When American Motors introduced the Eagle for the 1980 model year, followed by Audi beginning Quattro sales here a year later, it was finally possible to buy cars—not trucks—that powered all four wheels with no confusing decisions demanded of drivers. Toyota's response to this was the All-Trac AWD system, which first appeared here in 1988 models. Here's one of those first-year cars: a Camry All-Trac found in a Denver self-service yard recently.
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By far the best-selling of the early All-Trac cars was the Corolla wagon, and I've found quite a few of those during my junkyard travels. There was a Corolla All-Trac sedan available at the same time, but I have yet to find one of those in the boneyards.
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The Previa minivan was available with All-Trac (and, for a couple of years, All-Trac and a manual transmission), and I've documented some of them as well.
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The Camry All-Trac was sold in North America for the 1988 through 1991 model years, and it was popular enough in Colorado that I'd managed to find three used-up examples prior to today's Junkyard Find.
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This car appears to have been involved in a crime last fall. We can assume it was impounded by Johnny Law, eventually being auctioned off… straight into the hands of U-Pull-&-Pay.
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What evidence was inside?
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The "BIO" warnings inked on the glass made me cautious about poking around inside this car. I've found plenty of used hypodermic syringes (and worse) in junkyards.
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It was worth a peek inside, though, because this car has a five-speed manual transmission. I'd heard that manual Camry All-Tracs were available in theory, but this is the first example I've seen in person.
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All-Trac was a true all-wheel-drive system, in which you could drive on dry pavement all you wanted without damaging anything. Such was not the case with the four-wheel-drive Tercel wagon, which had to be manually switched into front-wheel-drive mode on dry pavement (many drivers didn't understand this and tore up their tires or worse).
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Under extra-slippery conditions, the driver of an All-Trac-equipped Camry with a manual transmission could mash the DIFF LOCK button to lock the center differential. If you had an automatic All-Trac Camry, you got a button that unlocked the center differential.
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Even this much simple decision-making proved befuddling to many American drivers, so such controls were deleted from all-wheel-drive vehicles as the 1990s went on. If you're assuming that I bought the DIFF LOCK switch and this indicator panel for a future car-parts boombox, you are correct.
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The Camry All-Trac wasn't available here with the V6 engine, though you could get a 1988-1991 front-wheel-drive Camry with both a V6 and a 5-speed that year. This car has the 2.0-liter 3S-FE four-cylinder, rated at 103 horsepower.
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Sadly, the Camry wagon wasn't available with All-Trac, at least not in North America.
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The emissions sticker tells us that this Camry was a "49-state" car, not originally sold in California.
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The odometer shows just over 120,000 miles, which is very low for a junkyard Camry.
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It has air conditioning, which cost $795 (about $2,067 in 2023 dollars) and the $190 AM/FM/cassette radio ($494 after inflation). You needed this audio rig to appreciate the unforgettable tunage of the era.
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The interior doesn't seem to have been too trashed when it arrived here, though there's a thick coating of dog hair on everything.
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The rust got nasty around the fenderwells. This car probably was a runner when it hit the auction, but its combination of biohazardous crime-scene provenance, body rot and manual transmission likely proved off-putting for potential bidders who didn't work for car graveyards.
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Ford sold Tempos and Topazes with all-wheel-drive around the time this car was new, and Subaru had just begun its transition from four-wheel-drive to all-wheel-drive (by the 1996 model year, every new Subaru sold in the United States would have all-wheel-drive as standard equipment).
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Even GM joined the AWD car party during the late 1980s. Within a few years, sedans with four driven wheels would be commonplace … just as sedans themselves became increasingly shunned by vehicle shoppers.
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You'll get there in time, Mom. You've got a Camry All-Trac.
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The JDM commercials for All-Trac-equipped cars are a lot more fun.
[Images: The Author]
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