Toyota Corolla
Toyota Corolla
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Manufacturer |
Toyota
Kanto Auto Works, Ltd.
NUMMI
UAAI |
Production |
1966 - present |
Predecessor |
Publica |
Successor |
Auris (hatchback, except Australia) |
Class |
Subcompact (1966-1987)
Compact (1988-present) |
The Corolla is a line of subcompact/compact cars produced by the Japanese automaker Toyota, which has become very popular throughout the world since the nameplate was first introduced in 1966. In 1997, the Corolla became the best selling model in the world, with over 30 million sold as of 2007.[1] Over the past 40 years, one Corolla car has been sold on average every 40 seconds.[2] The modern Corolla shares only the name with the first generation car, as the series has undergone several major redesigns. The current North American Corolla is priced and sized in between the Yaris and the Camry.
The name Corolla is part of Toyota's naming tradition of using the name Crown for their primary models, e.g. the Corona, which is Latin for crown, or the Corolla, which is Latin for small crown and Camry which is an Anglicized pronunciation of the Japanese term "kanmuri" meaning "crown".
Corollas are currently manufactured in Japan, the United States (Fremont, California), the United Kingdom (Derbyshire), Canada (Cambridge, Ontario), Malaysia, China (Tianjin), Taiwan, South Africa, Brazil (Indaiatuba, São Paulo), Turkey, Philippines, Thailand, Venezuela, Pakistan, India and Indonesia.
The Corolla's chassis designation code is "E", as described in Toyota's chassis and engine codes.
Alternative versions
Using the Corolla chassis
A slightly upmarket version called the Sprinter was sold in the Japanese home market. It was replaced in 2001 by the Allex, which was then replaced by the Blade in 2006.
There have also been several models over the years, including the Corolla Ceres (and similar Sprinter Marino) hardtop, Corolla Levin and Sprinter Trueno sports coupés and hatchbacks, and the Corolla FX hatchback, which became the Corolla RunX. The RunX was replaced by the Auris in 2006. A compact MPV named the Corolla Verso has also been released in European markets. Its Japanese counterpart is the Corolla Spacio, which has been discontinued as of the 10th generation. The US-market Scion xB is also sold in Japan as the Corolla Rumion.
The Corolla Matrix, better known just as the Matrix, shares the E120 and E140 platforms, and is considered the hatchback/sport wagon counterpart of the North American Corolla sedan, as the Corolla hatchback is not sold there. Toyota frequently combines the sales figures of the Corolla sedan and Matrix. The Pontiac Vibe, which is the General Motors badged version of the Matrix, also shares the Corolla platform. [3]
Over the years, there have been rebadged versions of the Corolla, sold by General Motors, including the 1980s' Holden Nova of Australia, and the Sprinter-based Chevrolet Nova, Chevrolet Prizm, and Geo Prizm (in the United States). The Corolla liftback (TE72) of Toyota Australia was badged as simply the T-18. The five-door liftback was sold with the Corolla Seca name in Australia and the nameplate survived on successive five-door models.
The Daihatsu Charmant was produced with the E30 through E70 series.
Using the Corolla name
The Tercel was a front wheel drive spin-off of the rear wheel drive Corolla introduced in 1980, called the Corolla Tercel which later became its own model in 1984.
The Tercel chassis was used again for the Corolla II hatchback.
History
First generation — E10 series
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Main article: Toyota Corolla E10
- The first Corolla generation was introduced in October 1966 with the new 1100 cc K pushrod engine. The Corolla Sprinter was introduced as the fastback version.
Second generation — E20 series
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Main article: Toyota Corolla E20
- In May 1970, the E20 was restyled with a more rounded body and the 1400 cc T and 1600 cc 2T OHV engines were added to the range. The now mutually exclusive Corolla and Sprinter names were used to differentiate between two slightly different treatments of sheet metal and trim. The Corolla Levin and Sprinter Trueno names were introduced as the twincam version of the Corolla and Sprinter respectively.
