Toyota NZ acknowledges vehicle supply issues

No quick fix for stock constraints, market leader warns.

the rav4 hybrid is among models that have become subject to delivery delay

the rav4 hybrid is among models that have become subject to delivery delay

WILL other brands lose reluctance to steer clear of acknowledging how affected they also are by an increasingly obvious problem – diminished new vehicle availability – now that the market’s biggest hitter has opened up about its own situation? 

That rhetorical becomes more valid with Toyota New Zealand’s concession that delivery times for popular models are slowing, to the point where orders are taking more than a month to fulfil.

The Palmerston North-based operator, which still accounts for one quarter of all new passenger vehicle sales nationally even after been hit hardest by the rental car business freeze, has stopped short in comment issued yesterday of being too specific about which model lines are being affected and for specifically how long in respect to individual types.

However, two models it has given as examples of being subject to hold-up – the RAV4 Hybrid and the new Hilux – are among its biggest stars and it has also cited that most of its popular vehicles are subject to some degree of inconvenience.

It also suggests an average wait time of six weeks between orders being lodged and fulfilled is often normal, that deliveries up to March, 2021, are impacted and there is potential for delays to continue until the middle of the year.

“The effects of Covid-19, closed borders and delayed shipping and logistics into New Zealand are severely impacting all operational areas of our business,” says chief executive officer Neeraj Lala.
 
“We have seen greater than a 30 percent reduction in our new and used vehicle sales due to the closure of the borders, and we are forecasting a minimum of 10 years impact to our overall value chain including reduced parts and service.”
 
As much as coronavirus-influenced supply chain disruptions and congested ports are the main cause of vehicle supply delays, TNZ these issues are also exacerbated by high global demand for new Toyota vehicles.

 
There is also further disruption in logistics with global shipping delays impacting new vehicles, used vehicles from Japan and parts, which has an effect on delivery schedules here.
  
Lala says the company is enormously grateful customers are showing patience but accepts that on-going delays will impact future sales as customers become frustrated.
 
“We are doing everything we can, but global demand and supply restrictions combined with shipping delays are fuelling customer frustration. We are providing customers with updates as often as we can but these timeframes are fluid.”
  
“We currently have 3,297 retail orders as at the end of November, which is a good position for Toyota New Zealand to be in but that means 72 percent of vehicles arriving in the country are pre-sold which is unprecedented for Toyota as demand for low emission hybrids continues to surge,” he says.
 

 

 

GR to Rallye to WRC cause

A special edition of Toyota’s upcoming GR Yaris sounds tasty … as does our neighbour’s incentive programme for this new hottie. We might see one, but probably not the other.

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AN even wilder version of Toyota’s super-heated GR Yaris is heading into production.

Set to be available in the first half of 2021, the GR Yaris Rallye – the white car seen here - further enforces the maker’s assertion that this three-door racer was not only born from Toyota’s success in the heat of motorsport but will have a credible ongoing homologation role with Toyota’s World Rally Championship programme.

The Rallye’s status with the emergent Gazoo fanbase will also be elevated through it being a limited-edition car.

 The difference between it and the ‘regular’ edition (represented by the black car) arriving in New Zealand soon isn’t defined by outright performance but by enhancements elsewhere.

Specifically, the Rallye will have circuit-tuned suspension, Torsen limited-slip diffs for both the front and rear axles, 18-inch forged alloy wheels from BBS, Michelin Pilot Sport 4S tyres and red brake calipers.

Naturally enough, those ingredients have been developed by Toyota Gazoo Racing in collaboration with Tommi Makinen Racing, the team that took the original Yaris WRC to a world title in 2018, 12 months after the car entered competition.

The Rallye’s additional content is undoubtedly more than window dressing.

Makinen’s outfit is now developing the new road car into their contender for the 2021 season and beyond – undoubtedly those extras will some way or another prove useful for the motorsport process.

The Rallye – which also restricts to just three paint colours; black, white and red – maintains the 1.6-litre three-cylinder turbo petrol engine in the same tune as the standard GR and also keeps the six-speed manual gearbox.

