Junkyard Gem: 1991 Toyota Camry with 5-speed manual

When the Toyota Camry shoved aside the Corona in the U.S. market in 1983, a significant minority of these cars rolled out of the showrooms with manual transmissions. When the second-generation Camry showed up in 1988, though, American shoppers made their preference clear: Two pedals good, three pedals bad! Here’s a rare five-speed Camry that beat the odds, found in a Northern California U-Wrench-It wrecking yard.

In theory, American Toyota shoppers were able to buy a manual-transmission-equipped Camry for every model year until 2012, when Toyota USA bowed to economic reality and made the car slushbox-only on these shores. In practice, though, nearly all 1988 and later Camry shoppers backed away in horror from the prospect of five- or six-on-the-floor in their cars.

You could get a 1988-1991 Camry with a five-speed and a V6, but I have found only a single example in all my junkyard travels. This one has the 2.0-liter 3S engine, rated at 115 horsepower.

Automatic or not, these cars were astoundingly well-built, and I seldom find a junkyard example with fewer than 150,000 miles; most have reached the 200k figure.

The well-known reliability of these cars keeps their resale value higher than that of most 20-plus-year-old cars (we’re talking figures like $ 1,100 versus $ 400 here), but most used-car shoppers can’t work a stickshift these days, and so a car like this is difficult to sell. That makes The Crusher the likely next stop for a beater like this.

It still has 2017 tags, which suggests that we’re looking at a towed-and-impounded victim of unpaid parking tickets rather than expensive mechanical failure; in either case, low resale value made it not worthwhile for its final owner to save. It makes me sad, but not enough to go out and rescue a forlorn manual-transmission Camry. Now, if they had sold the All-Trac Camry with a five-speed, I’d be driving one right now.

Eddie Haskell approved of the ’91 Camry. And, because he’d have been a cranky 50-year-old in 1991, he might have pounded his fist on the Toyota salesman’s table and demanded a manual transmission, just like the one he had in his ’66 Chevy Nova (but probably not).

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Post Author: martin

Martin is an enthusiastic programmer, a webdeveloper and a young entrepreneur. He is intereted into computers for a long time. In the age of 10 he has programmed his first website and since then he has been working on web technologies until now. He is the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of BriefNews.eu and PCHealthBoost.info Online Magazines. His colleagues appreciate him as a passionate workhorse, a fan of new technologies, an eternal optimist and a dreamer, but especially the soul of the team for whom he can do anything in the world.

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