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The Prado may also be referred to as Land Cruiser LC70, LC90, LC120, LC150 and LC250 depending on the platform. In some markets, it is known simply as the Toyota Prado or the Toyota Land Cruiser. Up until the J150 model, the Prado was not part of the Land Cruiser range in North America; the rebadged Lexus GX occupied the Prado's position in ...
The Toyota RZ engine family is a straight-four piston engine series built in Japan. The RZ series uses a cast-iron engine block and aluminum SOHC or DOHC cylinder heads . It has electronic fuel injection (EFI), 2 or 4 valves per cylinder and features forged steel connecting rods .
The Toyota VZ engine family is a series of V6 gasoline piston engines ranging from 2.0 to 3.4 L (1,992 to 3,378 cc) in displacement and both SOHC and DOHC configurations. [1] It was Toyota's first V6 engine, being made as a response to Nissan’s VG engine, one of Japan's first mass-produced V6 engines.
1989 – RZ – SOHC/DOHC. 1989–2004 – 2.0 L (1998 cc) 1RZ; 1989–2006 – 2.4 L (2400 cc) 2RZ; 1990–2004 – 2.7 L (2693 cc) 3RZ; 1999 – SZ – DOHC (by ...
Toyota Land Cruiser Prado / Toyota Land Cruiser II (1990–1996) J80. Toyota Land Cruiser (1990–1997) Lexus LX (1995–1997) J90. Toyota Land Cruiser Prado (1996–2002) J100. Toyota Land Cruiser (1998–2007, J100: Independent front suspension) Toyota Land Cruiser (1998–2007, J105: Solid-axle, J80 based chassis)
Land Cruiser II, Land Cruiser Prado Toyota 4runner and Hilux Surf (1989-1995) 2L-T series and 1KZ series Turbo Diesel, V6 3VZE and 5VZ-FE (also Japan, UK and Europe 1KZ/TE 4Runner 89–95) T100: 1995-1998 5VZ-FE 4WD 5MT Transfer case - VF1A Tacoma/Hilux: 1988–1995.5 3VZ-E 4WD 1995.5-2004 5VZ-FE 4WD N160/N170/N190 4Runner/Hilux Surf:
Toyota also manufactured lighter duty versions that shared the 70 Series designation from 1985 to 1996 and were marketed in various parts of the world initially as the Bundera, [citation needed] or Land Cruiser II and later as the Prado. Of these, the Prado name stuck, and each modification took it further from its 70 Series roots.
Lexus introduced the GX 470 at the North American International Auto Show in January 2002 as a 2003 model, with sales commencing in November 2002. The GX development program began in 1999 following the J120 Toyota Land Cruiser Prado in 1997, with design work by Shoichi Fujiyoshi concluding in the first half of 2000. [7]