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2000 Toyota Caldina GT-T

Posted: Fri May 22, 2026 12:52 am
by entirelyturbo
So... after 7 months of silent secrecy :lol:

... I think I am ready to reveal my latest acquisition... and my new daily driver!

Meet my 2000 Toyota Caldina GT-T!

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I imagine that car might look familiar to you all in the UK as the first iteration of the Toyota Avensis. Same basic chassis, but you all never got the 3S-GTE 2.0L turbocharged engine in your Avensises (Avenses?).

Having sold my 2017 Ford Mustang EcoBoost 6MT Performance Package on October 15th, the day before I picked up the Caldina from port, I have officially been 100% reliant on 25+ year old grey-market cars that were never sold in the USA for my basic transportation ever since.

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The Caldina needed a little more work than I expected, but I persevered, and it is now running and driving again!

I did:
- timing belt
- water pump
- cam and crank seals
- resealed oil pan
- valve cover gasket
- fuel filter
- brakes all the way around (new calipers, pads, and rotors, and rebuilt the parking brake)
- all fresh fluids throughout the whole car
- all four wheel bearings
- ball joints
- tie rod ends

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Neither the Caldina nor the 3S-GTE are mechanic-friendly :x

The OEM Toyota front pads and calipers are obsolete, even in Japan, and the OEM Toyota rear pads, calipers, and rotors are obsolete, even in Japan.

I had to get aftermarket brake pads and rear rotors, but everything else I replaced is OEM Toyota.

I had to use brand-new OEM SW20 MR2 Turbo front calipers (and I had to flip sides because the the MR2 mounts their calipers on the back of the hub and the Caldina mounts them on the front of the hub).

I think they may be one of the last sets of OEM front SW20 Turbo calipers left in the world... the left caliper came from a Toyota dealer here in the USA, the right caliper I had to order straight from Japan.

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I had to use brand-new OEM ST185 Celica All-Trac rear calipers.

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And the calipers only worked if I transposed them from the original brackets they came with onto the original Caldina caliper brackets.

But now with all that finally done, the car is once again on the ground and running great! My Ford Spectron van in the background is my current daily driver.

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Don't worry, I'm not staying with the steelies 😂 I am only running the steelies with the old (and WAY out of date) tires the car came with for now because the car drastically needs an alignment and I do not want to tear up my new tires with a misaligned car. I have an appointment for an alignment scheduled next week.

Anyway, by and large, it's finally done, and I am excited to start using the car as my daily driver probably starting June 1st!

Re: 2000 Toyota Caldina GT-T

Posted: Fri May 22, 2026 5:31 am
by Dieselman
How many miles has this one done and how are you finding driving on the correct/wrong side. It makes sense to me to use your right hand to steer and left for gears.
I'm surprised the wheel bearings were worn out.

For a daily use car, you can't beat steelies and hubcaps.

Re: 2000 Toyota Caldina GT-T

Posted: Sat May 23, 2026 12:22 am
by entirelyturbo
Oh I've been driving RHD Japanese cars in the USA for almost 20 years at this point :mrgreen:

I had this 2000 Subaru Legacy B4 RSK here in the USA for almost 14 years and put almost 100k kms on it. I sold it in 2024.

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I drove it from Orlando, Florida to Detroit, Michigan and back in 2019 :D

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So this is not my first rodeo 8-)

This Caldina has 31,100 kms on it, so less than 20k miles!

As far as the wheel bearings, I viewed them as preventive maintenance. The car had been used in the snow a bit in Japan, and while the body is perfectly solid (aside from a few spots of surface rust here and there which I will address) the brakes and hubs were not in great shape, hence the need to replace all the brakes, including the calipers.

I was concerned (probably unnecessarily so) that corrosion had found its way into the wheel bearings and I insisted on replacing them before it became a problem.

I was also glad to break through all the corrosion while doing all the work so that future maintenance will be far easier to perform.

And don't worry, the alloy wheels I have lined up for it after I get it aligned are nothing spectacular. They are OEM 16" alloys from another Toyota. I'm not the type to spend thousands upon thousands of dollars on fancy aftermarket wheels. I typically keep my cars as close to factory as I can.

Re: 2000 Toyota Caldina GT-T

Posted: Sat May 23, 2026 6:15 am
by Dieselman
Looking at your Detroit image makes me think it's a good job your Legacy had 4WD... it reminds me of Range Rovers crushing leaves.

I can't see rust making it's way into wheel bearings, they contain grease.