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2026 Toyota 4Runner, 1993 Toyota Previa, and Sample Poly Cars

  • Writer: Jason Haddad
    Jason Haddad
  • Feb 1, 2024
  • 2 min read

Updated: Feb 15, 2024

The Star Of This Article (from Topic 4/4):




Topic 1/4


I was supposed to work on a 1996-2002 model, but I actually worked on a 1990-1995 version (and that was on accident). The two versions are hardly distinguishable from a blueprint viewpoint, especially the '95 and '96 models, but in reality, the wheelbases are exactly two inches apart. With that being said, I did manage to get a wheelbase slightly longer (by just 0.7 inch) than the '96 4Runner.


Link to project (uploaded to Sketchfab):


Part 1

Part 2


I used the Imagine AI App, as well as the SeaArt AI website to recreate this semi-imaginary 1995.5 Toyota 4Runner (I got the much older 4Runner confused with the 1996 model, since I thought the newer 4Runner came out around '98 or so; maybe '97). Theoretically, this retro may represent more of a 2025.5 model than a full-term 2026.


Original Prompt (using Generative Fill by Imagine AI): 2026 Toyota 4Runner 1996 Edition, 13" diameter wheels on extremely-low-profile tires (P315/90R13). Price, $36,375.


I also requested the overall height to be raised up to 77.7 inches tall. That was very hard to do, especially after the Imagine AI app actually shortened the ride height. I had to do play the "hard work (pays off)" trick all by myself using the Blender 4.0 program on my Windows 11 laptop. Wheelbase is increased by 19.8 inches from 106.0 to 125.8. Subtract these numbers by 0.7, and we get the true (OEM-correct) wheelbase figures. It's very hard to actually measure wheelbase using Blender.


I also meant to write "high"-profile in my prompt, not "low." For some reason, I confused low and high with the wheel diameter size. 315/90R13 is in fact very high-profile.


Topic 2/4








Before we continue on to part 3, on a side note...


Topic 3/4


REVISED:








Topic 4/4

MAIN VIDEO! (then 4 prototypes to come as part of the tutorial)










 
 
 

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