Big hitter shines in smash test
/An impressive five star ANCAP score for Toyota leviathan
Read MoreAn impressive five star ANCAP score for Toyota leviathan
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Confirmation of the small SUV’s local availability comes more than a year after the local arm expressed interest and almost two years since its global debut at a motor show in China.
Read MoreTOYOTA has released this teaser image of the X Prologue, which is expected to showcase the design language for its upcoming electric vehicle family.
The introductory model, which will be fully unveiled next week, is expected to present as a sports utility, similar in size to the RAV4 – but with a longer wheelbase together with shorter overhangs.
It is built on the e-TNGA platform that was co-developed in partnership with Subaru. Toyota has previously indicated this kind of vehicle was on the way and Toyota New Zealand has also indicated willingness to take it.
The e-TNGA architecture is a big deal.
Toyota is planning on using this platform to spawn six electric vehicles, presenting in a diversity of body styles. These are speculated to be called BZ models. This references ‘Beyond Zero’, the title of Toyota’s public push towards zero-emissions motoring.
The platform is massively flexible. It can be lengthened or shortened, accommodate single or twin motor powertrains and host a range of drivetrain layouts and battery capacities.
Subaru will also have at least one car built off this underpinning; their one is also a SUV and is rumoured to already have a name: Evoltis. And, yes, Subaru NZ is keen to have it.
The teaser image that partially reveals the car’s front end suggests it will have a two-layer style bonnet with the Toyota logo in the middle on a black background. To the sides of the front fascia, there are C-shaped LED headlights that appear to be joined together by a thin light strip positioned between the bonnet and bumper. A closed-off grille conforms with EV design direction.
When Toyota first talked about e-TNGA, it released another image showing a stylised silhouette of a SUV and another revealing something of the platform layout (above).
The car is designed to go on sale worldwide and will be produced at Toyota’s ZEV factory in Japan.
Toyota says e-TNGA can host a wide range of different-sized battery packs and electric motors to suit models from different segments and allow the development of individual models in parallel.
The rest of the new e-TNGA-based models will include a smaller crossover, a large SUV, a sedan, and an MPV.
When talking up e-TNGA late last year, Koji Toyoshima, deputy chief officer of the ZEV factory was enthusiastic about the potentials.
“The versatility and flexibility of e-TNGA technology allows us to design and create vehicles that are not just battery-electric, but also exciting to drive and beautiful to look at.”
The Toyota BZ series (above) and the as yet unnamed Lexus base off a common platform.
TOYOTA and upmarket spin-off, Lexus, have released additional clues about their first bespoke electric cars, developed off a common platform for potential release next year.
The brands have each released shadowy images giving a hint of how the Toyota BZ - for ‘beyond zero’ – series and the as-yet-unnamed Lexus will look on release, with industry experts immediately seeing some styling connection between the latter and the LF-30, a concept Lexus displayed at the 2019 Tokyo motor show.
Toyota’s been slow to join the electric car field and for a long time was historically disparaging of the technology, saying it was an unnecessary stop on the journey between the mild-hybrid (so, non-mains replenishable) tech that kicked off with the first Pruis and now proliferates its family and is Kiwi-favoured, to the ultimate future of hydrogen fuel cell motivation.
However, that sentiment ceased when new boss Akio Toyoda took the reins; these brands now have more plug-in hybrid cars – which do rate as EVs – and also have developed the NX300e, a fully battery-reliant version of the smallest Lexus crossover, coming on sale in New Zealand next year.
The latest announcement from Toyota overnight represents further confirmation of a bigger investment into battery driving.
Even though the platform they build upon appears related to the new TNGA underpinning now used by many popular Toyotas, these are not conversions of existing products but new cars designed from the get-go to only be compelled by batteries. In short, they’re bespoke.
Overseas’ reports suggest the BZ series and Lexus are timed to make their public emergences at a common time, but no-one yet quite knows when that will be.
However, 2021 is looking good. Toyota says that it will announce final details on the BZ “in the coming months” and that the model “has already been developed and is being readied for production”.
Toyota New Zealand’s boss Neeraj Lala, in an interview in June on his first day as chief executive, promised “we’ll have an EV here within the next 18 to 24 months. Just in time for demand.”
He would not be drawn into saying which badge that tech would sit behind. In hindsight, it’d surely have to be both.
the LF-30 concept was revealed last year.
