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The 2T-G was replaced by the 4A-GE in most applications. Applications: Toyota Corolla Levin/Sprinter Trueno E20 through E70 series; Toyota Celica A20 through A60 series; Toyota Carina A10 through A60 series; Like the 2.0 L 18R-G, the 2T-G was considered the flagship engine of Toyota's 1600 class until it was superseded by the 4A-GE in the 1980s ...
The use of "G" to denote twin cam engines was decided on in 1971, with the renaming of the 10R into 8R-G. Before that, twin cams had received separate numerical codes. [1] In 1987, Toyota began assigning dual letter engine codes to some of the "engine family" categories in some engine lines, particularly six-cylinder models.
The Corolla Levin and Sprinter Trueno names were introduced as the enhanced performance version of the Corolla and Sprinter respectively when a double overhead camshaft version of the 2T engine was introduced in March 1972 (TE27). In September 1970, the 1400 cc T and 1600 cc 2T OHV engines were added to the range. [7] [6]
The 3K engine was used in certain markets and later the 4K, while most Japanese and American models had the bigger 2T engine. A "Toyoglide" 2/3-speed automatic transmission was added as well as a four-speed (K40/T40) and five-speed (K50/T50) manual transmission, driving to the rear wheels.
1966.11–1983.05 Toyota Sprinter; TE Platform (T, 2T, 3T engine) 1966.11–1983.05 Toyota Corolla; 1966.11–1983.05 Toyota Sprinter; AE Platform (3A, 4A engine) 1982–2000 Toyota Corolla; 1982–2000 Toyota Sprinter; CE Platform (1C, 2C engine) Toyota Corolla; Toyota Sprinter; ZZE Platform (1ZZ, 2ZZ engine) Toyota Corolla; Toyota Sprinter ...
1982 Corona with 3A engine; 1983 Corona with 1S/3T-E engine-1981 TA40, 1983 Carina with 3A/2T engine; 1983 Celica with 1S engine; 1975-1979 Corolla with 2TC engine (shorter shifter in tail shaft in this version) 1980-1982 Corolla with 3TC engine; KA67 Carina Station Wagon with 5K engine (22 spline) K bell housing with hydraulic clutch.
In early June, Toyota announced the recall of nearly 100,000 Tundra pickups and about 3,500 Lexus luxury SUVs to fix a problem that could cause their engines to lose power while driving.
At first three- or six-seater vans were offered, the more popular TR10 receiving the 1588 cc 2T-J engine (93 PS or 68 kW), although the smallest KR10 has the 1166 cc 3K-J (64 PS or 47 kW). Eight-seater wagons have the desmogged 12T engine rather than the 2T-J (TR11G chassis code rather than TR10V), and therefore lower power at 85 PS (63 kW). [10]