Toyota Succeed

The Toyota Succeed is a now-discontinued station wagon/van sold by Toyota in Japan as passenger car[3] and commercial van.[4]

Toyota Succeed (XP50/160)
Toyota Succeed Van UL (NCP51V)
Overview
ManufacturerDaihatsu[1]
Also called
Production
  • 2002–2020[2]
  • *2002–2014 (XP50)
  • *2014–2020 (XP160)
AssemblyJapan: Ōyamazaki, Kyoto (Daihatsu Kyoto plant)[1]
Body and chassis
Class
Body style5-door station wagon/van
Layout
PlatformToyota NBC platform (2002–2014)
Toyota B platform (2014–2020)
Related
Powertrain
Engine
Transmission
Dimensions
Wheelbase2,550 mm (100.4 in) (X50/160)
Length4,300 mm (169.3 in) (XP50)
4,245 mm (167.1 in) (XP160)
Width1,690–1,695 mm (66.5–66.7 in) (XP50/160)
Height1,510–1,515 mm (59.4–59.6 in) (XP50)
1,525–1,530 mm (60.0–60.2 in) (XP160)
Curb weight1,050–1,140 kg (2,314.9–2,513.3 lb) (XP50)
1,100–1,170 kg (2,425.1–2,579.4 lb) (XP160)
Chronology
PredecessorToyota Caldina Van (T190)
SuccessorToyota Probox (Succeed Van)
Toyota Corolla Fielder (Succeed Wagon)

First generation (XP50)

The first Succeed was introduced in July 2002 as the successor of Toyota Caldina Van.[1] A more basic and shorter version is known as the Toyota Probox.

For 2007 Japanese models, G-Book, a subscription telematics service, was offered as an option.

2014 facelift (XP160)

Since the 2014 facelift, the Succeed and Probox are identical. However, the Probox is also available with a 1.3-litre engine.[5] The passenger variants of the two were discontinued and the role was taken over by Toyota Corolla Fielder Wagon. The Succeed was available through Toyota and Toyopet dealerships,[6] while the Probox was sold through Corolla dealerships.[7] Starting in 2018, Toyota Japan started merging its four dealership formulas,[8] and the twinned model lines.[9] In May 2020, the Succeed was discontinued.

Toyota Succeed TX (NCP160V)

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.