Today’s Corona is the third to appear in the Rare Rides series. We started in early 2020 with a 1968 Corona Coupe and followed up that October with a Mark II wagon. Today’s entrant is from the last time North Americans could buy one.
Toyota changed Corona’s positioning more than once over its tenure, which included its placement in North America. Originally the Corona was a luxury model, second to Toyota’s flagship the Crown. The Coupe linked above was produced toward the end of Corona’s time as a luxury car, which lasted until 1970. At that point, the Corona Mark II arrived and Toyota expanded Corona name usage but pushed the original Corona down market. The larger, fancier Mark II was allowed to share features with the Crown and received its own platform in 1972.
That platform is where the Mark II wagon we featured previously arrived. The Mark II was on sale from 1969 through 1976 in the North American market, whereupon its third generation in 1978 it was renamed Cressida in North America. The lesser Corona was still on sale in the US and Canada and was still in its fifth-generation guise that debuted in 1973. Corona was Toyota’s compact offering, with Cressida playing a more upscale midsize role.
Production of a new sixth-gen T130 Corona started in 1978, and it arrived as a 1979 model in North America. Toyota decided to ditch the more rounded (yet still boxy) look of the fifth-gen car and go more square, upright, and formal. The size of the Corona sedan remained about the same as before at around 168 inches long, but the wagon version was now much closer in size to the sedan. In its prior generation, the wagon was nearly 9 inches longer than the sedan, but in T130 guise it was just 3 inches longer.
It was still the era of multiple body styles under a single nameplate, so Corona was offered with two doors as a hardtop, four doors as a sedan, and five doors as a liftback and wagon. The liftback was a new body style for Corona, as was the car’s naming in Japan. Home market customers saw Corona as a Toyota now, instead of a Toyopet. North America received all body styles except the coupe. Notable advances on the new Corona were an independent MacPherson strut front suspension and a trailing arm rear with a Panhard rod. Wagons across the Toyota lineup were more basic in their rear suspensions and used leaf springs. Front disc brakes were standard, and rear brakes were drums except on sporty models (not available in North America).
The Corona’s popularity had increased in North America with the fuel crisis, as the four-cylinder compact sedans were efficient and reliable at a time when domestic manufacturers were still playing catch up. Engines varied widely by market, as Corona used 13 different ones globally. All power was of inline-four configuration and ranged in displacement from 1.6 to 2.4 liters. Several different transmissions were used as well: Manuals had three, four, or five forward speeds. Automatics had three or four speeds.
In the middle of its model run, Corona received a facelift. The most notable change was quad headlamps, tilted slightly rearward to make the conservative Corona look more modern. Worth noting, the quad lamps were always used in North America, while other markets used single composite headlamps. The rear end was slightly updated as well. Toyota reserved the best for facelifted North American Coronas and offered only the five-speed manual or four-speed automatic, and larger engines.
The only engine on offer in the US and Canada at first was the 2.2-liter 20R engine from the Truck, but that was replaced with the 1981 facelift with the 2.4-liter 22R engine, also from the Truck. Horsepower was down in the emissions era and kept decreasing. The 2.0 started at 95 horses in 1979 and dropped to 90 in 1980. The 2.2 improved things to 96 horsepower in 1981.
Production continued on the T130 Corona through spring 1983, but 1982 was its last year in North America. For 1983 the Cressida was joined by a more modern and front-drive compact sedan that would make quite the impression on the market: Camry.
Today’s burgundy on burgundy Rare Ride is presently for sale in Michigan, where it miraculously appears to be rust-free. It’s a Luxury Edition trim and includes much velour and a vinyl roof. Manuel Transmisen will kindly accompany you on all journeys. This brougham sedan is yours for $7,500.
[Images: Toyota]
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The Cressida was the precursor to the Avalon this day.
Now I want a Cressida again, thanks for that.
Wish I’d talked my mom into buying a new Cressida, instead of the ’78 Malibu Classic she bought back then, but then the Cressida wasn’t on our radar. I’d probably still have the Cressida (we sold the Malibu in 2012 for $1000 after she passed away – it had 72,000 miles put on it over 34 years).
The Malibu was a total Malaise-mobile, recall-ridden and poorly assembled.
Don’t know whose apple my Dad polished but in the early 80s after a parade of awful Cutlasses (worst a hunchback with awful Catalytic converter stench if you stopped too fast… yes, it was a thing) he lucked into a Cressida as his company car. I think it made an impression because 15 years down the road after an aged-out but not mileaged-out-of-warranty Cadillac was going to need $4000 in suspension work, the ‘rents went Lexus and haven’t looked back.
He’s still of a generation reluctant to keep a car once the odometer gets into 6 digits, they’re on their 5th RX.
Nice, but $7500 for that is silly.
“Manuel Transmisen will kindly accompany you on all journeys.”
So does Manuel become my new travel companion? Usually a person isn’t part of a package deal for an automobile.
Yes, he lives to travel.
Does he know Grango?
I’d say they could be frend
One’s forgotten about his more popular sibling, Otto Transmisen.
Prior to the first and second generation Avalon the Corona was available with a front bench seat and a column shifter.
I had a coworker who owned a 74 Corona wagon with the 18RC that served him well. We used to lug machine tools in the back of it with no issues.
The lede should have been, “Toyota Corona. a Novel car.” ;)
Would it go viral?
Considering the domestic antivirals of the era like Ford Tempo, Chevy Citation, and Dodge Spirit…..
Available in a few variants.
Back when these were new, a friend’s brother owned a loaded Corona notchback sedan with the 20R and 5-speed.
This one looks like it’s been rustproofed, as I see something oozing out of the door drains, and caplugs where they drilled holes to spray in the material.
The first thing I’d do is take off those stick-on flag emblems on the front fenders someone put on it. And then find a set of the Toyota alloy wheels that they used on period Coronas and Celicas.
The first thing I’d do is lift up the back end with a tow truck, throw a cinder block on the accelerator, then drop it in a place where it could build up a good head of steam before it flew off a cliff.
There is nothing from the late 70s or early 80s worth getting sentimental about except Farrah Fawcett or Cheryl Tiegs. Farrah’s pushing up daisies. Cheryl’s had so much surgery smiling unintentionally triggers a fart.
I don’t trust myself with that much power.
Serious question: How did this particular example (assembled at Tsutsumi) survive 41 years in Eastpointe Michigan without being pelted by rocks thrown by UAW supporters?
(Source: First house I ever owned was near there, but on the other side of 8 Mile Road.)
Lots of garage time.
I would totally buy a Ford…if Toyota designed and built it.
I would maybe buy a new Toyota, if Someone Else styled it.
My first opportunity driving a Japanese brand was the new 1974 Corona wagon I used in a high school job delivering flowers. I was used to heavier, thicker American car metal, but I marveled at how light and maneuverable the little wagon was, and how pretty much everything on the dash and IP had a well intended purpose. I bought my first new car 7 years later – a Toyota Corolla SR5. I guess the impression stuck.
Minor correction: 20R = 2.2 liters, 22R = 2.4 liters.
Right you are. Fixed.
Top model was Corona 2000GT with the 18R-G twin-cam engine that has a Yamaha-developed alloy cylinder head, twin Mikuni carburetors, and 9.7:1 compression, good for 140-150 rated horsepower. A 5-speed synchromesh gearbox and limited-slip differential delivered the power, with the Corona 2000 GT capable of reaching a top speed of 125 mph. Main competitor’s were Datsun 240K GT and 180B SSS -models with Bosch fuel injection.
The NA market definitely did not receive the full trim range.