Toyota Land Cruiser Gold Portfolio 1956-1987
 This book covers Toyota Land Cruiser 1956 to 1987.
Includes driving impressions, first drives, road tests, comparison tests, long-term tests, owners' survey, buying secondhand, diesel, hardtop, pick-up, wagon, and more.
From the Publisher
The original BJ-85 Land Cruiser which appeared in the early Fifties was little more than a Jeep clone, built using existing light truck components and intended for use by the Japanese self-defense force and by emergency authorities. Few made it beyond the shores of Japan, although a small number were sold to enthusiastic new owners in Australia towards the middle of the decade.
By then, however, Toyota had given a great deal more thought to the non-military possibilities of a light 4x4 utility vehicle. The American Jeep and the British Land-Rover had opened up the market, and Toyota followed their lead with the 20-series Land Cruiser, a vehicle with a much more civilian orientation.
Toyota policy remained one of continual evolution, and the 20-series gave way in time to 40-series, 50-series, and 60-series models, each one offering rather more than the last. However, production of each successive series generally overlapped, reflecting Toyota's excellent understanding of the rather conservative market its Land Cruisers were selling into.
It took time for the Land Cruiser name to become firmly established outside Japan, but major sales success in Australia and around the Pacific Rim brought widespread recognition that this was indeed a vehicle to be reckoned with. Rugged, versatil, and offering a wide variety of engines, wheelbases and body types, the Land Cruiser had beaten off all opposition to become the world's best-selling light 4x4 range by the 1980s.
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