Junkyard Find: 2000 Toyota Camry CE With 5-Speed Manual Transmission

Murilee Martin
by Murilee Martin

Toyota offered North American car buyers the opportunity to buy a new Camry with a manual transmission from the time of the car’s introduction here in 1983 all the way through the 2012 model year. As I’ve found during my junkyard explorations, many Camrys sold here during the 1980s had five-on-the-floor rigs, and this setup remained reasonably popular into the early 1990s. After about 1993, however, automatics rule the American Camry universe, and I’ve been on a years-long quest to find the newest possible manual-equipped junkyard Camry. After peering into thousands of discarded cars, I managed to find a 1997 Camry CE with three pedals, and now I have surpassed that discovery with this 2000 Camry CE in Colorado.

Camrys have always been screwed together very well, and their reputation for reliability boosts resale values enough that older ones tend to get fixed rather than scrapped when something breaks (and that ugly ones get re-sold rather than scrapped when traded in). This means that I have a tough time finding junkyard Camrys built after about 2005… but even so, the rarity of 21st-century manual Camrys is striking.

If you search Craigslist for manual Camrys, 99 percent of the results will be automatic cars mistakenly listed as manuals because so many car sellers believe that “manual” means “gearshift lever not on the steering column.” The newest genuine stick-shift Camry I was able to find in a few minutes of searching was this ’09 in Southern California.

By the middle 1990s, American Camry buyers who opted for anything above the very cheapest trim level got an automatic at no extra cost. For 2000, the bargain-basement Camry was the CE, which stood for Cheap Edition (OK, fine, it stood for Classic Edition), and you got a five-speed manual as standard equipment. I’m not sure how much more the optional automatic cost on the ’00 Camry CE, but it added 800 bucks to the list price of the ’97 version. You may recall the ’02 Corolla CE as the very last new car available in North America with a three-speed automatic, so the Cheap Edition was very cheap indeed.

The Cheap Edition came with the four-cylinder engine making some uninteresting number of very dependable horses. If you wanted the V6, you had to move up to a higher trim level and pay extra on top of that.

I think most Camry CEs with automatics became fleet cars, while civilian CE buyers who got the five-speed either loved the stingy $17,418 price tag (about $27,140 in 2021 clams) or simply preferred driving a manual and felt willing to endure the car’s zero-luxury confines in order to do so.

This car endured some hard knocks during its final years. In addition to layer upon layer of body damage and badly-applied body filler, it features a front passenger door glass made of a taped-on trash bag.

A leaky rear-door window got the packaging-tape “weatherstripping” treatment.

The Beanie Babies hanging from the sun visors and the Vanillaroma Little Tree didn’t do much to brighten up this car’s “I’ll be parked next to a Sentra at U-Pull-&-Pay pretty soon” interior.

For decades after the Covid-19 pandemic recedes from the front-page news, we’ll be finding state-flag face masks in junkyard cars, just as I still find AOL FREE TRIAL disks in discarded cars to this day.

The right side of the car sports Hyundai alloy wheels, thanks to the 5×4.5″ wheel bolt pattern used on the Camry to the present day and shared with many other easy-to-find makes and models. The left side has cheapo steelies, so we can assume that the final owner of this car put the nice wheels on the side visible from the house, rather than the side visible from the street.

The final chapter in this car’s street career ended when it broke down and its owner wrote a heartfelt note in Sharpie on the decklid. As we know, such notes seldom work.

For links to more than 2,100 additional Junkyard Finds, visit the Junkyard Home of the Murilee Martin Lifestyle Brand™.









Murilee Martin
Murilee Martin

Murilee Martin is the pen name of Phil Greden, a writer who has lived in Minnesota, California, Georgia and (now) Colorado. He has toiled at copywriting, technical writing, junkmail writing, fiction writing and now automotive writing. He has owned many terrible vehicles and some good ones. He spends a great deal of time in self-service junkyards. These days, he writes for publications including Autoweek, Autoblog, Hagerty, The Truth About Cars and Capital One.

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  • Lamador Lamador on May 02, 2021

    I own one of these cars. Bought it in 2000 and still driving it. Has over 413k miles on it! I want to get to 500k at least, but she's starting to have some issues with the transmission, and got a bad rebuilt last year that is just now showing its weaknesses. I don't want to junk her, she's been my BFF all these years. I am at the point of deciding - should I continue to put $$$ into her, or get another vehicle? It's heart-wrenching. I wish I could post a picture of her here. She's a really beautiful gun metal gray. Still really clean interior and body. Just that darn transmission, misfire on #1, front cat converter out (she was born in CA, so has 2), and slipping 5th gear. And, she has used oil for like forever. Always had to top her off, with no visible sign of a leak anywhere. Still, I love her. It's like breaking up with a long-term lover.

  • Lou65688186 Lou65688186 on Aug 01, 2022

    hi I’m Louis and I’m interested in the 2000 Toyota Camry LE V6 manuel speed shift


  • Amy I owned this exact car from 16 until 19 (1990 to 1993) I miss this car immensely and am on the search to own it again, although it looks like my search may be in vane. It was affectionatly dubbed, " The Dragon Wagon," and hauled many a teenager around the city of Charlotte, NC. For me, it was dependable and trustworthy. I was able to do much of the maintenance myself until I was struck by lightning and a month later the battery exploded. My parents did have the entire electrical system redone and he was back to new. I hope to find one in the near future and make it my every day driver. I'm a dreamer.
  • Jeff Overall I prefer the 59 GM cars to the 58s because of less chrome but I have a new appreciation of the 58 Cadillac Eldorados after reading this series. I use to not like the 58 Eldorados but I now don't mind them. Overall I prefer the 55-57s GMs over most of the 58-60s GMs. For the most part I like the 61 GMs. Chryslers I like the 57 and 58s. Fords I liked the 55 thru 57s but the 58s and 59s not as much with the exception of Mercury which I for the most part like all those. As the 60s progressed the tail fins started to go away and the amount of chrome was reduced. More understated.
  • Theflyersfan Nissan could have the best auto lineup of any carmaker (they don't), but until they improve one major issue, the best cars out there won't matter. That is the dealership experience. Year after year in multiple customer service surveys from groups like JD Power and CR, Nissan frequency scrapes the bottom. Personally, I really like the never seen new Z, but after having several truly awful Nissan dealer experiences, my shadow will never darken a Nissan showroom. I'm painting with broad strokes here, but maybe it is so ingrained in their culture to try to take advantage of people who might not be savvy enough in the buying experience that they by default treat everyone like idiots and saps. All of this has to be frustrating to Nissan HQ as they are improving their lineup but their dealers drag them down.
  • SPPPP I am actually a pretty big Alfa fan ... and that is why I hate this car.
  • SCE to AUX They're spending billions on this venture, so I hope so.Investing during a lull in the EV market seems like a smart move - "buy low, sell high" and all that.Key for Honda will be achieving high efficiency in its EVs, something not everybody can do.
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