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  • Originally posted by Big Dad View Post
    Where is that? Those are super rare, and I want one (Toyota GT2000 for those that don't know).

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    • Natural law. Sons are put on this earth to trouble their fathers.

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      • Originally posted by Ratt View Post
        Where is that? Those are super rare, and I want one (Toyota GT2000 for those that don't know).
        Seven figures plus puts it out of any of our price ranges .... Except for Pattymelt.

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        • That is why they are so rare , Pattymelt has 3 and the seats are covered with cowhides

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          • Natural law. Sons are put on this earth to trouble their fathers.

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            • Best Sounding Car EVAR!!!


              Last edited by BlackGT; 08-13-2014, 12:25 PM.
              "Laws that forbid the carrying of arms...disarm only those who are neither inclined nor determined to commit crimes...Such laws make things worse for the assaulted and better for the assailants; they serve rather to encourage than to prevent homicides, for an unarmed man may be attacked with greater confidence than an armed man." - Thomas Jefferson, 1776

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              • Originally posted by BlackGT View Post
                Best Sounding Car EVAR!!!

                We are not able to confirm since the video link is not working

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                • Sorry, was not able to embed. Link should work now.

                  No to just figure out which, nut, leg, and arm I can live without to get my hands on one of those quad-rotor engines...

                  I remember watching this car in races on TV, and also using it in Gran Turismo (best car on the game). Car was badass...
                  "Laws that forbid the carrying of arms...disarm only those who are neither inclined nor determined to commit crimes...Such laws make things worse for the assaulted and better for the assailants; they serve rather to encourage than to prevent homicides, for an unarmed man may be attacked with greater confidence than an armed man." - Thomas Jefferson, 1776

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                  • Originally posted by Ratt View Post
                    Where is that? Those are super rare, and I want one (Toyota GT2000 for those that don't know).

                    San Francisco,Ca..

                    Said only 54 ever imported
                    and few remain, claimed it was worth over 1million

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                    • Originally posted by Big Dad View Post
                      San Francisco,Ca..

                      Said only 54 ever imported
                      and few remain, claimed it was worth over 1million
                      Fun fact: Toyota never offered it as a convertible. They shipped the car to the set and Sean Connery couldn't fit in it so Toyota said "OK, we can fix that". They built a special targa model but the director said Connery looked ridiculous and gave Toyota 2 weeks to build the "convertible" model or the car would not appear on film. They pulled it off by chopping the roof off two of them and sent them back to location. The "verts" didn't even have a top, just a thing that looked like a folded top.







                      No ordinary Camry: 1967 Toyota 2000GT sells for $1.16 million at auction


                      Would you pay nearly $1.2 million for a Toyota?

                      Someone at RM Auctions did, setting an auction sale record for a car from an Asian manufacturer. However, this wasn’t your grandmother’s Camry.

                      This pale yellow coupe is a 1967 2000GT, Toyota’s first sports car and the great-grandparent of the 560 horsepower, $388,475 Lexus LFA.

                      If a supercar from the company known for the dowdy Camry and Lexus RX seems like a stretch today, imagine what it was like in 1965, when Toyota unveiled the 2000GT at the Tokyo Motor Show, surrounded by cars that pretty much were toys in comparison.

                      Nothing like the 2000GT had ever come out of Japan, whose cars had the reputation Korean cars of the 1980s and 1990s had: basic, cheap and maybe a bit suspect.

                      Taking a quantum leap forward, Toyota married a sleek body (that bore more than a passing resemblance to the Jaguar E-Type) with a 150 hp, Yamaha-designed 2.0-liter straight six and then-innovative features like disc brakes and rack-and-pinion steering.

                      A roadster version also starred in the James Bond film You Only Live Twice.
                      The 2000GT had a reported top speed of over 135 mph (pretty good for the ‘60s) and, like any good supercar, it was as exclusive as it was fast.
                      Only 351 2000GTs were built, costing approximately $7,250 each. A period Jaguar E-Type stickered for $5,580.

                      On top of that, the 2000GT sold at RM was one of just 62 left-hand drive versions made. Rarity is a great way to drive up a collector car’s selling price, but this 2000GT’s selling price is still surprising.

                      There are many 1960s Japanese cars that can be called “collectable,” but they don’t usually attract the same insane bids as vintage contemporaries from the United States or Europe.

                      In addition to the 2000GT, there are the many early generations of Nissan Skyline GT-R, as well as the Cosmo, Mazda’s first rotary-powered sports car. They’re all great cars, but they don’t inspire the same passion as a pristine Yenko Camaro or Austin Healey 3000.

                      Just as when they were new, vintage Japanese cars have had to play some catch-up in the collector arena. Now that a Toyota 2000GT has sold for the price of a small country, it seems they’ve caught up.

                      Toyota could also learn something from this car. In the time it’s taken for the 2000GT to go from new car to collector car, Japan’s largest carmaker has, in a way, stayed put.

                      When Toyota unveiled the Lexus LFA, it was just as unbelievable as the 2000GT. This time, the company’s technical expertise wasn’t in question, but its will to push the limits of that expertise was. Today’s Toyota doesn’t have to take risks, so it doesn’t.

                      That wasn’t the case in 1965, and Toyota is better for it.

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                            • Originally posted by Ratt View Post
                              Where is that? Those are super rare, and I want one (Toyota GT2000 for those that don't know).
                              LH drive also, only made like 70 of those or something.
                              "When the people find that they can vote themselves money, that will herald the end of the republic." -Benjamin Franklin
                              "A democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury." -Alexander Fraser Tytler

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