Toyota Land Cruiser (J40)

The Toyota Land Cruiser (J40), is a series of Land Cruisers made by Toyota from 1960 until 2001. Traditional body on frame SUVs, most 40 series Land Cruisers were built as 2-door models with slightly larger dimensions than the similar Jeep CJ.

Toyota Land Cruiser 40 series
Overview
ManufacturerToyota
Also called
Production
  • 1960–1984
  • 1968–2001 (Brazil)
Body and chassis
ClassCompact SUV
Body style
LayoutFront engine, rear-wheel drive / four-wheel drive
Powertrain
Engine
  • Petrol:
    3.8-litre F I6
  • 4.2-litre 2F I6
  • Diesel:
    3.0-litre B I4
  • 3.2-litre 2B I4
  • 3.4-litre 3B I4
  • 3.6-litre H I6
  • 3.7-litre 14B I4
  • 4.0-litre 2H I6
Dimensions
Wheelbase
  • 2,285 mm (90.0 in)
  • 2,430 mm (95.7 in)
  • 2,650 mm (104.3 in)
  • 2,950 mm (116.1 in)
Chronology
PredecessorToyota Land Cruiser (J20)
SuccessorToyota Land Cruiser (J70)

The model was available in short (J40/41/42), medium (J43/44/46) and long (J45/47) wheelbase versions, with petrol and diesel engines.

History

For the history of the J series from the original 1951 Toyota Jeep BJ through the J20 series see Land Cruiser History from 1950 to 1955.

  • 1960: J40 series launched (wheelbase 2,285 mm (90.0 in)/2,430 mm (95.7 in)/2,650 mm (104.3 in)).
  • 1963: Longer wheelbase (2,950 mm (116.1 in)), FJ45-B, pickup and cab-chassis were added).
  • 1967: End of four-door FJ45V (I) (2,650 mm (104.3 in) WB) production, replaced by FJ55 Station wagon).
2-door FJ45-B renamed FJ45 (II) (2,950 mm (116.1 in) WB).
  • 1968: 40-series production commences as the Bandeirante in Brazil, with locally produced Mercedes-Benz diesel engine.[1]
Toyota Land Cruiser hardtop
  • 1972: HJ45 launched with the H, 3.6-litre inline 6-cylinder diesel engine.
  • 1974: BJ40/43 launched with the B, 3.0-litre inline 4-cylinder diesel engine. A factory-fitted roll bar becomes standard in the United States (FJ40).
  • 1975: Rear barn doors are added to US model FJ40s. The lift gate remains available as an option in other countries.
  • 1976: Disc brakes on the front axle.
  • 1977: Front door vent windows removed, added rear vent windows on the hard top in the United States
  • 1979: Power steering (only F models) and air conditioning added to the options, gear ratios modified from 4:11 to 3:70 in the United States to be more freeway friendly. 1979 and later FJ40s square grill bezels.[2]
  • 1980: HJ47 launched with a 4.0-liter six-cylinder diesel engine. End of HJ45 production.
BJ42/46 and BJ45 launched with a 3.4-liter four-cylinder diesel engine.
  • 1981: Power steering added on the BJ models to the options, disc brakes added in Australia.
  • 1984: End of J40 series production (replaced by J70 series).
  • 1993: Five-speed transmission becomes available for the Toyota Bandeirante.[3]
  • 1994: In Brazil, the Mercedes-Benz OM-364 engine is replaced by the Toyota 14B unit.
  • 2001: End of Bandeirante production.

