The
Toyota Celica Supra is described as being in all-around good original condition
For too many years,
conventional car-guy wisdom determined that Japanese cars would never rise to
the level of collectability, and that the late 1970s and ’80s were wastelands
of forgettable vehicles.
Celica
Supra was a sport/luxury car designed to attract upscale drivers
If you doubt that,
think of the Datsun 240Z sport coupes that are starting to pick up steam in the
collector-car marketplace. Or further out there, the million-dollar sales of
limited-production Toyota 2000GTs, or the Mazda Cosmos that are changing hands
at around $250,000. Even the scant number of funky Japanese compacts that remain
from the ’70s, Corollas and such, are finding an audience among young people.
With just 67,000 miles on its odometer and in apparently
original, rust-free condition aside from an apparent repaint to the original
color, the Celica Supra is advertised onClassicCars.com for just $12,500.
The upscale six-cylinder version of the Celica was a desirable GT car in its
day, and they were nicely finished cars designed to attract sport/luxury
drivers.
Speaking of funky, this first-gen
model of the Celica Supraalso has a major helping of retro
charm. The Supra reveals its’70s roots with a “burgundy maroon vinyl” interior
that should go well with your bell bottoms and platform loafers.
The photos are not
the best in the listing by a Massachusetts classic car dealer, but at least you
can see that the Supra seems to be in remarkably good condition for an
unrestored original.
The
‘burgundy maroon’ interior is a throwback to the disco days
The car, which is
located in Lyon, Illinois, is equipped with the desirable five-speed manual
transmission and is finished in silver (the dealer notes that it looks blue in
the photos) with a contrasting black roof.
“Overall, this car
is in very good condition,” the seller says in the listing. “The exterior looks
good, the interior is in good condition, under the car she is in good shape and
mechanically it runs and drives nicely.”
There is one
caveat, however. The dealer says that the Supra has been off the road for some
years and while it runs and drives, it needs a thorough fuel-system cleaning.
At least.
Most of the Toyota Supras getting
attention from young driversthese days are thelater-generation performance modelsthat are turned
into showy sport-compact customs or “tuned” for drifting competitions. But this
first-year Celica Supra has more appeal and value in stock condition and,
hopefully, the buyer will appreciate the originality of a special car from a
weird automotive time.
And if preserved as
a survivor, that could pay off in its collector car future.
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