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With 200kW and 370Nm the engine is the most powerful triple in production and gives both editions of the car an ability to sprint to 100kmh in just 5.2 seconds. The Rallye’s edge will undoubtedly come in the corners and under braking.

Talk of the Rallye has emerged with Toyota in Australia announcing a pricing plan for the GR Yaris that perhaps might leave New Zealand enthusiasts wondering how they might find a way to secure the model there and ship it back across the Tasman.

Toyota New Zealand’s announced sticker of $54,990 has been undercut by our neighbour – and massively so during a programme designed to elevate the Gazoo image across the Tasman.

Toyota Australia’s car, which seems to be kitted identically to that coming here, will only be $1200 less expensive than here at full recommended retail – but to ensure it gets off to a smart start, the first 1000 sold will only cost $NZ43,400 drive away. A huge $11,590 undercut.

The Rallye is not included in that programme and how much of a premium it will carry over the GR has yet to be announced.

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Toyota Australia’s vice president of sales and marketing, Sean Hanley, says the launch price was to incentivise support for the Gazoo Racing brand, which is probably newer to our neighbour than it is here.

The NZ awareness programme began even before the first GR car, the Supra, landed last year as it was used in a sponsorship association with the international single seater Toyota Racing Series since the end of 2018.

As for a discount start here? It doesn’t sound likely, from the tenor of comment from TNZ chief executive Neeraj Lala.

His thought about what’s going on across the Tasman?

Says Lala: “Toyota New Zealand has not offered a Recommended Retail Price in New Zealand for the past 2.5 years to avoid this situation.

“This means our Toyota Driveway Price (TDP) provides our customers with an up-front and transparent transaction price which includes on-road costs and subsidised servicing.”   

BTW, he declined to comment on the potential of the Rallye coming here.

The GR Yaris is the first homologation special since the Celica GT-Four, the car that was used to find WRC rally success when Toyota was last involved in international rallying, becoming the first Japanese maker to win the WRC manufacturer’s title, in 1993. 

Toyota’s plan is for the GR Yaris to be an even hotter ticket for road use than the Celica and the hope is it will establish the same street status as such stage-to-road greats as Ford’s RS Escort Cosworth and Subaru’s Impreza WRX.

 

Into the hot zone

The GR Yaris has been priced to compete with some serious performance hatches.

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TALK about landing in a whole heap of trouble … but potentially in good way. 

Toyota New Zealand making public that its first hotshot hatch in ages, the Yaris GR, will start out as a $54,990 buy cements earlier signal from the Palmerston North-based marque that it plans to be a massive disrupter in this sector.

Effectively, the price puts the mighty midge bang in the middle of the action; it’ll square up against some tasty, established and well-credentialed rivals with similar performance, if not exactly alike for technical presentation, dimension or even door count. 

Today’s story lists cars surely set to be considered competitors for the Gazoo Racing-prepped giant-killer. But first, a quick rundown on Toyota’s pint-sized pugilist.

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GR Yaris.

THE second model is Toyota’s GR stable could well also be the smallest in that performance car sub-genre, but promises to be a heck of a firecracker nonetheless – and, despite being set to be in short supply to start with, ultimately surely has potential to make a bigger bang than the first model to bring Gazoo’s talent into NZ showrooms, the Supra.

Powered by a new 1.6-litre three-cylinder turbocharged engine developing 200kW of power and 360Nm of torque, for 0-100kmh in 5.5 seconds, it’s the only new Yaris variant with a three-door body design, a manual transmission (six-speed) and GR specific aero adornments, suspension, drivetrain and braking hardware. 

Two ideals drive this 1280kg car. It’s another Toyota out to reset public perception about the brand; Japan HQ, under its new leadership, has realised reliability’ only works so well as a sales tool. It now needs to re-install the fun element as well. This promises to have an extra-large personality. Yes, being a Yaris makes it smaller than every other hot hatch in this sphere, but assuredly it should go so big in other ways to offset thinking about tighter size being a drawback.

