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The Toyota Camry (XV10) is a mid-size car that was produced by Toyota between 1991 and 1996 in Japan and North America, and 1993 and 1997 in Australia. The XV10 series represented the third generation of the Toyota Camry in all markets outside Japan, which followed a different generational lineage. The XV10 Camry range is split into different ...
Rear view of Toyota Celica Camry 1.8 XT. The "Camry" nameplate originated on a four-door sedan approximate to the Toyota Celica called the Celica Camry. Toyota designated this initial application of the Camry name as the A40/A50 series. Celica Camry made its sales debut in January 1980 [9] at Toyota Corolla Store retail dealerships in Japan. [10]
The Toyota Camry (XV20) is a mid-size car that was sold by Toyota between September 1996 and 2001 in Japan and North America, and 1997 and 2002 in Australia. [3] Introduced on 3 September 1996, the XV20 series represented the fourth generation of the Toyota Camry in all markets outside Japan, which followed a different generational lineage.
Station wagon: Corolla: 1966 E160: 2012 Japan Station wagon version of the E160 Corolla, continues to be sold as the Corolla Fielder alongside the E210 Corolla Touring in Japan. E210: 2018 Europe and Japan Station wagon version of the Corolla, primarily marketed in Europe and Japan. Marketed with a short-wheelbase in Japan. Hybrid powertrain is ...
On August 27, 2001, [2] for the 2002 model year, the Toyota Camry was released as a larger sedan (taking styling cues from the successful Vitz, Corolla and Solara) only, but without a station wagon for the first time. Due to station wagons losing popularity to minivans and crossover SUVs, the Camry wagon was replaced by the Sienna minivan (in ...
The XV80 Camry is underpinned by the same GA-K platform as the XV70, retaining the underlying body structure, front doors and roofline, with some changes such as revised dampers and revised tuning for improved comfort. The front fascia design adopts Toyota's 'hammerhead' grille and slimmer headlights integrates the C-shaped daytime running lights.
The Toyota Lexcen reached Toyota dealerships in 1989, the same year that Toyota models arrived in Holden showrooms. The Lexcen was Toyota's version of the Holden Commodore , [ 16 ] available in the same sedan and station wagon body styles, but only in the V6 engine and automatic transmission guise.
Toyota Camry; Toyota Aurion; Lexus ES350; MCV (1MZ, 2MZ, 3MZ V6 engine) 1994–2004 Toyota Windom; 1994–2005 Toyota Camry, Toyota Camry Vienta; 1994–2003 Lexus ES300; 2004–2006 Lexus ES330; SXV platform (5S-FE, 3S-FE engine) 1991–2001 Toyota Camry; 1991–1996 Toyota Windom; VCV (3VZ-FE 3.0 V6, 4VZ-FE 2.5 V6) 1991–1996 Toyota Camry Vienta