Junkyard Gem: 1982 Toyota Tercel
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Even as the rear-wheel-drive Corolla got bigger during the 1970s, fuel prices kept climbing. To provide a cheaper, more economical commuter car, Toyota developed the tiny front-wheel-drive Tercel and began selling it in 1978. I used to find plenty of these simple and reliable first-generation Tercels during my junkyard travels, but they have become quite rare in recent years. Here’s a battered ’82 in a Denver-area yard.
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Just as Toyota slaps the familiar Prius name on the unrelated Aqua for the American market, the early Tercel was given an association with the well-known Corolla model and badged as the Corolla Tercel. By 1982, though, Toyota USA’s bosses had decided that the Tercel name could stand on its own; this car has no Corolla badges.
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The longitudinally-mounted engine (a 3A-C rated at 59 horsepower) might make you think you’re looking at a rear-wheel-drive car, but the transmission sends the power forward via a V-drive-style arrangement, driving the front wheels through a differential mounted beneath the engine. This setup made it simple for Toyota to build four-wheel-drive Tercel wagons later on, just by adding a driveshaft out the rear of the transmission.
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You’ll find one in every car. You’ll see.
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These cars were notorious for rust problems, with multiple recalls due to corrosion-induced failures of the rear control arms. Most cars don’t rust so much in Denver, but this one has some mild rot in the usual spots.
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Few new cars had six-digit odometers in 1982, but Toyota felt sufficiently confident in the Tercel’s reliability to add the 100,000-mile digit. This car came close to the magical 200,000-mile mark.
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The cramped rear-wheel-drive Starlet beat the Tercel in the fuel-economy game for 1982, with its tough-but-primitive pushrod engine, but most American car shoppers preferred the Tercel (and its all-new-for-1982 Nissan Sentra competitor).
Great for burly fishermen to take off-roading!
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August 3, 2019 at 11:07AM