One big draw is that it comes with a motorsport background. The car obviously presents opportunity establish a link with Toyota’s rising dominance of the World Rally Championship with the Yaris. In this respect, the GR is more than just about street image and reflected glories from the current WRC weapon. It is actually the basis of the present type’s replacement, being an official homologation model for the one that’ll start competing from next year.

Indeed, as rally-keen colleague and MotoringNZ contributor Colin Smith has noted, the GT road car will arrive with all the attributes required for owners looking to compete successfully in local rally competitions. Anyway, this explains the lowered roofline, widened track, trick suspension, very clever all-wheel-drive, huge brakes and advanced aerodynamics.

Keen to buy in? You might already be too late for the initial consignment. Yaris GR is basically hand-built in Japan, ‘takumi’ (basically, artisan assemblers) working on on a special line in the Motomachi factory, and is in high demand in every country it will be offered to. New Zealand was originally promised just five examples for 2020, but after receiving orders for four times that many, has been able to wangle a larger consignment. Assuredly, though, it’ll be fewer cars than it can sell and that situation is unlikely to clear up until next year.

So, anyway, what else is in the running at or around this money?

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Ford Focus ST

LAST week’s test reminded that New Zealand’s association with fast Focuses/Focii has been a wild ride through history. It also reminded that everything became all the more exciting when Ford doubled the mix; keeping a front-drive firework – with ST badging - but also offering a more honed higher-tier RS that, by adding in the ingredients of four-wheel-drive, tricky differentials and even more explosive power really shook things up. 

In pure ingredient, the latter would be more a foil for the GR, but that’s semantics now, because only the ST has made into production this time. It lacks the skills and sheer wallop to stand as an RS replacement, but still comes across as a great plaything. That 206kW and 420Nm 2.3-litre has heaps of character and the new automated manual will broaden its appeal.

Still, as much as last week’s test cited it as the best ST yet, overall conclusion was the car could be better: The slightly cheap ambience for the money is a pity and while the transmission’s operability is fine, presentation is not brilliant, with the sports modes being more complex than they need to be.

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Hyundai i30 N

You know how Hyundai cooked up the N: Created an i30 hatch as a VW Golf GTi competitor, poaching Albert Biermann, then head of BMW’s M Division,  and his crew to ensure the job was done right.

It was all so worthwhile. Hyundai’s hottie is a fantastic car that’s also the only one here to be exact-priced against the GR.

You’re probably also aware there’s now also an Nth degree N in the $4000-dearer Fastback; every bit as ferociously fast and feral, yet more finessed and, of course, more functional in delivering as a five-door hatch whereas the still available original is a three-door.

Both are awesome. With 202kW and 353Nm, Hyundai’s 2.0-litre isn’t the most fiery offer in this sector, but it has brilliant flexibility and it is fun.

 Yet there are drawbacks are clearly containing consumer excitement, unfortunately. It’s stuck in the same niche that might yet bog down the Yaris in being manual only but also suffers perhaps for a lack of visual excitement. Hyundai also runs in the WRC, of course, and yet as much as this car could leverage off the brilliant results from the i20 WRC – plus, of course, the Hayden Paddon association – fact is, it doesn’t. Indeed, Hyundai NZ really doesn’t do much to remind that it has this marvellous model in its ranks.

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Honda Civic Type R

 Again, slightly more expensive that the Toyota, with the standard model sitting just $10 under $60k and this year’s Mugen-enhanced (if only in bodykit) version another $5000 above that, the Civic probably still rates as as contender simply because it’s also a Japanese berserker whose extreme character isn’t just expressed by its grunt but also the packaging. The whole look is an outrageous origami that really polarises.

Honda isn’t kidding in calling it a car kitted to meet the thrill of driving. But wow, there are no half measures here. The car has a ton of go, no argument, and the 228kW/400Nm 2.0-litre’s effervescence is enthralling, but among everything here today, it’s the one that asks most of its driver in order to entertain. You’ve really got to stir that manual six-speed to make it work. Get into the zone and it is stunning … but it’s almost too race car for its own good: The ride is very rigid and even the seat design is unremitting.

