Supra A80
The Toyota Supra A80 (also known as JZA80 or MKIV Supra, 1993-2002) is the fourth and final generation of Toyota's legendary sports car, powered by the iconic 2JZ-GTE 3.0-liter twin-turbocharged inline-six engine. In Japanese domestic market specification, the 2JZ-GTE produces 276 horsepower (limited by the gentlemen's agreement) and 318 lb-ft of torque, while export models received upgraded turbos, larger injectors, and improved cooling systems producing 320-325 horsepower at 5,600 rpm and 315 lb-ft at 4,000 rpm. The sequential twin-turbo system spools the primary turbo from 1,800 rpm, adds the secondary turbo around 4,000 rpm, and operates both in parallel above 4,500 rpm for seamless power delivery.
The A80 Supra achieved 0-60 mph in 4.6 seconds and 13.1-second quarter-miles with 155 mph top speed (electronically limited), representing supercar-level performance in the 1990s. The 2JZ-GTE engine has achieved legendary status for its iron block construction, forged internals, and exceptional strength, with the stock engine reliably supporting 500-600 horsepower and built examples exceeding 1,000 horsepower through turbo upgrades and tuning. Available with either a Getrag 6-speed manual or 4-speed automatic transmission, the A80 featured double-wishbone suspension at all four corners, large brake rotors, and a rigid chassis. Pop culture exposure through the Fast & Furious franchise dramatically increased Supra values and desirability, with clean examples now commanding $100,000+ and low-mileage Turbos exceeding $200,000. The A80 Supra represents the pinnacle of 1990s Japanese sports car engineering, offering timeless styling, bulletproof reliability, and legendary tuning potential that continues to define import performance car culture decades later.