Models

1985 Land Cruiser FJ45 pickup
Land Cruiser Station Wagon (FJ45)
1981 Land Cruiser HJ47 utility
  • The J40/41/42 was a two-door short wheelbase four-wheel-drive vehicle, with either a soft or a hardtop (V). It was available with various petrol or diesel (from 1974) engines over its lifetime. It was replaced on most markets from 1984 by the J70 series (70/71).
  • The J43/J44/46 was an extremely rare two-door medium wheelbase four-wheel-drive vehicle, with either a soft or a hard-top (V). It was replaced on most markets from 1984 by the J70 series (73/74).
  • The J45/47 was a long-wheelbase four-wheel-drive vehicle, available in two-door hardtop, three-door hardtop, four-door station wagon and two-door pickup models. The four-door station wagon model (FJ45V-I) was the shortest-lived of the J40 series, as it was replaced by the FJ55G/V in 1967.
  • The Bandeirante TB25/TB41/TB51 Series are J25 series Land Cruisers built in Brazil by Toyota do Brasil Ltda from 1962 to 1968. In 1966 they were replaced by the OJ32 (soft top) and OJ31 (hard top) for the TB25, and the TB81 for the TB51; for an unknown reason the TB41 would keep its J2 code until 1968 when Toyota do Brasil switched to the J40 series.
  • The second generation Bandeirante OJ40/OJ45 Series (1968 to 1973), OJ50/OJ55 Series (1973 to 1994) and BJ50/BJ55 Series (1994 to 2001) are J40 series cars built in Brazil by Toyota do Brasil Ltda from 1968 to 2001. Identical to the BJ40 in almost every respect, it had a few stylistic modifications to the grille (models produced from 1989 on featured square headlights, instead of the round ones used before) and used Mercedes-Benz OM-314/OM-324/OM-364 diesel engines (replaced by Toyota 14B inline 4 direct injection Diesel engine in 1994) for much of its production life; another visible major characteristic are the entire hind doors (like in Land Rover SUVs) rather than the traditional Toyota two-wing hind doors at the Bandeirante's hard top models.
1963 Land Cruiser 4-door Station Wagon (FJ45)
Land Cruiser paint color codes
Code Color
012 Cygnus White
031 White (?-'80)
033 White ('80-)
113 Health Grey
309 Freeborn Red
310 Capri Blue
414 Buffalo Brown
415 Pueblo Brown
416 Dune Beige
464 Beige
Traditional Beige
474 Dark Copper
532 Mustard Yellow
611 Dark Green
621 Rustic Green
622 Nebula Green
653 Sicilian Olive
681 Green
(Nicknamed "John Deere Green")
808 Horizontal Blue
822 Royal Blue
854 Sky Blue
857 Nordic Blue
Feel Like Blue

The Bandeirante Models

  • 1968:
    • OJ40L - Short soft top bushdrive car - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-324 (September 1968 to January/February 1973) - replaces the OJ32L
    • OJ40LV - Short hard top bushdrive car - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-324 (October 1968 to January/February 1973) - replaces the OJ31L
    • OJ40LV-B - Long hard top bushdrive car - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-324 (October 1968 to January/February 1973) - replaces the TB41L
    • OJ45LP-B - Short pickup with native bed - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-324 (September 1968 to January/February 1973) - replaces the TB81L
  • 1973:
    • OJ50L - Short soft top bushdrive car - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-314 (February 1973 to November 1989) - replaces the OJ40L
    • OJ50LV - Short hard top bushdrive car - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-314 (February 1973 to November 1989) - replaces the OJ40LV
    • OJ50LV-B - Long hard top bushdrive car - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-314 (February 1973 to November 1989) - replaces the OJ40LV-B
    • OJ55LP-B - Short pickup with native bed - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-314 (February 1973 to November 1989) - replaces the OJ45LP-B
  • between 1973 and 1989:
    • OJ55LP-B3 - Short chassis-cab pickup - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-314 (19?? to November 1989) - new in 19??
    • OJ55LP-BL - Long pickup with native bed - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-314 (19?? to November 1989) - new in 19??
    • OJ55LP-BL3 - Short chassis-cab pickup - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-314 (19?? to November 1989) - new in 19??
    • OJ55LP-2BL - Long 2-door double cabin pickup with native bed - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-314 (19?? to November 1989) - new in 19??
  • 1989:
    • OJ50L - Short soft top bushdrive car - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-364 (November 1989 to April 1994) - replaces the OJ50L with Mercedes-Benz OM-314 motor
    • OJ50LV - Short hard top bushdrive car - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-364 (November 1989 to April 1994) - replaces the OJ50LV with Mercedes-Benz OM-314 motor
    • OJ50LV-B - Long hard top bushdrive car - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-364 (November 1989 to April 1994) - replaces the OJ50LV-B with Mercedes-Benz OM-314 motor
    • OJ55LP-B - Short pickup with native bed - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-364 (November 1989 to April 1994) - replaces the OJ55LP-B with Mercedes-Benz OM-314 motor
    • OJ55LP-B3 - Short chassis-cab pickup - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-364 (November 1989 to April 1994) - replaces the OJ55LP-B3 with Mercedes-Benz OM-314 motor
    • OJ55LP-BL - Long pickup with native bed - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-364 (November 1989 to April 1994) - replaces the OJ55LP-BL with Mercedes-Benz OM-314 motor
    • OJ55LP-BL3 - Long chassis-cab pickup - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-364 (November 1989 to April 1994) - replaces the OJ55LP-BL3 with Mercedes-Benz OM-314 motor
    • OJ55LP-2BL - Long 2-door double cabin pickup with native bed - motor Mercedes-Benz OM-364 (November 1989 to April 1994) - replaces the OJ55LP-2BL with Mercedes-Benz OM-314 motor
  • 1994:
    • BJ50L - Short soft top bushdrive car - motor Toyota 14B - April 1994 to November 2001 - replaces the OJ50L
    • BJ50LV - Short hard top bushdrive car - motor Toyota 14B - April 1994 to November 2001 - replaces the OJ50LV
    • BJ50LV-B - Long hard top bushdrive car - motor Toyota 14B - April 1994 to November 2001 - replaces the OJ50LV-B
    • BJ55LP-B - Short pickup with native bed - motor Toyota 14B - April 1994 to November 2001 - replaces the OJ55LP-B
    • BJ55LP-B3 - Short chassis-cab pickup - motor Toyota 14B - April 1994 to November 2001 - replaces the OJ55LP-B3
    • BJ55LP-BL - Long pickup with native bed - motor Toyota 14B - April 1994 to November 2001 - replaces the OJ55LP-BL
    • BJ55LP-BL3 - Long chassis-cab pickup - motor Toyota 14B - April 1994 to November 2001 - replaces the OJ55LP-BL3
    • BJ55LP-2BL - Long 2-door double cabin pickup with native bed - motor Toyota 14B - April 1994 to November 2001 - replaces the OJ55LP-2BL
  • 1999:
    • BJ55LP-2BL4 - Long 2-door double cabin pickup with native bed - motor Toyota 14B - 1999 to November 2001 - new in 1999

