Daihatsu Taft (F10)


The F10/F20/F50/F60 series Daihatsu Taft is an off-road vehicle vehicle built by Daihatsu between 1974 and 1984. It was also sold as the Wildcat and Scat in some markets. The Taft is similar to the Suzuki Jimny, although a bit larger. The name "Taft" stands for "'Tough and Almighty Four-wheel Touring Vehicle".
The first Taft was the F10 model, introduced in 1974. It was equipped with a 1.0 L petrol engine mated to a four-speed manual transmission with a two-range transfer case. The F10 model is available in short wheelbase softtop and hardtop versions.
Around 1977, the F10 was replaced with the F20 series with a larger 1.6 L Toyota 12R petrol engine. Around the same time the F50 with a 2.5 L DG diesel engine was introduced. Both models had an improved transmission and were available in SWB softtop and hardtop versions, either as four- or six-seaters. In 1979, trayback/ute versions of the F20 and F50 introduced as the F25 and F55 models. Around 1983, updated F20/F25 models were introduced with an optional Deluxe version and optional five-speed transmission. At the same time the F50/F55 models were replaced with the F60/F65 with a 2.8 L DL diesel engine, with the same Deluxe model version and optional five-speed gearbox. In Europe, Giovanni Michelotti marketed a luxuriously equipped version of the Taft, a version echoed by the later Bertone Freeclimbers.
Between 1981 and 1984, Toyota sold a rebadged Taft known as the Toyota Blizzard. Fitted with a 2.2 L L-series diesel engine, the LD10 Blizzard had the same optional Deluxe model variant as the Taft.
In 1984, the Taft models were replaced with the F70 series Rugger. In Indonesia, the succeeding Rugger/Rocky/Fourtrak still used the "Taft" name among many others.
Daihatsu revived the "Taft" nameplate in Japan in 2020 as a kei car competing with Suzuki Hustler.