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The Crown Athlete has been tested to do 0–100 km/h in under 6 seconds, while the Crown Hybrid has been estimated to take 5.4 seconds due to the additional power of the hybrid motor. The mechanically similar Lexus GS 450H Hybrid (GWS191) outputs 253 kW (339 bhp). [citation needed]
1978.5–1997 Toyota Crown; 1991.5-1994 Toyota Crown Athlete G; 1989.5-1998 Toyota Comfort; MS Platform (3M, 4M, 5M, 7M engine) 1967–1988 Toyota Crown; 1989.5–1998 Toyota Comfort; GRS Platform (2GR, 3GR, 4GR V6 engines) 2003–present Toyota Crown Athlete; 2003–present Toyota Crown Royal Saloon; 2006–2007 Lexus GS300; 2007–present ...
The wheelbase is 75 mm (3.0 in) longer than the corresponding Crown Royal and Athlete, but 100 mm (3.9 in) shorter than the Century, and incorporates advanced safety and convenience equipment such as blind spot monitoring and a collision avoidance system. [17] The Crown Majesta was discontinued on 27 April 2018 in favour of the S220 series Crown.
Vehicle manufacturer Toyota is set to end its massive sponsorship deal with the International Olympic Committee after this year's Paris Olympics, according to reports in Japan. Toyota has a ...
There are three versions of G-Book being offered; G-Book mX (and G-Book mX Pro), G-Book Alpha (and G-Book Alpha Pro) and G-Book. Some of the services G-Book offers are a Safety and Security service, which aids in requesting a tow truck and vehicle location service, Live Navigation where an operator gives turn-by-turn directions, Information Service which provides news, weather forecasts and ...
Every Toyota vehicle has a model code which describes the basic vehicle (e.g. Corolla), its generation and major options (engine type, gearbox type, body style, grade level). The model codes fall into three periods, 1937 to late 1950s, late 1950s to late 1970s and late 1970s to present.
Toyota Corolla Furia: 2013 Toyota Crown Convertible: 1963 Based on the Crown 1900 Toyota Crown Majesta EV: 1993 Based on the Crown Majesta: Toyota CQ-1: 1983 Based on the TownAce: Toyota CS&S: 2003 Toyota CX-80: 1979 Also shown as the FCX-80: Toyota C+pod: 2019: Based on the Toyota Ultra-Compact BEV: Toyota D-4D 180 Clean Power Concept Car: 2004
The Toyota GR engine family is a gasoline, open-deck, piston V6 engine series. The GR series has a 60° die-cast aluminium block and aluminium DOHC cylinder heads.This engine series also features 4 valves per cylinder, forged steel connecting rods and crankshaft, one-piece cast camshafts, a timing chain, [1] and a cast aluminium lower intake manifold.