Engines

The J40 series was produced with both diesel and petrol engines. The F series was a 6-cylinder petrol motor, B series a 4-cylinder diesel, and H series a 6-cylinder diesel. The diesel trucks were never sold to the general public in the United States, though some found their way in as mine trucks. Some engines are similar within their series; for example, the F and 2F engines share many of the same parts. However the H and 2H designations have almost nothing in common.

Engines included (power and torque figures may vary depending on the market):

Petrol
EngineCapacity (L)Power (hp)TorqueUsed
F3.978 kW (105 hp)/93 kW (125 hp)256 N⋅m (189 lb⋅ft)/283 N⋅m (209 lb⋅ft)1960–1975
2F4.2101 kW (135 hp)285 N⋅m (210 lb⋅ft)1975–1984
Diesel
EngineCapacity (L)Power (hp)TorqueUsed
B3.060 kW (80 hp)191 N⋅m (141 lb⋅ft)1974–1984
2B3.269 kW (93 hp)216 N⋅m (159 lb⋅ft)1979–1981
3B3.467 kW (90 hp)217 N⋅m (160 lb⋅ft)1979–1984
H3.671 kW (95 hp)216 N⋅m (159 lb⋅ft)1972–1980
2H4.078 kW (105 hp)240 N⋅m (177 lb⋅ft)1980–1984
OM3243.458 kW (78 hp)262 N⋅m (193 lb⋅ft)1961–1973 (Bandeirante)
OM3143.863 kW (85 hp)319 N⋅m (235 lb⋅ft)1973–1989 (Bandeirante)
OM3644.067 kW (90 hp)319 N⋅m (235 lb⋅ft)1989–1994 (Bandeirante)
14B3.773 kW (98 hp)240 N⋅m (177 lb⋅ft)1994–2001 (Bandeirante)

Features

  • A pair of jump seats folded behind the front seats, maximizing cargo space compared to the full width folding rear seat of the Jeep CJ series.
  • Original factory optional winches were P.T.O. driven. Later models were electric powered.

Legacy

Toyota FJ Cruiser
Rear view

Toyota still offers many replacement parts for the J40, available through Toyota parts departments worldwide.

In 2006, Toyota introduced the FJ Cruiser, a modern SUV with styling paying homage to the J40 Land Cruiser. The FJ Cruiser (FJC) went on sale in the spring of 2006.

In Brazil

In Brazil, the J40 was known as the Toyota Bandeirante, and made from 1968 until 2001. Those built from 1958 to 1962 received the series code FJ25 (open roof) and FJ25L (soft top) but are often referred to as FJ-251, and in 1961 thanks to a new motor called 2F - not to be confounded with the later 2F engine from 1975 - there still came out some few units with the series code FJ-151L (soft top). Bandeirantes built from 1968 to 1993 - with Mercedes-Benz engines - received OJ40/45 (OJ50/55 from 1973) series chassis codes and those built from 1994 to 2001 - with Toyota engines - have BJ50/55 series model codes.

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References

  1. "Toyota's first production outside Japan at Toyota do Brasil". 75 years of Toyota: Expansion into Latin America. Toyota Motor Corporation. Archived from the original on 2015-07-31. Retrieved 2014-12-19.
  2. "Toyota Landcruiser FJ40 Timeline History". petesmedia.com. Retrieved 2019-08-29.
  3. Cavalcante Bitu, Felipe. "E o Toyota passou" (in Portuguese). Best Cars Web Site. Archived from the original on 2009-05-14. Retrieved 2013-04-20.

Further reading

  • Boltrek, Josh. The History of the Toyota Land Cruiser.
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