Here is some info on the air suction tube: https://tercel4wd.com/forums/viewtopic.php?t=12 ... on&start=0
You are just missing the metal L-shaped tube which attached to the block and the rubber hose in your pix. As detailed in the link,
I removed mine as it was quite kinked and used a really stiff washing-machine hose. I still have not replaced it with another metal
pipe - don't intend to, either.
Tom M.
T4WD augury?
"Oh, do not ask, 'What is it?' Let us go and make our visit." T.S. Eliot - "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock"
"Now and then we had a hope that, if we lived and were good, God would permit us to be pirates." Mark Twain
This is just an air inlet to a reed type valve chamber that eventually leads to the catalytic converter. It lets freash air into the cat. The idea is to use the exhuast pulses to introduce oxygen into the cat converter to complete oxidation of the the NOx and CO (into N2, H20 and CO2), in earlier cars they actually used a belt driven air pump, this is better.
There appears to be a missing length of metal tube that goes ahead of this rubber connector hose (it bolts to the side of the block). It simply ends under the alternator, presumably high and forward enough so mud and water splash will not enter the intake tube. It makes little difference if the inlet tube is missing or not except for the water/mud splash issue. Even with the metal inlet tube, it still looks out of place to have an open ended tube just sitting there beside the engine. No worries unless you regularly cross creeks or flood zones with your Terc.