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Renault Megane RS

A shift from three to five-doors and three pedals to two might have stunned some fans, but overall it’s been a sensible shock. A more family-friendly shape, a more convenient transmission with the six-speed EDC, even if this dual-clutch tranny isn’t quite as good as the Volkswagen direct-shift gearbox whose consumer favouritism compelled Renault to follow suit. When the EDC car came on test, there was still a manual on offer, for $3k less than the $62,990 sticker attached to the press model.

The sheer Frenchness of the recipe will cause some to hold back and, as much as the new body shape offers greater convenience, it just doesn’t look as chic as the previous edition. What it has in common with the Yaris is a rarity factor. Few are sold, so if you see one, it commands attention. 

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Subaru WRX Saigo

Just announced today, it’s the final version of the current WRX (Saigo is Japanese for ‘last’).

Subariu NZ is trying to rev up enthusiasm  by calling it “an exceptionally limited, limited-edition collector’s car” however, really, that’s sounds a bit tenuous, regardless just 18 are heading this way.

Why? Well, for one, ‘last’ doesn’t mean last of the kind … it’s more accurate to call it the final special edition. Subaru NZ has acknowledged the ‘regular’ WRX is actually going to be available here until well into next year.

Also, it’s really just a dress-up; no additional performance is promised, which is a bit of a shame. Everything additional is for show rather than go and of these the best bits – 18 inch STI wheels and red Brembo brakes – are restricted to the manual version, otherwise the additions of value amount to a Harmon Kardon stereo and Recaro seats. Nice to have, and the body trim enhancements are nicely done, but as a collector’s item, it’s not exactly at 22B level, right?

On top of this, the current generation WRX arguably hasn’t been one the true greats anyway; though in fairness no modern WRX has really felt as resolved as those produced in the era of WRC involvement. The car has become better for road driving since it hung up its helmet, no argument, and the all-wheel-drive ingredient is a cool vibe, it’s also lacked a certain edginess, particularly when the Lineartronic CVT is optioned over the six-speed manual. It nowadays struggles on stonk (197kW and 350Nm) plus it’s starting to date in look. Still, at $55,990 in this new trim it’s in the zone.

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Volkswagen Golf GTI

Also in its final year of production, with a replacement already on the road in Europe and destined for introduction here in 2021, the GTI nonetheless rates consideration simply because it has been the car that has set the standard in this scene for so long.

VW NZ is keeping the type on the boil with an exciting final blow-out TCR edition (above) that primarily attracts through having extra 44kW additional power over standard plus 235/35 rubber on 19 inch rims and an enhanced trim level, but realistically at $65,990 it’s less likely to be considered a GR competitor than the standard GTI, which starts at $56,990 and, though ‘only’ making 169kW, has the same 350Nm torque as the race-inspired special and, based on all past experience, will be just as much fun on a challenging road.

Sure, we’re talking front-drive, of course, but the chassis is sweet and that six-speed DSG is the box all others tend to be measured against. Though it’s not really playing the same game as the GR, fact is that established cred alone makes a GTI hard to turn down.

 

 

 

 

Now there are three?

Landcruiser Prado looks set to be a candidate for the newly-updated 2.8-litre four-cylinder turbodiesel announced for Hilux and Fortuner.

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UPGRADES similar to those confirmed for the mid-life updated Hilux and its Fortuner sibling will spread into the Prado four-wheel-drive.

Toyota New Zealand has yet to respond to a call asking about latest revisions, however information shared in the venerable Landcruiser’s core market, Australia, spills the beans.

The big change is that it achieves the same upgraded 2.8-litre four-cylinder turbodiesel in identical tune to that already announced for the Hilux and Fortuner – for Prado, that means 20kW more power and 50Nm extra torque.

There are also improvements to the equipment level, in respect to safety as well as comfort – and, yes, no surprise that it’s another Toyota to finally achieve Apple CarPlay and Android Auto compatibility. 

