Class: Cars, Sedan — Model origin:
Minor action vehicle or used in only a short scene
Author | Message |
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◊ 2023-09-07 22:19 |
Huh, first new Crown Cr̶o̶s̶s̶t̶o̶u̶r̶ Crossover on the site. Haven't seen one the road yet. -- Last edit: 2023-09-07 22:19:32 |
◊ 2023-09-08 23:56 |
Class should be sedan as the new Crown still has a conventional trunk rather than a liftback. Link to "www.motorbiscuit.com" -- Last edit: 2023-09-09 00:01:19 |
◊ 2023-09-09 04:56 |
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◊ 2023-09-13 16:26 |
![]() ![]() Also, I think [S235] should be the default chassis code for the sixteenth generation, to follow the code tradition of the previous gen Crowns that Toyota assigned in the past. |
◊ 2024-01-28 15:29 |
Agree, Class should be sedan For other models: Crown Sport => Off-road/ SUV Crown Sedan => Sedan Crown Estate/Signia => Off-road/ SUV |
◊ 2024-01-28 22:12 |
It is indeed a sedan. The extended chassis codes either say ASZH35-AE... or TZSH35-AE..., and that that AE part means a sedan. If it were a hatchback, it would have been AH. Now, the chassis code is not SH35. And I'm not sure if we should use S230/S235, just because earlier Crowns used similar codes. Toyota's chassis code system has changed with the introduction of the Dynamic Force engine. Let's take the current XP210 Yaris. The versions equipped with the M15A engine have a MXPA10 chassis code. M and A for the engine, XP for the platform, but I don't know why 210 just became 10. Anyway, for this Crown, as I mentioned above, we have ASZH35 (A25A engine) or TZSH35 (T24A engine). If we remove the engines' letters, does that mean we have a ZS30 platform ? I'm not even sure. What is sure, though, is that this car has the standard 19-inch wheels. And that means it's powered by the standard 2.5 litre engine, thus ASZH35 it is. |