Another story on this. For reasons never fully explained, my
grandmother bought one of 199 Toyota Crowns sold in the US that year.
This was truly a "japmobile"...4.11 gears with 14" rims which would
give about 4500 RPM at freeway speeds, archiac power steering stolen
from GM's Saginaw design used from 1951-'55, a direct and smaller copy
of Moraine's power brake unit, a downsided copy of the
Borg-Warner/Ford FMX transmission, dash design stolen from the 1969-70
Oldsmobile...just a patchwork of mismatched, badly engineered parts
that didn't work well. Add the then-common "jap" styling, and you had
a real novelty...and one that would have people stop and gawk every
time you drove it. In Japan, these cars were considered to be
limousines, and all high government and industry officials of the late
'60s and early '70s were chauffeured around in them. True to form of
the era, it was too small for most any American, unless you were a
woman. It also had the horrid 4M straight 6 cylinder engine, which,
like many Toyotas of the era, would burn exhaust valves regularly due
to bad cooling design. The 4M also had siamesed cylinders, which gave
uneven piston skirt and ring wear. Chevrolet also had siamesed
cylinders on its dreadful small block 400", which didn't last very
long.
Anyway, Grandma gave the Crown to my Mom to use as a "grocery getter"
so she wouldn't have to use the Cadillac around town, and Grandma went
to a Buick X body, which lasted her until she died in it in an
accident. Not that it mattered much to my mom...the Crown got worse
gas mileage than did the Cadillac...around 11 MPG around town, MAYBE
14 on the road. Anyway, since it was such a curiousity to people on
the street, and in mint condition, we kept it in the fleet.
One day many years later, a tell tale puddle of green under the front
of the engine foretold a failing water pump seal. Getting a water
pump for Toyopet 4M in the US was nigh impossible through most parts
sources, but one call to a local Toyota dealer had a new pump, with
its captive viscous fan drive clutch, air freighted to him the next
day! $104, which for a water pump in those days was outrageous, but
they had the parts. Other very obscure oddball parts for this
particular car, such as the retro-50s power steering gearbox, were
also similarly available for years afterward, even though only 199 of
these things were sold in the US in 1971!
Try that on GM or Ford...FAHGEDDABOUDIT! However, Chrysler has bucked
that trend, and you can still get many minor parts for the old M-body
RWD Fifth Avenues today, even though most M-bodies are more than 20
years old. I bet Noodles can't get a lot of parts for his Grand Prick
now, either! HAHAHAHAHAHA!
Oh...the Crown? My sister wound up with it, and sold it to an
interested collector. Despite her inability to keep a car running for
more than a year at a time, the Crown carried her around for two.
Reason she got rid of it? Bad fuel economy!
a good reason to buy lead sled American Caddy/Lincoln over small
foreign cars
girth
>> woman. It also had the horrid 4M straight 6 cylinder engine, which,
>> like many Toyotas of the era, would burn exhaust valves regularly due
>> to bad cooling design.
> I drove a Tojo Land Cruiser in the 70s. I think that in line six
>was pretty much a Chevy 6. <snip>
Yes. Toyota couldn't build decent engines until the late '70s.
Everything before was very prone to valve failure due to excessive
casting thickness around the seat area and cast-in-place seats with
soft valves. My dad bought a '73 Celica (what a shitbox!) with the
18RC engine, which would fry exhuast valves every 30K miles until
Toyota finally had stellite seats and valves installed, out of
warranty, for free. That won my dad over as a Toyota lover for life.
The Land Cruiser 6 was a near exact copy of the Chevy 250, so close
that GM sued Toyota and won. Toyota then ceased production of that
engine, and the Land Cruiser was no longer sold in the US.
dB
General Motors- the best there is
> I have also heard stories of very early Japanese cars (usually Toyota
>is claimed) with four cylinder engines where you could still faintly see the
>Austin of England markings on the castings. Thank goodness they improved on
>the Austin engines or today we would have Toyotas that never start and leak
>bucket-fulls of oil. And this from one who loves the old Brit cars. <snip>
That one I hadn't heard.
Insofar as Britmobiles are concerned, I do know this:
MG stands for "My God!"
My sympathies, DB- (laughter..)
your poor wife and kids, must be so embarassed for you...
oh well, not everyone can drive a nice GM.
let's see a Jap motor sell for this much