Toyota’s First Car in America
The first Toyota car to be sold in the United States was the Toyopet Crown. It was released as a special car in 1958. The Toyopet Crown had a pretty plain-looking grille. The grill that was used on this vehicle was shiny metal (chrome) and would have been in a rectangle komercijalna električna friteza shape. At the center of the grille was a horizontal bar. It was a styling trend of the time, and I think I've seen it on quite a few other cars as well. Back then, quite a few people liked a simple grille.
Changing Designs Over Time
Another decade later, and Toyota began to play around with different/grille designs. This unique and elegant design would no longer plinska friteza reklama biti a plinski roštilj s ravnim vrhom thing of the modern cars of the 1960s and 1970s, as manufacturers created more unique and stylized grilles that gave their vehicles a unique character that could set them apart from every other vehicle on the road. It was a playful era for automobile design! Then something happened in the 1980s: Toyota started focusing on more aerodynamic grilles. Aerodynamic, which describes the space-age curves of the body, pulls air past the car like a blade through butter, a quality many drivers crave.
We had this really cool new grille design in the 1990s derived from race cars. We heard this grille referred to as "TRD Sportivo," grille. It looked sleek and aggressive and many younger drivers found that appealing. This design not only made the model very popular but also put Toyota on the map as a manufacturer of fast and performance cars. They fell in love with what they saw and with how it felt behind the wheel.