Seller's description
Estimate:
$900,000 - $1,100,000
150 bhp, 2,000 cc DOHC Yamaha aluminum hemi-head inline six-cylinder engine with three Solex twin-choke side-draft carburetors, five-speed fully synchromesh manual transmission with overdrive, four-wheel independent suspension, and four-wheel power-assisted Dunlop disc brakes. Wheelbase: 91.7 in.
- Only 351 built; one of 84 left-hand-drive examples
- Comprehensive restoration and recent mechanical sorting
- Toyota's E-Type; the greatest Japanese car of all time
Little did the attendees know at the time, but the 1965 Tokyo Motor Show would signal a significant shift in the automotive world. Certainly the most desirable sports cars in the world were Western. Italy's Ferrari 275 GTB, Britain's Jaguar E-Type, Germany's Porsche 911, and the American Chevrolet Corvette all satisfied a youthful urge in the automotive market for sprightly and beautifully designed sports cars. Japan, however, had never produced a car that could pluck at the heartstrings of enthusiaststhat is until the 2000GT made its grand debut.
In comparison to what preceded it and its contemporary competition, the 2000GT was almost otherworldly. Here was an automobile that could compete with the world's most sophisticated sports cars, not only in terms of performance but also in design. Yamaha, which was heavily involved in precision motorcycle manufacture at the time, created the car's underpinnings. Toyota saw this as an opportunity to shake their reputation of producing rather conservatively designed economy cars. The 2000GT project would show the world that Toyota could construct a world-class car that was both refined and exciting and that they could reach a design equilibrium that perfectly balanced aerodynamic efficiency with aesthetic excellence.
In an article written by a Toyota designer in the 1967 fall issue of Automobile Quarterly, it is evident that tremendous consideration was given to the overall design language of the 2000GT.
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