Toyota Corolla (E80)

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Toyota Corolla (E80)
1987 Toyota Corolla LE sedan, front left.jpg
Overview
ManufacturerToyota
Also calledCorolla Levin/Sprinter Trueno AE85/86
Toyota Corolla Sprinter
Chevrolet Nova (N.America)
Production1983–1987
February 1985 – December 1988 (Australia)[1]
1986-1990 (Venezuela)[2] (AE82 Sedan)
AssemblyToyota City, Japan
Fremont, California (FX) (NUMMI)
North Jakarta, Indonesia
Shah Alam, Malaysia
Samut Prakan, Thailand
Cumana, Sucre, Venezuela[2]
Durban, South Africa
Thames, New Zealand
Port Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
Body and chassis
Body style3/5-door hatchback (FX)
4-door sedan
4-door sedan (six-window)
5-door liftback
2-door coupé (RWD)
3-door hatchback coupé (RWD)
LayoutFront engine, front-wheel drive / rear-wheel drive
Powertrain
Engine
  • 1.3 L 2A I4 (AE80)
  • 1.3 L 2E I4 (EE80)
  • 1.5 L 3A I4 (AE81/85)
  • 1.6 L 4A-C/E I4 (AE82/86)
  • 1.6 L 4A-GE I4 (AE82/86)
  • 1.8 L 1C-L diesel I4 (CE80)
Transmission4/5-speed manual
3/4-speed automatic
Dimensions
Wheelbase2,430 mm (95.7 in)
2,400 mm (94.5 in) (AE85/86)
Length4,135 mm (162.8 in)
FX: 3,970 mm (156.3 in)
North America:
4,254 mm (167.5 in)
FX: 4,064 mm (160.0 in)
Width1,635 mm (64.4 in)
Height1,328 mm (52.3 in)
FX: 1,346 mm (53.0 in)
FX16: 1,341 mm (52.8 in)
Curb weight840–940 kg (1,852–2,072 lb)
Chronology
PredecessorCorolla E70
SuccessorCorolla E90

The Toyota Corolla E80 is a range of small automobiles manufactured and marketed by Toyota from 1983 to 1987 as the fifth generation of cars under the Corolla and Toyota Sprinter nameplates, with production totaling approximately 3.3 million, and most models adopting a front-wheel drive layout.

The AE85 and AE86 Corolla Levin and Sprinter Trueno (SR-5/GT-S in US) retained rear-wheel drive from the previous E70 generation,[3][4][5] along with the three-door "liftback" (E72), three-door van (E70) and five-door wagon (E70) of the previous generation, which remained in production. The AE86 ultimately gained international prominence in the motorsport of drifting and wide popularity in Showroom Stock, Group A, and Group N, Rally and Club racing.

In a joint venture with General Motors, mildly restyled versions of the front-wheel drive AE82 sedan and liftback were locally manufactured and sold in the United States as the Chevrolet Nova.

Design[]

The front-wheel-drive wheelbase was now 2,430 mm (95.7 in).

It was the first Corolla to top the New Zealand top-ten lists, ending Ford's dominance of that market. A shorter hatchback range, called the Corolla FX in Japan and the Corolla Compact in Germany, arrived in October 1984 on the front-wheel-drive platform.[6] The three- and five-door hatchbacks resembled the Corolla sedan with a truncated rear deck and trunk. Although there was a five-door liftback model of the basic Corolla, the shorter FX hatchback was sold alongside it. The Corolla FX replaced the Toyota Starlet in North America.

A DOHC 16-valve engine, designated 4A-GE, was added in 1983 on the rear-drive cars. It was a 1.6 L (1,587 cc) inline-four and produced 124 PS (91 kW), turning the Levin/Trueno (Japan), Corolla GT coupé (Europe) and Corolla GT-S (North America) into a what was arguably a sports car.[7] The three-door FWD hatchback was also available with this engine; it was known as the Corolla FX-16 in North America. This engine was also combined with the front-drive transaxle to power the mid-engined Toyota MR2.

The Sprinter sports cars, in two-door coupé and three-door liftback forms, were notable for being the line's first use of pop-up headlamps, which the equivalent Corolla Levin sports models did not have. The liftback has a drag coefficient of Cd=0.34.

Launched in Japan in May 1983, it reached Europe (including the right-hand drive UK market) three months later, and sold well in most European markets. The car was facelifted in May 1985, receiving larger headlights akin to those installed on the coupés. The smaller 1.3-litre A-series engine was replaced by the new 12-valve 2E unit at the same time for most markets.