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Prado’s latest refresh follows a mostly cosmetic update meted two years ago and comes as it enters an 11th year of production – that’s almost twice the normal life span for a passenger car but is par for the course for large off-road machines. The larger Land Cruiser 100-Series, whose update has already been revealed overseas and has a good chance of showing here before year-end, has been around for even longer.

TNZ has not shared its thoughts about the future sales prospects for Fortuner, however it is probable some re-evaluation will be required as it has been among models that have been pitched heavily into the rental scene, mainly for winter use, particularly in Queenstown. Same goes for Prado.

Vehicle registration stats show 542 of the 816 Fortuners plated-up in 2019 were for rental. With Covid-19 having destroyed international tourism, the hire scene penetration has unsurprisingly completely eroded this year and, with 154 units registered to date, buyer interest in general is also well down,.

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Prado, meantime, claimed 1056 registrations in 2019, of which 586 were rentals, and since January 1 this year has so far found 173 registrations, of which three are noted as heading into rental use. 

The engine update is as touted for Fortuner and Hilux. Maximum outputs are now cited at 150kW and 500Nm in all three models when married to the automatic transmission that is standard to the wagon variants.

The Prado being the heaviest model with this engine will likely be the slowest off the mark to 100kmh, and potentially might be the thirstiest, though in that respect there is still improvement.

Toyota suggests the combined fuel consumption has been reduced and combined CO2 emissions are also down, this coming from adoption of a variable flow control power steering device and modifications to turbo design and cooling system.

A new water-cooled, heavy-duty ball-bearing turbocharger with a newly developed variable nozzle vane mechanism features, while cooling and efficiency have both been stepped up thanks to “optimised pistons and piston rings, changes to the cylinder block and head, higher fuel-injection flow rate and the adoption of high-performance materials for the exhaust manifold”. 

As before, drive is sent permanently to all-four wheels via a six-speed automatic transmission with a low-range transfer case.

Maximum braked towing capacity also holds firm at 3000kg for Prado; with Fortuner this increases from 2800kg to 3100kg.

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Both model lines gain changes within the cabin. With Prado, the touchscreen is upgraded to an 8-inch display and the instrument cluster and multi-information display have been revised with new information displays including front wheel turning angle.
 
The Fortuner range has two specification levels – the GXL, and the Limited. Both variants gain parking support alert, which includes two front and four rear parking sensors. 

With Prado rain sensing wipers have also been added across the range and features contained within the Toyota Safety Sense system upgraded.

The autonomous emergency braking system has been expanded to now detect cyclists in daylight and pedestrians at night (previously only in the day) while the lane departure warning system can now brake one side of the vehicle to help the driver remain in their desired lane.

Road-sign assist with speed sign recognition also joins the package with the new function able to reset the Prado’s cruise control setting.

 

 




 

Crumpy spirit ... and the pride of Aussie

Everything good arriving with the update of a Kiwi icon ute is due to Ocker influence. Apparently.

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 "I'M sure if Hilux could talk, it would definitely have a strong Aussie accent." 

Yes, he really said that. ‘He’ being Toyota Australia's general manager of product planning and development.

Rod Ferguson claims a one-tonner whose Kiwiness is a core sales strength here is “more Australian than ever.”

The comment is based on the high degree of development work behind the model’s mid-life facelift having been undertaken across the Tasman.

Now just weeks from national introduction, the updated line – whose NZ pricing was announced today - is core to Toyota New Zealand putting any effort into renewing effort to regain ute market leadership.

It held that position with ease for more two decades until the pesky Ford Ranger turned up and nabbed the crown more than half a decade ago.

Hilux conceivably has a chance to get back on top, not this year but perhaps in 2021, which will be when Ford ends sale of the current Ranger and swaps to a new model that becomes a co-share with Volkswagen. Ford is leading that project, so the new Amarok will be a Ranger in engineering though probably not in look. 

Toyota NZ has worked hard to cement Hilux as a Kiwi icon; that effort beginning in earnest in the 1980s with advertising involving total Kiwi bloke, Barry Crump.

