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As every automotive enthusiast knows by now, the GT-86 is a 2+2 sports coupe powered by a 2.0 liter, direct-injected boxer engine that Toyota co-developed with Subaru. What we did not know, until now, is how much power this mill would produce. Well, it makes 200hp at 7000rpm and 205Nm (151ft-lbs) of torque. Technically, the engine uses two sets of fuel injectors that allow it to alternate between direct and port injection depending on what the car's computers tell it would work best. The boxer engine allow Toyota to keep the GT-86s center of gravity low to make it more tossable and better handling.
It comes with either a six-speed manual or six-speed automatic transmission. Power is routed to the rear wheels via a standard limited-slip differential and the stability control has been retuned specifically for the GT-86s more sporty demeanor.
The GT-86 is 4.2m long and 1.28m high with a 2.5m wheelbase, which Toyota claims makes it the world's most compact four-seat sports coupe. How usable those back seats are, is as of yet unknown. It has a 53:47 weight distribution. It uses a MacPherson Strut front suspension with dual wishbones in the rear.
The design of the FT-86 is classic but modern. It maintains the classic long hood/short deck appearance that is identified with sports coupes while having its own modern flourishes like the twin exhausts protruding from the rear diffuser. Up front the GT-86 does not look like any modern Toyota. The front is bracketed by the tall fender bulges. It has triangular head lights with a slight bulge in the hood. Toyota calls it all Scorpion styling.
Inside the GT-86 is modern, if a little dark. Toyota says it has made the seats as supportive as possible for hard cornering and tuned the ergonomics for sporty driving. The gauges are built around the large, central tachometer. Toyota says that it chose typefaces and colors for the instruments that would make them most readable.
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Toyota
In 1933, with the help of the Japanese government stimulation, Kiichiro Toyoda decided to create an automobile division from its already established company of automatic looms and electric sewing machines. Their first production automobile, the Toyota Model AA, starts in 1936 and in the following year Kiichiro finally inaugurates Toyota Motor Company as an independent company.
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