Toyota Corolla Rumion

First generation
Overview
Manufacturer Kanto Auto Works (Iwate plant)
Also called Scion xB (Canada and USA)
Toyota Rukus (AUS)
Production 2007-2015
Designer Hiroaki Suzuki (2005)
Body and chassis
Related Toyota bB
Toyota Corolla (E140)
Toyota Corolla (E160)
Toyota Corolla (E170)
Toyota Auris
Toyota Vitz
Powertrain
Engine

1.5 L 1NZ-FE I4

1.8 L 2ZR-FAE I4
Transmission 7-speed Super CVT-i
Chronology
Predecessor Toyota Corolla Verso

Toyota Corolla Rumion, called the Rukus in Australia,[1] is a small wagon produced by the Kanto Auto Works[2] in Japan under the Toyota label.

It is based on the second generation of the Scion xB, the same car but with a different hood, front bumper, front fenders, and headlights. The Australian Toyota Rukus uses the same front clip as the xB.

AEROTOURER Chocolate (2008)

It is a limited version of 1.5X, 1.5G, 1.8S with Chocolate-coloured body.

The vehicle went on sale in 2008-1-21.[3]

AEROTOURER Sora (2008)

It is a limited version of 1.5G Aero Tourer, 1.8S Aero Tourer with Light Blue Mica Metallic body, Super White II-coloured aero parts (front spoiler, side mudguard, rear bumpers, rear roof spoiler), two-tone interior (Light Blue Mica Metallic with Super White II meter borders).[4]

The vehicle went on sale in 2008-5-6.[5]

1.8S/1.5G “Smart Package” (2008-)

It is an equipment package keyless entry, engine start/stop switch, engine immobilizer. Optional features (standard on 1.8S) include high intensity discharge head lamp, driver side arm rest.[6]

Body styles

Chassis codes(DBA-)ZRE152N-FHXSK(DBA-)NZE151N-FHXEK(DBA-)NZE151N-FHXNK(DBA-)ZRE154N-FHXSK
Model1.8S 2WD1.5G 2WD1.5X 2WD1.8S 4WD
DriveFWDFWDFWD4WD
Engine2ZR-FAE1NZ-FE1NZ-FE2ZR-FAE

Engines

CodeYearsCapacityTypePower@rpmTorque@rpm
1NZ-FE2007-1,496 cc (1.496 L; 91.3 cu in)I4110 PS (81 kW; 110 hp)@6000143 N·m (105 lb·ft)@4400
2ZR-FAE2007-1,797 cc (1.797 L; 109.7 cu in)I4136 PS (100 kW; 134 hp)@6000175 N·m (129 lb·ft)@4400

Transmissions

Model(s)Type
1.5G, 1.5XSuper CVT-i
1.8SSuper CVT-i with 7-speed sport sequential shiftmatic

Production

The vehicles were built in Iwate Plant, Kanto Auto Works, Ltd.[7] Toyota stopped exporting the Scion xB to North American market in 2015 due to its replacement, the second generation Toyota Auris based Scion iM.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/19/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.