mark II / Toyota Cressida; Toyota Chaser (1976–1980) X50, X60. Toyota Corona Mark II / Toyota Cressida (1980–1984) Toyota Chaser (1980–1984) Toyota Cresta (1980–1984) X70. Toyota Mark II / Toyota Cressida (1984–1988) Toyota Chaser (1984–1988 ...
Toyota Mark II: 1968 2004 also known as the Corona Mark II Toyota Mark II Blit: 2002 2007 Toyota Mark II Qualis: 1997 2002 upmarket version of Camry Gracia wagon Toyota Mark X: 2004 2019 Toyota Mark X ZiO: 2007 2013 Toyota Massy Dyna: 1969 1979 four-ton cab-over truck Toyota Master: 1955 1956 also called the RR: Toyota MasterAce: 1982 1991 ...
Toyota Hilux N20 (1972–1978) Toyota Corona Mark II X10/X20 (1972–1976) 1973. Datsun Sunny B210 (1973–1977) Datsun Violet 710 (1973–1977) Honda 145 (1973–1974)
Toyota upped the ante again with the DOHC (but still 2-valve) 8R-G, produced from 1969 through 1972. From 1969 to Feb 1971 it was known as the 10R , but along with a removal of the tensioner gear in the interest of quieter operation, it was renamed the 8R-G to reflect the decision that twin-cam engines were henceforth to be identified by a "-G ...
The Hilux was offered alongside the Toyota Crown, Toyota Corona, and Toyota Corona Mark II based pickup trucks in Japan until 1972, when the Crown, Corona, and Corona Mark II were repositioned as passenger sedans. In spite of the name "Hilux", it was a luxury vehicle only when compared to the Stout.
The Mark X was introduced in 2004 and is the successor to the Mark II which was first introduced in 1968, and was known in the North American market as the Corona Mark II starting in 1972, and renamed the Cressida from 1977 to 1992. The "Mark X" is not pronounced "Mark Ten" but "Mark Ex", though the "Mark II" is "Mark Two".