Back then, too, it used to host Japanese engineers keen to understand what New Zealanders wanted from their utes. Occasionally, pre-releasing testing was undertaken here.

However, what happened then – and hasn’t happened here for years – pales into insignificance in comparison with the rework job of the current Hilux that Japan headquarters has entrusted to Toyota Australia. 

Detail of that project has been revealed to an information pack that has circulated to media across the Tasman. 

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Ferguson claims his design and engineering teams were entrusted with undertaking significant styling, development and evaluation work that finetunes the international specification.

In other short, that means the Hilux coming to us is all thanks to them.

Ferguson says Toyota Australia played a considerable role in styling the exterior of the Hilux range, as part of an international team, to the extent they had transformed the styling to align it more closely with the global Toyota ute and truck family.

Engineers from the brand’s Melbourne-based operation had focused on evaluating and helping to develop upgrades to power and torque, suspension and steering.

The combined effort from the Australian teams – who worked extensively with their Toyota counterparts in Japan and Thailand – has delivered the bolder looks while offering even stronger performance, enhanced ride comfort and a more precise steering feel.

"Being awarded this project was a real feather in the cap for our team - and a tribute to the level of design capability we have at Toyota Australia," Ferguson said.

"In addition, our vehicle evaluation team was instrumental in the global development of the 2.8-litre turbo-diesel engine and improvements to the way it rides and handles across a wide variety of conditions," he said.

"I'm sure if Hilux could talk, it would definitely have a strong Aussie accent."

Toyota Australia's product design manager Peter Elliott said the brief was to develop a simple and strong athletic pick-up truck, a vehicle that was tough and genuine.

"From the beginning, our sketches investigated bold and tough themes that centred on a larger, more vertical trapezoid grille enhanced by an upper bonnet moulding and lower bumper components that lock into the grille surround," Mr Elliott said.

"The headlamps have been moved outboard and they now connect with the distinctly chiselled bumper corners, linking the design. We progressed through clay models and CAD, evolving the idea to be cohesive with the rest of the vehicle, while maintaining maximum visual impact.

"The final design was milled as a full-size clay model and shipped to Japan, where it was well received as a bold step forward with a strong Toyota DNA."

Development and evaluation of the 2.8-litre engine - which now develops 150kW and up to 500Nm with a recalibrated six-speed electronic automatic transmission (and 420Nm with the six-speed manual) - suspension and steering in Australia was conducted in collaboration with teams from Japan and Thailand, as well as representatives from ‘other’ markets. Presumably that means someone from Toyota NZ got to ride along.

Toyota Australia's vehicle evaluation manager Ray Munday said Australian road conditions cover more than 80 percent of the different environments around the world, and local customers are some of the toughest Hilux users.

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Munday said higher engine output, particularly with a wider and flatter torque curve, had resulted in significantly improved acceleration, overtaking and towing.

Toyota engineers claim to have improved performance and fuel economy simultaneously by adopting a larger, heavy-duty turbocharger with a ball-bearing cartridge for exceptionally crisp and strong throttle response, and a new common-rail injection system with a higher maximum fuel pressure of 250 MPa.

Fuel economy is also said to benefit from a new combustion chamber that reduces cooling losses and more efficient exhaust gas recirculation (EGR) in the intake manifold. A water-cooled double-pipe pre-cooler results in optimum EGR gas temperature.

On SR and SR5, drivers can choose two modes: ECO which reduces throttle response in favour of fuel economy and reduces power consumption for heating and cooling; and POWER to provide sharper acceleration response for a more engaging drive on undulating and winding roads.

Munday said the six-speed automatic transmission had been recalibrated to allow earlier lockup for improved acceleration and cooling performance, especially while towing.

HE has also opened up about the suspension rework. The models introduce longer leaf springs to suppress road vibrations, wider spacing of the springs for stability while cornering under load, and revised attachment points to promote steering stability.

The 2020 facelift has resulted in retuning of spring rates, shock absorbers and suspension bushes as well as revised cabin mounts. These improvements are designed to deliver a more agile handling response and improving ride comfort, particularly when unladen on country roads and over speed humps.