Third generation — E30, E40, E50, E60 series
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Main article: Toyota Corolla E30
- April 1974 brought rounder, bigger and heavier Corollas and Sprinters. The range was rounded out with the addition of a 2 door liftback. The Corollas were given E30 codes while the Sprinters were given E40 codes. A facelift in March 1976 saw most Corolla E30 models replaced by equivalent E50 models and most Sprinter E40 models were replaced by equivalent E60 models.
Fourth generation — E70 series
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Main article: Toyota Corolla E70
- A major restyle in March 1979 brought a square edged design. The Corollas had a simpler treatment of the grill, head lights and tail lights while the Sprinter used a slightly more complex, sculptured treatment. The new 3A and 4A "Hicam" OHV engines were added to the range as a running change. This was the last model to use the K and T series of engines.
Fifth generation — E80 series
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Main article: Toyota Corolla E80
- A sloping front bonnet and a contemporary sharp-edged, no-frills style was brought in during May 1983. The new 1800cc 1C diesel engine was added to the range with the E80 Series. From 1985, re-badged E80 Corollas were sold in the U.S. as the fourth generation Chevrolet Nova.
- Most models now used the front wheel drive layout except the AE85 and AE86, which were to be the last Corolla's offered in the rear wheel drive or FR layout. The AE85 and AE86 chassis codes were also used for the Sprinter. This model was identical to the Corolla, differing only by minor body styling changes such as 'Pop-Up' front headlights.
Sixth generation — E90 series
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Main article: Toyota Corolla E90
- A somewhat more rounded and aerodynamic style was used for the E90 introduced in May 1987. Overall this generation has a more refined feel than older Corollas and other older subcompacts. Most models were now front wheel drive, along with a few 4WD All-Trac models. Many engines were used on a wide array of trim levels and models, ranging from the 1.3 liter 2E to the 165 horsepower (123 kW) supercharged 4A-GZE. The E90 Corolla was also rebadged and sold as the Geo Prizm (US) or Holden Nova (Australia).
Seventh generation — E100 series
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Main article: Toyota Corolla E100
- In June 1991 Corollas received a redesign to be larger, heavier, and have the completely rounded, aerodynamic shape of the 1990s. The Corolla was now in the compact class, rather than subcompact, and the coupe still available known as Corolla Levin AE101. Refinement reached new levels, as development chief Dr. Akihiko Saito strove to create a "mini-Lexus".
Eighth generation — E110 series
The Brazilian Corolla VVTi Flex is sold in
Brazil with an flex-fuel engine capable of running on either
gasoline or
ethanol or any blend of both.
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Main article: Toyota Corolla E110
- May 1995 saw a minor redesign for the Corolla. External differences from the E100 series were minimal. Evolutionary technological improvements continued, however, and in 1998 non-Japanese Corollas received the new 1ZZ-FE engine. The new engine was the first in a Toyota to have an aluminum engine block and aluminum cylinder heads, which made this generation lighter than the E100 Corolla.
Ninth generation — E120 and E130 series
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Main article: Toyota Corolla E120
- In November of 2000 the ninth generation Corolla was introduced in Japan, with edgier styling and more technology to bring the nameplate into the 21st century.
Tenth generation — E140 and E150 series
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Main article: Toyota Corolla E140
- The tenth generation of the Corolla was introduced in October 2006.
