When American Motors introduced the Eagle for the 1980 model year, followed by Audi beginning Quattro sales here a year later, it was finally possible to buy cars—not trucks—that powered all four wheels with no confusing decisions demanded of drivers. Toyota's response to this was the All-Trac AWD system, which first appeared here in 1988 models. Here's one of those first-year cars: a Camry All-Trac found in a Denver self-service yard recently.
By far the best-selling of the early All-Trac cars was the Corolla wagon, and I've found quite a few of those during my junkyard travels. There was a Corolla All-Trac sedan available at the same time, but I have yet to find one of those in the boneyards.
The Previa minivan was available with All-Trac (and, for a couple of years, All-Trac and a manual transmission), and I've documented some of them as well.
The Camry All-Trac was sold in North America for the 1988 through 1991 model years, and it was popular enough in Colorado that I'd managed to find three used-up examples prior to today's Junkyard Find.
This car appears to have been involved in a crime last fall. We can assume it was impounded by Johnny Law, eventually being auctioned off… straight into the hands of U-Pull-&-Pay.
What evidence was inside?
The "BIO" warnings inked on the glass made me cautious about poking around inside this car. I've found plenty of used hypodermic syringes (and worse) in junkyards.
It was worth a peek inside, though, because this car has a five-speed manual transmission. I'd heard that manual Camry All-Tracs were available in theory, but this is the first example I've seen in person.
All-Trac was a true all-wheel-drive system, in which you could drive on dry pavement all you wanted without damaging anything. Such was not the case with the four-wheel-drive Tercel wagon, which had to be manually switched into front-wheel-drive mode on dry pavement (many drivers didn't understand this and tore up their tires or worse).
Under extra-slippery conditions, the driver of an All-Trac-equipped Camry with a manual transmission could mash the DIFF LOCK button to lock the center differential. If you had an automatic All-Trac Camry, you got a button that unlocked the center differential.
Even this much simple decision-making proved befuddling to many American drivers, so such controls were deleted from all-wheel-drive vehicles as the 1990s went on. If you're assuming that I bought the DIFF LOCK switch and this indicator panel for a future car-parts boombox, you are correct.
The Camry All-Trac wasn't available here with the V6 engine, though you could get a 1988-1991 front-wheel-drive Camry with both a V6 and a 5-speed that year. This car has the 2.0-liter 3S-FE four-cylinder, rated at 103 horsepower.
Sadly, the Camry wagon wasn't available with All-Trac, at least not in North America.
The emissions sticker tells us that this Camry was a "49-state" car, not originally sold in California.
The odometer shows just over 120,000 miles, which is very low for a junkyard Camry.
It has air conditioning, which cost $795 (about $2,067 in 2023 dollars) and the $190 AM/FM/cassette radio ($494 after inflation). You needed this audio rig to appreciate the unforgettable tunage of the era.
The interior doesn't seem to have been too trashed when it arrived here, though there's a thick coating of dog hair on everything.
The rust got nasty around the fenderwells. This car probably was a runner when it hit the auction, but its combination of biohazardous crime-scene provenance, body rot and manual transmission likely proved off-putting for potential bidders who didn't work for car graveyards.
Ford sold Tempos and Topazes with all-wheel-drive around the time this car was new, and Subaru had just begun its transition from four-wheel-drive to all-wheel-drive (by the 1996 model year, every new Subaru sold in the United States would have all-wheel-drive as standard equipment).
Even GM joined the AWD car party during the late 1980s. Within a few years, sedans with four driven wheels would be commonplace … just as sedans themselves became increasingly shunned by vehicle shoppers.
You'll get there in time, Mom. You've got a Camry All-Trac.
The JDM commercials for All-Trac-equipped cars are a lot more fun.
[Images: The Author]
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