"The ride comfort of the rear suspension has been noticeably improved when driving without a load. Importantly, the vehicle maintains the Hilux DNA of being able to carry heavy loads with excellent body control, both on sealed and dirt roads.

"We also confirmed that Hilux maintains its acknowledged off-road traction with the combination of high wheel articulation and traction control systems which have previously been tuned in the real-world customer conditions of Australia.

"In addition, we adopted a variable flow control power-steering pump to provide a more direct steering feel on narrow winding country roads and to reduce steering effort when parking."

Each part of the new package was tested in Australia to confirm that it met the performance targets in real-world customer conditions as well as on test benches and test tracks.

"Importantly, we were able to confirm the cooling performance was maintained in every test we could throw at it - including uphill highway towing with an ambient temperature well over 40 degrees.

"If a vehicle can survive the Australian customer and the Australian environment, it can survive anywhere," Munday said.

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MotoringNZ has previously touched on the spread of driver assists incoming, but to remind it has the usual full range of electronic braking and traction-control technologies, emergency stop signal (hazard lights), reversing camera (pick-ups), seven airbags, and seatbelt reminders for all seats. On double-cab variants, the rear seats have two top tether anchors and two ISOFIX points.

Downhill Assist Control is standard on all 4x4 SR5 variants and 4x4 automatic SR double cabs (including cab-chassis). Toyota Safety Sense technologies in HiLux are: a pre-collision system that can also detect pedestrians (day and night) and cyclist (daytime); high-speed active cruise control, and lane-departure alert that offers steering assist (via the brakes) to prevent unintended wandering into another lane. Road-sign assist can now recognise speed advisory signs. New for SR5 double and extra-cab pick-ups are front and four rear sonars to support parking. When the system detects objects, it alerts the driver with a buzzer and a message in the multi information display.

By the way, Ranger fans who see this Aussie influence as something funny should stop smirking now. Their favourite truck underwent exactly the same process and will again, with Ford Melbourne having maintained its role as the Ford model’s primary development centre.

Toyota NZ proposes to launch with 18 Hilux variants, evenly split in rear and four-wheel-drive. The rear drive models start with a 2.7-litre Workmate single cab chassis with automatic at $28,990 and topping with a 2.8TD PreRunner SR5 Cruiser Double Cab automatic for $47,490. The four-wheel-drive range is totally wed to the 2.8-litre and starts with a single cab chassis at $44,990 and tops with a $58,990 SR5 Cruiser double cab auto.





 

 

TNZ boasts market-beating emissions counts

The market leader and its luxury offshoot are cleaning up among car brands when it comes to CO2 emissions.

RAV4 hybrid has been a huge success for TNZ

RAV4 hybrid has been a huge success for TNZ

COMBINED average fleet emissions from Toyota and Lexus product sold here are already below the national standing and should fall even more in coming months. 

This contention comes from the brands in a spruik relating how its hybrid models are achieving increasing popularity, in part driven by enhanced fleet interest.

Toyota and Lexus say their combined carbon dioxide emissions profile year to date stands at an average of 167.5 grams per kilometre. The industry average across all manufacturers is sitting at 175.9g/km year to date, the makes claim.

 Toyota New Zealand says introduction this month of the new Yaris in its hybrid state will further reduce Toyota’s fleet emissions profile. The car is claimed to deliver fuel efficiency of 3.3 litres per 100km and emissions of just 76g/km in optimal test conditions.

The Palmerston North-based market leader says it is selling, on average, 15 hybrid models a day.

It also states that it has gone from selling 1337 hybrids in 2017 to 5159 in 2019 and is on track to increase further in 2020, with 3627 petrol-electric cars sold by the end of July.

Neeraj Lala, chief executive officer for Toyota and Lexus here, says parent Toyota Motor Compnay in Japan is on a mission to reduce greenhouse gases.

Neeraj Lala is pleased with his brands’ increasing petrol-electric presence.

Neeraj Lala is pleased with his brands’ increasing petrol-electric presence.

