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1982 Toyota Supra 2.8i L-Type (MA61) In 1981, for the 1982 model year, in the North American market, the Celica Supra's engine was the 2.8-litre 12-valve (two valves per cylinder) DOHC 5M-GE. Power output was 145 hp (108 kW; 147 PS) SAE net and 155 lb⋅ft (210 N⋅m) of torque.
Toyota Celica 1.8 VVT-i (ZZT230, Germany) Toyota Celica 1.8 VVTL-i GT (ZZT231, UK) All the 7th generation Celica models for Europe have the 6-speed manual transmission and all around disc brakes, and was just marketed as 1.8 VVT-i and 1.8 VVTL-i 190 or T-Sport, which are the GT and GT-S, respectively.
Toyota Carina Surf: 1982 1992 wagon version of Carina Toyota Carina II: 1984 1992 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 ...
Toyota Celica: 1984 1993 [154] Toyota MR2: 1984 1999 [150] Toyota Sprinter Trueno/Corolla coupé: 1983 1991 [155] Toyota Supra: 1982 1992 [156] Toyota Tercel: 1986 ...
The 1982 version had a vacuum-advance distributor, whereas the 1983–1988 versions found in the Celica Supra and Cressida had full electronic control of the ignition system and distributor. The newer engine control system found in these later cars was named TCCS, or T oyota C omputer C ontrol S ystem and, together with different intake runners ...
1981 Toyota Celica Supra; 1981 Toyota Pickup 2WD 2.4L I4 22R (California emissions only, Federal emissions used A43) 1982–1995 Toyota Pickup 2WD 2.4L I4 22R/RE; 1982–1995 Toyota Cab/Chassis 2.4L I4 22R/RE (flatbed, cube, motorhome) 1982–1985 Toyota Celica XX 2000G/S turbo; 1982 Toyota Crown Royal 2.8L I6 5MG; 1982–1985 Volvo 240 2.1L ...
The Toyota R family was a series of inline-four gasoline automobile engines. Designed for longitudinal placement in such vehicles as the Celica and Hilux and in production from 1953 through 1997, usage faded out as many of Toyota's mainstream models moved to front-wheel drive.
The Toyota TOM'S Supra GT500 race car used a version of the 3S-GTE known as the 3S-GT, another name for the 503E which was detuned to 360 kW (480 bhp), in accordance to the regulations of GT500 at the time. This was due to the Supra's conventional engine, the 2JZ, being deemed as too front-heavy for the race car. [17]