I picked up a 92' Black w/ Black leather interior all the options etc... and since i've never actually seen a 92' in person before it got me wondering how rare it really is? Car was built in March of 92'.
RazoE;1757043 said:Welcome to the '92 Club! We have the 2nd rarest Supra (behind '96 Supras), so definitely take care of her!
te72;1757087 said:More so than the teal 92 or Turbo A?
Anyway, nice find to the OP, should post up a few pictures!
Also, is a working power antenna really all that strange? I don't listen to radio (sucks around here, and where I bought the car in Phoenix, you didn't need an antenna due to really strong signals), so I've long since disconnected mine...
That's what I always thought... wish mine had them, even though my heater works great, still feels nice. Plus you can cruise with the targa off on cooler days comfortably that way!RazoE;1757299 said:Heated seats? Wasn't that a Canada only option?
mk1spyder;1757317 said:115k, turbo targa 5-Speed, and yeah it has heated seats, I can take a picture of the switch if you want, confused me as well. You know how the wire connectors to all the termostat housing coolant sensors are usually corroded and about to fall off, these look brand new, the whole engine bay is so clean I don't want to drive it lol. When I get a chance this weekend i'm going to detail it and then just put it under a tarp until its sold.
Heated seats are really quite simple to add. It's a simple layer that goes between the cushion and the upholstery... the biggest pain is pulling off the original upholstery, and even that's not hard with an industrial set of side cutters. Then you need a bunch of hogrings and a set of hogring pliers to put it back on after inserting the heater layer... probably pay $30 for the tools and rings. The actual heating units cost about $100 per seat, and include everything needed except the rings and tools.te72;1757338 said:That's what I always thought... wish mine had them, even though my heater works great, still feels nice. Plus you can cruise with the targa off on cooler days comfortably that way!
Good info man, I've seen a thread or two on here detailing the procedure, and it's a possibility for a future project, but who knows... Mk3 won't be driven much in the winter once I'm done with it, for fear of those who can't handle snow driving.GrimJack;1757380 said:Heated seats are really quite simple to add. It's a simple layer that goes between the cushion and the upholstery... the biggest pain is pulling off the original upholstery, and even that's not hard with an industrial set of side cutters. Then you need a bunch of hogrings and a set of hogring pliers to put it back on after inserting the heater layer... probably pay $30 for the tools and rings. The actual heating units cost about $100 per seat, and include everything needed except the rings and tools.
mk1spyder;1757386 said:The MK3 isn't my dream supra, my dream is that some day Mitsubishi and Mazda bring back a newer version of the FD RX7 and 3000GT to compete with the Nissan GT-R and then Toyota drops a bomb on their face just like the MK4 Supra did back in 1993.5
Granted the Z32 300ZX wasn't a Skyline but in Toyota fashion they wait for everyone else to show their cards and then drop a royal flush on the table. The Z32 was out in late 89', then the 3000GT in 91', then the RX7 early 93', then the Supra 93.5'.
Notice Nissan was first, I know this is a long shot but I can't believe Toyota will let the GT-R stay stateside without an answer. Along with the turbo diesel Tundra that is inevitable. And don't say the LF-A counts because that was just a pet car porn project by Toyota's owner that lost them money but was so cool he had to do it. Then they gave one to Kyle Busch which made me want to punch myself in the balls.
And ya heated seats are easy, I would not doubt that someone put them in this car as an after thought and just bought the factory canada switch to make them look original.