under the steering column.
Before 1995 = OBDI, 1995 and later = OBDII
Neither.....your 74 isn't computer controlled.
According to a thread on ToyotaNation.com there's an OBDII port 'behind' the coin cubby 'IF' your '95 is OBDII compliant. It appears some vehicles produced early that year are still OBDI while later year '95s are OBDII. The thread says there's mention on the engine sticker under the hood that says "OBDII Compliant" if your vehicle is. If your '95 is OBDI you can still do a diagnostic but it's the old 'count the blinks' method. You'll probably need a service manual to decode it. Cheers
OBDI is not compatible with this vehicle. If you mean the OBDII diagnostic port then it is on the driver's side of the dash usually on the underneath side. Sometimes it has a little cover over it. Hope this helps.
No, 1995 is OBDI.
Probably. OBDII was required starting in 1996 but some manufacturers implemented it earlier. I have a 1994 Prizm and it is OBDI so the 1995 is most likely "one" also.
94 should be OBD I.
Depends where you live. In Australia they came with OBDI, only the latest model has OBDII. Most other countries had OBDII on the both the latest and previous models (only OBDI on the first generation RAV4)
dont no
In 1990, OBDI was still in use, not OBDII. OBDI did not have a standardized connector. You will probably need to activate the SCS mode of the PGM-FI and count flashes of LEDs on the PGM-FI module under the seat to get codes.
The engine will most likely fit, but the engine management computer system will be different- '95 is OBDI and the 98 is OBDII- (On-board diagnostics 1 and 2) the second gen system is much more complex
You need a code reader to plug in to diagnostic port and erase it. 97 is around the cut off though, not sure if you need OBDI or II. Most shops can do this for you, just make sure the reason it was on is fixed, otherwise it comes back on in 25 miles after a reset.