Toyota BX


The Toyota BX was a 4,000 kg truck built by Toyota from 1951. It is long, and has a close resemblance to Ford's 1948 trucks. The engines owed much to Chevrolet's period inline-sixes of the period. The BX replaced the BM truck, which was introduced in 1947. Compared to the BM, the BX was considerably easier to build and the cabin could seat three rather than two.

History

The BX prototype entered production in June 1951 after the prototype had undergone extensive testing in 1950. The truck had been meant for introduction in August 1950, but a two-month strike beginning in April 1950 combined with Toyota's production commitments for the Korean War efforts meant a sizable delay.

Mechanicals

The BX originally used the 3,386 cc Type B 6-cylinder engine that was first introduced in the 1938 Toyota GB truck. It produced at 3,000 rpm. Top speed was. In September 1951, this was joined by the bigger 3.9 litre F-engined FX, which offered at the same engine speed. At the same time, the 2.5-ton BZ and FZ models on a shorter wheelbase were also added. In June 1953, output of the Type B engine increased to.
The BX/FX did see some exports, mainly to countries without their own car industries. A left-hand-drive model had been planned from the beginning, and the range was marketed in Taiwan, Thailand, Argentina, Brazil, and Uruguay.
The BX and FX were re-designed in February 1954, becoming the BA and FA models. On the outside, changes were largely limited to a new grille, but the Type F engine was also upgraded and now produced. Through a series of upgrades these trucks were kept in production until 1964, although the BA was discontinued in 1956. The FA names were kept on a new generation of trucks that were kept in production in Japan until 1978 and elsewhere in the world into the 2000s.