Toyota Corolla E80

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Fifth generation
Corolla Coupe (UK)
Also called Toyota AE86 Sprinter Levin / Trueno
Toyota Corolla Sprinter
Production 1983-1987
Assembly Toyota City, Japan
Fremont, California (FX)
Santa Rosa, Laguna, Philippines
Durban, South Africa
Body style(s) 4-door sedan
3-door hatchback
2-door coupé
3-door liftback
4-door station wagon.
Layout Front engine, front-wheel drive / rear-wheel drive / four-wheel drive
Engine(s) 1.3L I4
1.6L I4
Diesel: 1.8L I4
Transmission(s) 3-speed automatic
5-speed manual
Wheelbase 95.6 in (2428 mm)
FX: 95.7 in (2431 mm)
Length 167.5 in (4255 mm)
FX: 160.0 in (4064 mm)
Width 65.1 in (1654 mm)
FX: 65.2 in (1656 mm)
Height 52.3 in (1328 mm)
FX: 53.0 in (1346 mm)
FX16: 52.8 in (1341 mm)
Curb weight 1047 kg (2304 lb)
Related Daihatsu Charade
Toyota Celica
Toyota Tercel
Toyota Cressida
Chevrolet Nova

The Corolla E80 was the fifth generation of cars sold by Toyota under the Corolla nameplate.

The fifth generation is generally regarded as the most popular Corolla when measured against its contemporaries, and some 3.3 million units were produced. This model, from 1983, moved the Corolla into front wheel drive, except for the AE85 and AE86 Corolla Levin / Sprinter Trueno models (SR-5 / GT-S in USA) which continued on the older rear wheel drive platform, along with the three-door "liftback" (E72), three-door van (E70) and five-door wagon (E70) of the previous generation, that were still being produced.

The front-wheel-drive wheelbase was now 95.6 in (2428 mm).

It was the first Corolla to top the New Zealand top-10 lists, ending Ford's dominance of that market. A "short" hatchback range, called the Corolla FX in Japan and the Corolla Compact in Germany, arrived in 1984, on the front-wheel-drive platform. 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 FX-based 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 (1587 cc) I4 and produced an impressive 124 hp (92 kW), turning the Levin/Trueno (Japan), Corolla GT coupé (Europe) and Corolla GT-S into a popular sports car. This engine was also combined with the front-drive transaxle to power the mid-engined Toyota MR-2.

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

A new Corolla FX, built at the US NUMMI plant, appeared in 1987. It was available with either SOHC or DOHC engines, the latter marketed as the FX-16. From 1985 to 1988, NUMMI built a rebadged version of the Corolla, sold by Chevrolet as the Chevrolet Nova. Nova's successor, the Geo Prizm was another rebadged Corolla selling in the United States from 1989 to 2002.

Contents

[edit] North America

North American market engines:

North American market chassis:

  • AE82FWD sedan, 2-door/4-door, hatchback (Std, LE, LE Ltd, SR-5) 3-door (FX/FX16)
  • AE844WD 5-door wagon (Std, DX)
  • AE86RWD coupé 2-door, 3-door hatchback (SR5 and GT-S)

[edit] Europe

European market engines:

European market chassis:

[edit] Australia

Australian market engines:

Australian market chassis:

[edit] Gallery