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The
sold well in the United States during the 1990s, but the pivot of American family-hauler buyers from small wagons to small SUVs progressed quickly as the decade went on and compact wagons seemed increasingly irrelevant.
axed the US-market
wagon after 1996, when the
went on sale, making today’s Junkyard Gem a very rare and (in its small way) historically significant
.
Just as wagons were in their US-market death throes by 1994, manual transmissions were being increasingly shunned by two-pedal-loving American car shoppers. The buyer of this Corolla wagon wanted the 5-speed, however, either because it was cheaper and got better
… or because it livened up a sensible-but-soporific commuter car.
As is typical of Colorado wagons, this one has had its share of outdoorsy travel adventures. The
Subaru wagons I see in Denver wrecking yards
also tend to have stickers like this car’s, plus
plenty of cannabis-dispensary and microbrewery stickers
.
Now that just about every four-wheeled motor vehicle sold in North America has air conditioning as standard equipment, this sort of optional A/C button looks like a real throwback to the 1970s.
This is a 1.8-liter, 105-horsepower 7A-FE engine, which made the 2,403-pound DX wagon reasonably zippy with a 5-speed.
capacity in the Corolla DX wagon was excellent, considering the car’s small footprint and strong fuel economy.
I neglected to photograph the odometer in this car, but it’s unusual for Corollas (or, to be fair, RAV4s) to appear in wrecking yards with fewer than 200,000 miles on the clock. The interior of this Corolla looks very clean, so either it was well-cared-for or didn’t drive much. I’m betting on the former.
In the E102 Corolla’s homeland, you could get this car with four-wheel-drive. Not so in North America.
“You can’t buy a more impressive car for less.”
from Autoblog https://ift.tt/2ycRqWx