The Toyota P family is an inline-four engine produced from October 1959 through 1994. Originally fitted to the Corona passenger car, it was soon relegated to commercial use vehicles and for its latter two decades it mostly powered various forklifts.
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P
The 1.0 L (997 cc) P was produced from 1959 through 1961. Bore and stroke are 69.9 x 65.0 mm.
- 1959.10-1961.09 Toyota Toyoace PK20, 45 PS (33 kW)
2P
The 1.2 L (1,198 cc) 2P was produced from 1961 through 1972. This was bored out to 76.6 mm, while retaining the short 65.0 mm stroke. Power is 55 PS (40 kW) at 5,000 rpm, while torque is 8.8 kg·m (86 N·m; 64 lbf·ft) at 2,800 rpm.
- 1961.09-??? Toyota Toyoace PK30/31, 55 PS (40 kW)
- 1962-1964.08 Toyota Coronaline Van/Pickup PT26"
- 1964.09-1967.05 Toyota Corona PT40/PT46
3P
The 1.3 L (1,345 cc) 3P was produced from 1967 through 1979. Bore is 76.6 mm, stroke is 73.0 mm. Power is usually 65 PS (48 kW) at 5,000 rpm, with torque of 10.3 kg·m (101 N·m; 75 lb·ft) at 3,000 rpm.
- 1967.05-1970.01 Toyota Corona PT41/PT47
- 1970.02-1973.07 Toyota Corona PT86V
- 1967-1971 Toyota Toyoace PK32
- 1971-197? Toyota Toyoace PY10
- Toyota "Seven" shovel SG7 (700 kg), 28 PS (21 kW)
4P
The 1.5 L (1,493 cc) 4P (retaining the 76.6 mm bore but with a longer 81 mm stroke) mostly saw use in off-road equipment such as forklifts and loaders, where it was used until at least 1994 for the Toyota 5FGL. It produces 30 PS (22 kW) at 2,400 rpm as fitted to the Toyota 2SGK6 loader.
Source of the article : Wikipedia
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