Junkyard Find: 1987 Toyota Conversion Van

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

Chrysler revolutionized the American family-hauler world in the 1984 model year when the Plymouth Voyager and Dodge Caravan minivans first appeared. That same year, Toyota began selling Americanized versions of its LiteAce/ TownAce/ MasterAce Surf vans over here, attracting less attention but moving enough of them that I still see them during my junkyard travels. Here's an '87 that received the camper-conversion treatment, now residing in a Northern California car graveyard.

Toyota called the passenger version of this van the Van Wagon at first, but Volkswagen of America felt that name seemed awfully similar to that of the Vanagon.

Lawyers sent nastygrams back and forth, leading Toyota to change the name to the Toyota Van. This fit in well with their name for the North American-market Hilux pickup after 1973: the Toyota Truck.

When Nissan and Mitsubishi brought over their mid-engined small vans, they followed Toyota's naming lead and called them the Nissan Van and Mitsubishi Van, respectively (actually, Mitsubishi only used the Van name for the cargo version of the Delica here; the passenger version was called the Wagon). I'm disappointed that Toyota never offered a sedan called the Toyota Car.

Toyota made extra room inside this forward-control design by installing a straight-four engine, laid over on its side, beneath the front seats. This is a pushrod straight-four Y engine, rated at 90 horsepower and 120 pound-feet. To get to the engine, you have to flip up the hinged front seat mounts.

Most Americans wanted the optional automatic transmission in their Vans, and that's what this one has. I do find the occasional discarded Van with a five-speed manual.

This Van is a rear-wheel-drive version ( four-wheel-drive Vans were available) with the top LE trim level, with an MSRP of $14,598 with automatic. That's about $39,925 in 2023 dollars.

Of course, that price was before the conversion treatment.

It has the curtains, big aftermarket windows, all that good stuff.

The red-and-silver two-tone paint looks sharp with these pinstripes.

Modifiers Performance Systems was a line of 1:43 diecast toy cars, apparently.

Most of the Toyota Vans I find in these places have a lot more miles than this on their odometers. The only ones I've seen with lower odometer readings are an '84 with factory icemaker and another '87 conversion van.

The last year for the Toyota Van in the United States was 1989. It replacement, the Previa, arrived for the 1991 model year.

This looks like a job for Toyota Wonderwagon!

The panel version was the newest workhorse of the workforce.

[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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  • Michael Michael on Jul 06, 2023

    Wow, only made it 150k miles. So much for Toyota so-called realibility!

    • David David 6 days ago

      Honestly, Toyota is only slightly less overrated than Honda.

      The Toyota LE Van was a disposable car, as any major repair costs more in labor than the price of a new van. A friend's dad had one that just after the warranty expired the oil had coolant in it and the transmission fluid was black. I was asked to look at it as the repair shop said that it was totaled. Which was true as the labor for an engine swap alone exceeded the cost of a brand new crappy Toyota Van...

      Ironically, my friend's dad had previously told me that I "was a f#cking dumb a$$ for buying my 86 Ford Escort" Pony at $4800, as "Ford stands for Fix or repair only" and "American Cars are Garbage". My Escort was one of the best cars I have owned, but not as good as the 84 Audi 4000 Quattro. And his Toyota Van was one of the worst cars that Toyota exported to the US...





  • David David 6 days ago

    Murilee Martin, These Toyota Vans were absolute garbage. As the labor even basic service cost 400% as much as servicing a VW Vanagon or American minivan. A skilled Toyota tech would take about 2.5 hours just to change the air cleaner. Also they also broke often, as they overheated and warped the engine and boiled the automatic transmission...

  • FreedMike Miami is a trip - it's probably the closest thing we have to Dubai in this country. If you are into Lambos and the like, definitely go - you'll see a show every night. These condos fit right in with the culture. I was in Miami Beach in January with my fiancee, and we shared a lovely lunch that consisted of three street tacos each, chips and salsa, and two sodas. Tab: $70.00, with tip. Great town, assuming you can afford to live there.
  • Kjhkjlhkjhkljh kljhjkhjklhkjh Pay money to be inundated in Adverts for a car that breaks when you sneeze? no
  • Laflamcs My wife got a new 500 Turbo in 2015. Black exterior with an incredible red leather interior and a stick! The glass sunroof was epic and it was just about the whole roof that seemed to roll back. Anyway, that little bugger was an absolute blast to drive. Loved being run hard and shifted fast. Despite its small exterior dimensions, one could pile a lot into it. She remember stocking up at COSTCO one time when a passerby in the parking lot looked at her full cart and asked "Will it all fit?" It did. We had wonderful times with that car and many travels. It was reliable in the years we owned it and had TONS of character lacking in most "sporty" car. Loved the Italian handling, steering, and shift action. We had to trade it in after our daughter came along in 2018 (too small for 3 vacationers). She traded it in for a Jeep Renegade Latitude 6 speed, in which we can still feel a bit of that Italian heritage in the aforementioned driving qualities. IIRC, the engine in this Abarth is the same as in our Renegade. We still talk about that little 500..........
  • Rochester If I could actually afford an Aston Martin, I would absolutely consider living in an Aston themed condo.
  • Redapple2 I ve slept on it. I would take one on a 3 yr lease for $199/mo- ($1000 down total). Evil gm Vampire gave me this deal in 2012.
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