Japan[]

The 1.3-litre 2A engine was replaced by the more modern 12-valve 2E engine along with a May 1985 facelift at Toyota Corolla Store locations. The range began with the 1300 Custom DX and ended with the 1600 GT Limited, introduced in June 1986.[8] The FX hatchback lineup was considered a semi-separate line and received a different nose and different equipment levels than its sedan and liftback counterparts. The 1.3 was not available in the FX, targeted at sportier buyers, until the 2E engine became available.[6]

Japanese market engines:

  • 2A-LU – 1.3 L I4, 8-valve SOHC, carb, 75 PS (55 kW) (AE80)
  • 2E-LU – 1.3 L (1,295 cc) I4, 12-valve SOHC, carb (EE80)
  • 3A-LU – 1.5 L (1452 cc) I4, 8-valve SOHC, carb, transverse mount, 83 PS (61 kW) (AE81)
  • 3A-U – 1.5 L (1452 cc) I4, 8-valve SOHC, carb, 83 PS (61 kW) (AE85, RWD)
  • 4A-ELU – 1.6 L (1587 cc) I4, 8-valve SOHC, EFI, 100 PS (74 kW) (AE82)
  • 4A-GELU – 1.6 L (1587 cc) I4, 16-valve DOHC, EFI, 130 PS (96 kW) (AE82)
  • 4A-GEU – 1.6 L (1587 cc) I4, 16-valve DOHC, EFI, 130 PS (96 kW) (AE86, RWD)
  • 1C-L – 1.8 L (1,839 cc) I4, diesel, Mechanical Injection (CE80)

Japanese market chassis:

  • AE80FWD, 2A-LU engine, 4-door sedan (Custom DX, DX, GL, GL Saloon, Lime, SE), 5-door liftback (SX)
  • AE81 – FWD, 3A-LU engine, 4-door sedan (DX, GL, GL Saloon, Lime, SE, SE Saloon), 5-door liftback (SX, ZX), 3 hatchback (FX-D, FX-L, FX-L Lime), 5-door hatchback (FX-G, FX-L, FX-Lime, FX-SR)
  • AE82 – FWD, 4A-ELU/GELU engine, 4-door sedan (GT, SR), 5-door liftback (SX, ZX), 3-door hatchback (FX-GT, FX-SR), 5-door hatchback (FX-SR)
  • AE85RWD, 3A-U engine, 2-door coupé (Levin Lime, Levin GL, Levin SE), 3-door liftback (Levin SR)
  • AE86 – RWD, 4A-GEU engine, 2-door coupé (Levin GT, Levin GT-APEX), 3-door liftback (Levin GT, Levin GT-APEX, Levin GTV)
  • CE80 – FWD, 1C-L engine, 4-door sedan (DX, GL, GL Saloon, SE), 5-door liftback (SX), 3/5-door hatchback (FX-G, FX-L)
  • EE80 – FWD, 2E-LU engine, 4-door sedan (DX, GL, SE, SE Saloon), 5-door liftback (SX), 3/5-door hatchback (FX-D, FX-L)

North America[]

The American specification was available with either SOHC or DOHC engines. From 1985 to 1988, NUMMI in Fremont, California built a rebadged version of the Sprinter sedan sold by Chevrolet as the Chevrolet Nova. During calendar 1985, Corolla sedans and Sprinter-type 5-door hatchbacks (sold under both Nova and Corolla nameplates) were added, with the Toyota-branded US built cars gradually superseding imports from Japan and Nova hatchbacks being offered from the 1986 model year. Only the Corolla FX hatchback, launched for 1987 to replace the 3-door AE86 Corolla Sport liftback, was imported from Japan.

While all the rear-wheel drive 80-series Corollas were AE86 chassis in North America, the VINs differentiated between the three equipment levels: the DX got AE85, the SR-5 got AE86, and the GT-S received an AE88 VIN.

North American market engines:

  • 1C 1.8 L I4, diesel, mechanical injection, 58 hp (43 kW) (1984–85)[9]
  • 4A-C 1.6 L I4, 8-valve SOHC, carb, 71–75 hp (53–56 kW)
  • 4A-GE 1.6 L I4, 16-valve DOHC, EFI, 112 hp (84 kW)

North American market chassis:

  • AE82FWD sedan 4-door, hatchback (Std, LE, LE Ltd, SR-5, GT-S) 3-door (FX/FX16)
  • AE86RWD coupé 2-door, 3-door hatchback coupé
DX with 4A-C has "AE85" in VIN
SR-5 with 4A-C has "AE86" in VIN
GT-S with 4A-GE has "AE88" in VIN
  • CE80 – FWD sedan 4-door (low sales numbers)

Europe[]

European market engines:

  • 2A 1.3 L I4, 8-valve SOHC, carb, 69 hp (51 kW)
  • 4A 1.6 L I4, 8-valve SOHC, carb, 84 PS (62 kW)
  • 4A-LC 1.6 L I4, 8-valve SOHC, carb, 78 PS (57 kW) (desmogged version for Sweden and Switzerland)[10]
  • 4A-GE 1.6 L I4, 16-valve DOHC, EFI, 116–124 PS (85–91 kW) (121 PS in the hatchback)
  • 1C 1.8 L I4, Diesel, Mechanical Injection, 58 PS (43 kW)
  • 2E 1.3 L I4, 12-valve SOHC, carb, 75 PS (55 kW)

European market chassis:

  • AE80/EE80FWD 4-door sedan, 5-door liftback, 3/5-door hatchback (2A, 2E engines)
  • AE82 – FWD 4-door sedan, 5-door liftback, 3/5-door hatchback (4A engine)
  • AE86RWD 2-door coupé, 3-door hatchback coupé (4A engine)
  • CE80 – FWD 1.8 diesel 4-door sedan, 5-door liftback, 5-door hatchback (1C engine)

Australia[]

Australian market engines:

  • 2A-C 1.3 L I4, 8-valve SOHC, carb,
  • 4A-C 1.6 L I4, 8-valve SOHC, carb, 78 hp (58 kW)
  • 4A-GE 1.6 L I4, 16-valve DOHC, EFI, 115 hp (86 kW)

Australian market chassis:

  • AE80FWD 4-door sedan /5-door hatchback
  • AE82 – FWD 4-door sedan /5-door hatchback /5-door Seca Liftback
  • AE86RWD 3-door hatchback (badged as Toyota Sprinter)

Asia[]

Mainly 1.3 and 1.6 petrol engines were available in Asia:

  • 2A-C 1.3 L I4, 8-valve SOHC, carb,
  • 2E-L 1.3 L I4, 12-valve SOHC, carb, 72 PS (53 kW) SAE net (Indonesia)[11]
  • 4A-C 1.6 L I4, 8-valve SOHC, carb

After the 1985 facelift, the 1.3 was switched to the new 12-valve E-series unit. Model designations changed at the same time; in Indonesia it was switched from GL to SE Saloon. The newer model has slightly bigger headlamps and also received flush hubcaps.

Asian market chassis:

  • EE80FWD 4-door sedan
  • AE80 – FWD 4-door sedan
  • AE82 – FWD 4-door sedan

Motorsport[]

The rear-wheel-drive AE86 models campaigned in the Group A rally championship from 1985 until 1992. Victories included a class win in the 1985 Rally Portugal (its first), with Jorge Ortigão driving and J. Batista navigating.[12] The car continued to be raced as late as the 1993 Acropolis Rally, with its best finish a third overall in the 1989 Rallye Côte d'Ivoire (with Adolphe Choteau/Jean-Pierre Claverie).[13]

The AE86 became international prominent in the motorsport of drifting. Owners may heavily modify their AE86 models to where the only connection to the original model is the bodyshape.[14]

John Smith won the 1986 Australian 2.0 Litre Touring Car Championship driving a Corolla GT AE86.[15]

References[]

  • 別冊CG: 自動車アーカイヴ 80年代の日本 [Car Graphic: Car Archives Vol. 11, '80s Japanese Cars] (in Japanese). Tokyo: Nigensha. 2007. ISBN 978-4-544-91018-6.
  1. ^ "Overview of Overseas Production Affiliates: Oceania". Toyota Motor Corporation. 2012. Retrieved 11 July 2014.
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b "Historia de Corolla" (in Spanish). Toyota de Venezuela. Retrieved 23 July 2014.
  3. ^ Lye, Gerard (14 January 2020). "TAS 2020: Toyota 86 Black Limited Concept and AE86 Sprinter Trueno GT-Apex Black Limited on display". paultan.org. Malaysia. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  4. ^ "Oh what a feeling!". carsales. Australia. 3 November 2020. Retrieved 17 January 2020.
  5. ^ Hsu, Dan (8 June 2011). "EVENTS: 2011 Toyotafest Part 06". Japanese Nostalgic Car. US. Retrieved 17 January 2020./
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b Car Graphic: '80s Car Archives, p. 21
  7. ^ De Leener, Philippe (15 December 1983). "Toyota Corolla GT: une véritable GT" [a true GT]. Le Moniteur de l'Automobile (in French). Brussels, Belgium: Editions Auto-Magazine. 34 (784): 46.
  8. ^ Car Graphic: '80s Car Archives, p. 19
  9. ^ "Fuel Economy of 1984 Toyota Corolla". fueleconomy.gov. (US). Retrieved 29 February 2012.
  10. ^ Büschi, Hans-Ulrich, ed. (6 March 1986). Automobil Revue 1986 (in German and French). 81. Berne, Switzerland: Hallwag AG. ISBN 3-444-00450-8.
  11. ^ Toyota Corolla (brochure) (in Indonesian), Jakarta, Indonesia: P.T. Toyota-Astra Motor, 1986, p. 8
  12. ^ Bridier, Gérard (April 1985). "Walter retourne en enfer..." [Walter returns to hell]. Echappement (in French). Paris, France: Michael Hommell (198): 158.
  13. ^ "Toyota Corolla (AE86) Profile". Rallye-Info.com. Retrieved 14 September 2014.
  14. ^ "7 Epic AE86 drift car builds to blow your mind". Drifted.com. 28 November 2016. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  15. ^ "1986 Under 2 Litre Australian Touring Car Championship". touringcarracing.net. Australia. Retrieved 3 October 2016.
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