Junkyard Find: 1978 Toyota Celica GT Coupe

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

The first-generation Toyota Celica was sold in the United States from the 1971 through 1977 model years, and this Mustang-influenced coupe became a frequent sight on American roads. The second-generation Celica debuted here as a 1978 model, and I've found one of those first-year cars in an extremely hot Northern California car graveyard.

The second-generation Celica was available in notchback and liftback form, with North American sales continuing through the 1981 model year.

The 20th-century Celica always had a sedan sibling called the Carina; that car was sold in the United States for just the 1972 and 1973 model years. Just to confuse everyone, the original Camry (available only in Japan and pronounced "cah-moo-REE") was a Celica.

A stretched and widened Celica with six-cylinder power and badged as the Celica Supra first became available in the United States as a 1979 model. This car has the good old 2.2-liter 20R SOHC straight-four, rated at 95 horsepower and 122 pound-feet.

The 20R was lifted straight from the Hilux pickup, and it was a very sturdy engine designed to make good torque at low speeds. Perhaps such a truckish motor wasn't ideal for a sports car, but it got the job done.

A five-speed manual was base equipment, but the original buyer of this car saw fit to spend extra on the three-speed automatic.

The factory clock is still there, but the factory radio has been replaced by a very 1980s Pioneer cassette deck.

That 5,000 rpm redline sure looks Hiluxy. The five-digit odometer shows 9,623 miles, but we can be sure the true mileage was much higher.

It had been sitting for many years before it came here. This is the same yard at which I shot a similarly weathered 1971 Corona coupe last year, and I think both cars may have come from the same Toyota hoard in the Gold Country woods.

The interior is trashed and the body is bent… but there's no rust. That's very rare for one of these cars, even in California.

Finally, get your money's worth!

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

1978 Toyota Celica GT in California wrecking yard.

Toyota seems to have have pushed the liftback much harder than the notchback in its U.S.-market advertising.

[Images: The Author]

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Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • Pianoboy57 Pianoboy57 on Sep 18, 2024

    Not buying one of these was a regret. If I had, I would have painted the big black bumpers the body color.

  • Maly Maly on Oct 02, 2024

    Hi got one Celica 1981 St 2 doors auto need part got it need rubber back window within the crome parts let 'me now any one sale part for it thank s much sale it to for $5.000 OBO thank you

  • Lorenzo If it's over 30 years old and over 80k miles, and not a classic, it's a parts car, worth no more than 20% of original price.
  • Dusterdude No mileage noted on a 33 year old car means likely well north of 300k + miles , along with issues noted , should equate to an ask price of less than $3k
  • Ajla IMO, something like this really should be naturally-aspirated.
  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh Unless they are solid state batteries you BAN THEM. I like EVs... but EVs like to burn ... for days
  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh uh .. it looks like a VW golf got the mumps
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