Safety
In Australia, Corolla models built between 1982-2004 were assessed in the Used Car Safety Ratings 2006:[4]
- (1982-1984) — significantly worse than average level of occupant protection
- (1986-1988) — worse than average
- (1989-1993) — worse than average
- (1994-1997) — average
- (1998-2001) — significantly better than average
- (2002-2004) — average
In North America, the Insurance Institute for Highway Safety rates the 1998-2002 models as Acceptable in their 40 mph (64 km/h) Frontal Offset crash test. Initial 2003 models had an overall Good rating, but received a Marginal on left foot injury protection. A rebuild beginning December 2002, which continues through to the 2007 model, gives the Corolla a Good rating in all aspects of the test. Corolla models from model year 2005 to present with optional side curtain air bags received an Acceptable rating in the Side Impact crash test, largely due to a Marginal rating in Structure/Safety Cage design. Otherwise, injury protection ratings for Driver and Rear Passenger were all good except for Driver pelvis/leg injury protection, which was Acceptable.[5]
Euro NCAP ratings are as follows:
- 1998 (EE110 1.3 5-door liftback LHD): 3 stars (23 points) adult occupant, 2 stars (15 points) pedestrian (pre-2002 rating system)
- 2002 (ZZE120 1.4 5-door hatchback RHD): 4 stars (28 points) adult occupant, 2 stars (11 points) pedestrian
- 2007 (E150 4-door sedan): 5 stars (34 points) adult occupant, 4 stars (39 points) child occupant, 3 stars (23 points) pedestrian
See also
- Toyota
- Toyota AE86
- Chevrolet Nova Chevrolet (GM brand) re-badged Corolla
- Geo Prizm Geo (GM brand) re-badged Corolla
- List of Toyota engines
References
External links
Awards and achievements |
Preceded by
Mitsubishi Lancer Evo V |
Autosport
Rally Car Of The Year
(Corolla WRC)
1999 |
Succeeded by
Ford Focus WRC |
Toyota Motor Corporation |
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Marques |
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Current vehicles |
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Past vehicles |
2000GT • AA • Allex • Altezza • Aristo • Cami • Carina • Carina ED • Celica • Celsior • Chaser • Classic • Comfort • Corolla Levin • Corolla Levin (AE86) • Corona • Corona EXiV • Cressida • Cresta • Curren • Cynos • FA/DA • DA115 • Duet ( デュエット) • Echo • FJ40 • Fun Cargo • Granvia • Grand Hiace • Lexcen • Mark II • Mega Cruiser • MR2 • Opa • Origin • Paseo • Picnic • Platz • Pronard • Publica • Mark II Qualis • QuickDelivery • Regius ( レジアス) • Revo • Scepter • Sports 800 • SA • Sera • Soarer • Sprinter • Starlet • Stout • Supra • T100 • Tamaraw • Tercel • Tiara • Van • Verossa • Vista • Voltz • WiLL • Windom
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Concept vehicles |
A-BAT • Alessandro Volta • CS&S • Camry TS-01 • eCom • GTV • F3R • FINE-N • FINE-S • FT-HS • FT-SX • FTX • i-swing • i-unit • Motor Triathlon Race Car • NLSV • PM • Pod • RSC • Sportivo Coupe
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Engines • Transmissions • Manufacturing Facilities • Hybrid Synergy Drive • Toyota Racing Development |
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— Toyota road car timeline, North American market, 1980s–present |
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Tercel |
Tercel |
Tercel |
Tercel |
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Echo |
Yaris |
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Starlet |
Corolla FX |
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Paseo |
Paseo |
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Corolla |
Corolla |
Corolla |
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Corolla |
Corolla |
Corolla |
Corolla |
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Matrix |
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Prius |
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Camry Solara |
Camry Solara |
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Venza |
Full-size |
Cressida |
Cressida |
Cressida |
Cressida |
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Avalon |
Avalon |
Avalon |
Sport compact |
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Corolla GT-S |
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Celica |
Celica |
Celica |
Celica |
Celica |
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Sports |
Celica Supra |
Celica Supra |
Supra |
Supra |
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MR2 |
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MR2 |
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MR2 Spyder |
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TC 2000 |
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Champion
drivers |
1979 Cocho López · 1980-82 Jorge Omar del Río · 1983 Rubén Luis di Palma · 1984 Mario Gayraud · 1985 Rubén Daray · 1986, 1988, 1990-93, 1995 Juan María Traverso · 1987 Silvio Oltra · 1989 Miguel Ángel Guerra · 1994 Guillermo Maldonado · 1996 Ernesto Bessone · 1997 Henry Martin · 1998 Omar Martínez · 1999 Juan Manuel Silva · 2000 Daniel Cingolani · 2001, 2003, 2005 Gabriel Ponce de León · 2002 Norberto Fontana · 2004 Christian Ledesma · 2006-07 Matías Rossi · 2008 José María López
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Cars |
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Circuits |
Current (2008)
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Paraná · Salta · General Roca · Santa Fe · San Juan · Resistencia · Córdoba · Buenos Aires · Oberá · Río Hondo · Viedma · San Martín · San Luis · Punta del Este (Uruguay)
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