“It’s satisfying to report that the high number of hybrids sold is helping Toyota achieve two objectives – reducing our overall emissions as a brand and helping us support the New Zealand Government’s target to reduce gross carbon emissions by 30 percent by 2030.”

“CO2 reductions are a journey for Toyota and our customers,” he says. 

“This is why hybrids help us achieve reductions as we transition to alternatives when supply, infrastructure, and demand is ready.

“The customer transition has been more evident as the new generation of hybrid have the capability to outperform traditional petrol alternatives.” 

One particular hybrid hit has been the RAV4, with demand outstripping supply. Forty-nine percent of the 8313 examples sold since the model released in March 2019 have been with the hybrid drivetrain and interest has grown this year to the point where those types accounted for 81 percent of RAV sales in July. That translates to 2141 units.

TNZ cited an example of one customer, beverage supplier Frucor Suntory, being so convinced by hybrid technology it is transferring its entire Australasian fleet to the battery-electric RAVs.

The Griffin’s Food Company has also adopted a Toyota hybrid fleet for its vehicle eligible employees while Silver Fern Farms has a fleet of 39 Toyota RAV4 Hybrids. 

Lala says that while the extra technology required for a hybrid vehicle makes the car more expensive to build, but Toyota has intentionally kept the price differential between a petrol and hybrid versions of vehicles minimal.

“We deliberately keep the price difference down as we genuinely want people to access our fantastic hybrid options,” says Lala.

“We have seen through customer demand for hybrids that our pricing strategy has paid off.”

Yaris hybrid is expected to be influential for the remainder of the year.

Yaris hybrid is expected to be influential for the remainder of the year.

 

GR Corolla? Toyota NZ’s revved

The big sleep might be ending, with talk about Toyota reviving an old-school favourite. What’s the local distributor’s reaction?

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SPECULATION about Toyota Japan prepping a Gazoo Racing version of the Corolla sounds sweet to a local brand boss.

When asked for his thoughts about the potential of any such programme, Toyota New Zealand chief operating officer Neeraj Lala was unequivocal: Bring it on.

 Talk about the potential of a GR Corolla that would be a direct heir to the celebrated 4AGE 1.6-twin cam AE86 and GT Corollas of the 1980s has re-emerged on strength of a tweet sent out by Toyota America to media.

A message relating that the NZ-confirmed baby GR Yaris hot hatch is not a starter Stateside, the American operation raised flags – and hopes – by adding “it’s time the U.S. got a hot hatch to call its own.” 

Commentators saw that as a green light for Corolla, purely on strength that the brand’s top seller is the only other conventional hatchback in the Toyota line-up.

Sounds thin? Well, then consider what might be construed from this sole comment from Lala: “We are working hard on confirming this model, and would love to have it here in NZ.”

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Interesting choice of words, right? Does ‘confirming’ mean there’s definitely something going on? Or is this just mischief?

Let’s not forget Toyota America’s interest in the concept of a hot Corolla has already been delivered in exactly that form. The highly-modified one-off special pictured here was a one-off created for the 2018 SEMA show in Las Vegas. 

Certainly, Lala and other TNZ high-ups are huge fanboys for Akio Toyoda’s aggressive expansion plan for its GR (Gazoo Racing) high-performance road cars.

NZ was amongst the first export customers for the GR Supra that has revived the brand’s most famous sports car and is also in the queue for the upcoming GR Yaris, a quasi-homologation homage to its World Rally Championship car 

If and when a GR Corolla does arrive, then don’t be surprised if it borrowed heavily from the GR Yaris, including using the blitzer baby’s 200kW/370Nm turbocharged 1.5-litre three-cylinder engine and all-wheel drive system.

In addition to Supra and Yaris, the GR clan will also include the next-generation 86 sports coupe – with the GR 86 nameplate – by the end of 2021 and also the GR Super Sport, a road-going version of the race car Toyota is creating to run in the Le Mans hypercar category expected to start in the 2021/22 season, though the category is looking precarious after Aston Martin froze its programme.