Toyota Corolla (E120)

Toyota Corolla (E120/E130)
Japanese/international version (2000–2004)
Overview
ManufacturerToyota
Also calledToyota Allex (Japan, hatchback)
Production
  • August 2000 – January 2007 (Japan)
  • March 2001 – November 2007 (Southeast Asia)
  • January 2002 – December 2007 (North America)
  • February 2004 – February 2017 (China)
  • July 2001 – January 2007 (Allex, RunX)[1]
Model years2003–2008
Assembly
Designer
  • John McLeod (1998)[3]
  • Masao Saito, Takashi Hagino and Hideyuki Numata (Corolla Altis/N. American Version: 1998; MY2005 refresh: 2003)[4][5][6]
Body and chassis
ClassCompact car
Body style
LayoutFront mid-engine, front-wheel drive or four-wheel-drive
PlatformToyota MC platform
Related
Powertrain
Engine
Transmission
Dimensions
Wheelbase2,600 mm (102.4 in)[8]
Length
  • 2000–03 Corolla: 4,390 mm (172.8 in)
  • 2004–07 models: 4,529 mm (178.3 in)
  • Japanese models: 4,370 mm (172.0 in)
  • Hatchback: 4,180 mm (164.6 in)
Width
  • 2000–03 Corolla: 1,695 mm (66.73 in)
  • 2004–07 models: 1,705 mm (67.13 in)
Height
  • 2003–04 Base: 1,460–1,466 mm (57.5–57.7 in)
  • 2005–08 CE: 1,481 mm (58.3 in)
  • 2005–08 S & LE: 1,486 mm (58.5 in)
  • XRS: 1,476 mm (58.1 in)
Curb weight
  • Japanese specifications:
  • 1,070–1,190 kg (2,358.9–2,623.5 lb) (hatchback)[9][10]
  • 1,010–1,180 kg (2,226.7–2,601.5 lb) (sedan)[7]
  • 1,070–1,240 kg (2,358.9–2,733.7 lb) (station wagon)[11]
  • 5-door hatchback (Europe) with 1ND-TV: 1,280–1,330 kg (2,821.9–2,932.1 lb)[12]
Chronology
PredecessorToyota Corolla (E110)
Successor

The Toyota Corolla (E120/E130) is the ninth generation of compact cars sold by Toyota under the Corolla nameplate. In Japan, this series arrived to the market in August 2000; however, exports were typically not achieved until 2001 and 2002 depending on the market.

The sedan and station wagon arrived first in August 2000, followed by the five-door hatchback in January 2001, and the Europe-only three-door hatchback in 2002. Toyota supplemented the original styling with an edgier, hatchback-only styling treatment from 2002. Sedans and wagons sold in Japan adopted a new front-end design in 2004, although this version did not typically reach export markets. In other Asian markets and the Americas, the ninth generation Corolla (sedan and wagon only) had unique front and rear styling treatments with mild updates over the model's production run.

The E120/E130 model offered a longer 2,600 mm (102.4 in) wheelbase. It is built on a shortened V50 series Vista platform. From being marketed as a premium compact sedan, to an affordable hatchback, the ninth generation Corolla was designed as a "global" automobile to suit different market needs. This was one of Toyota's most versatile and most popular models ever produced.

The E120/E130 series Corolla has also spawned another separate hatchback model called the Matrix, sold in the United States, Canada and Mexico, which forms the basis of the Pontiac Vibe, which was in turn sold in Japan as the Voltz.

The E120 series was replaced by the E140 or E150 series in late 2006 or early 2007 but the E120 continued to be produced in China until 2017.[13]

The E120 Corolla won the What Car? magazine's "Car of the Year" award for 2002.

  1. ^ a b "Affiliates (Toyota wholly-owned subsidiaries)-Toyota Motor East Japan, Inc". Toyota Motor Corporation. 2012. Retrieved 21 July 2014.
  2. ^ "國瑞汽車股份有限公司 Kuozui Motors, Ltd" (in Chinese). Kuozui.com.tw. Retrieved 20 November 2011.
  3. ^ Oude Weernink, Wim (8 October 2001). "New Toyota Corolla to get compact minivan variant". Automotive News Europe. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  4. ^ INPIT. "J-PlatPat". Archived from the original on 28 November 2015. Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  5. ^ "Patent USD494892 - Automobile". Retrieved 4 April 2016.
  6. ^ US D500710S, Masao Saito; Takashi Hagino & Hideyuki Numata, "Motor vehicle and/or toy replica thereof" 
  7. ^ a b "Corolla sedan catalogue" (in Japanese). Toyota. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  8. ^ Newbury, Stephen (2002). The car design yearbook 1. Merrell Publishers Limited. ISBN 1-85894-190-3.
  9. ^ "Corolla RunX catalogue" (in Japanese). Toyota. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  10. ^ "Corolla Allex catalogue" (in Japanese). Toyota. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  11. ^ "Corolla Fielder catalogue" (in Japanese). Toyota. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  12. ^ EC Declaration of conformity. Toyota. 2004.
  13. ^ "Corolla EX 花冠" (in Chinese). Retrieved 27 February 2010.