A strong styling feature of the Lexus concept is an aggressive bonnet lip over what seems to be a typically complex ‘spindle’ front grille.
The BZ, meantime, is are expected to roughly the same size as the RAV4 SUV - although the wheelbase is almost certainly likely to be longer than that of the conventionally-powered vehicle, and the front and rear overhangs should be shorter.
There’s another string to the BZ bow in that it is likely to also be the basis for an electric Subaru; the brands are, of course, partners already with the current and new 86/BRZ – only the latter coming to NZ, next year, as the GR86 (because it’ll be part of the Gazoo Racing tribe).
Onlookers say panel creases highlighted in the BZ sketch make it clear that it and Subaru’s effort, which has been spoken of in the past, are going to share more than their underpinnings.
Says Britain’s AutoExpress: “The lines should translate into a distinctive-looking model with an image unlike anything else in the Toyota range - much as the Prius hybrids have their own identity.”
Toyota calls its new EV platform e-TNGA, and says it is designed to support a wide range of vehicles, since only a few areas of the architecture - notably the space between the front axle and the base of the windscreen - are fixed.
Toyota claims this allows difference widths, lengths, wheelbases and heights - and also says e-TNGA can be fitted with front-, rear- or four-wheel drive, and a range of battery and electric motor capacities. Some of the trademarks registered by Toyota - including BZ4X and BZ5X - would sit easily on a four-wheel-drive vehicle.
Lexus is reportedly hoping that its defined styling and a sophisticated new four-wheel drive system, called DIRECT4, will lend enough distinction between its model and the Toyotas.
The new Lexus set-up uses a motor on each axle and features sophisticated computer hardware and software that can split power and torque depending on the dynamic experience required.
As all this unfolds, Toyota has also stated intention to build another conventional – so petrol and petrol hybrid – SUV to slot between the C-HR and the RAV4.
toyota has displayed various electric car design studies over recent years, including this one from 2018.
Neeraj Lala.
NEW Zealand risks becoming the “Cuba of the South Pacific”, a dumping ground of Europe’s dirty diesels and high carbon-emitting petrol-fuelled cars.
That’s the view of Toyota New Zealand’s chief executive officer, Neeraj Lal, reacting to recent occurrences of political shift toward encouraging a shift from fossil fuels and toward more environmental motoring solutions, including battery-motivated products.
His comments come in the wake of two big headline actions: The move by the United Kingdom to ban sale of new fossil-fuelled cars after 2030 and our own Government’s determination this week to formally joined 32 other countries around the world in declaring a state of climate emergency for New Zealand.
The NZ initiative brings with it a revitalised focus on electrifying its public service vehicle fleet, thorough prioritising fully electric and hybrid cars, and plans to become carbon neutral by 2025.
That’s conceivably a switch Toyota NZ cannot leverage to advantage as much as some other brands as even though Toyota hybrid cars are highly favoured by private and fleet buyers, they are not considered electric models, because they lack facility to recharge off the mains.
The Government’s climate response decision has been welcomed by not-for-profit pressure group Drive Electric, though this organisation - which involves 17 new car brands, including TNZ - says the move still doesn’t go far enough.
Mr Lala says the UK’s move is both an encouragement to New Zealand policy-makers and a danger sign that this country could be flooded with used internal combustion engine (ICE) vehicles at the end of this decade.
New Zealand needs to work urgently on the right policy settings that encourage much higher take up of electrified vehicles through meaningful financial incentives, he said today.
“We also need to make sure that we do not end up importing vast numbers of ICE passenger vehicles. Otherwise there is no hope of meeting the Paris Agreement’s 2050 net-zero carbon target.”
A push by new vehicle distributors, via their representative body, the Motor Industry Association, to introduce the ‘feebate’ that incentivises purchase of low and no-emissions cars has TNZ’s support. Mr Lala said the scheme, proposed in the last Parliamentary term by kyboshed by the Government’s then-partner, NZ First, has much merit.
The core element of the scheme is that it incentivises private and fleet buyers of low-emitting vehicles by adding a levy to high-emitting vehicles and using that revenue to reduce the price of low-emitting vehicles costing less than $80,000.
Mr Lala also reminds that the era of Covid-19 has affected car makers ability to produce and ship vehicles.
“As the worldwide supply of hybrid and battery electric vehicles becomes stretched due to global demand, New Zealand will find it harder and harder to access stock without a financial incentive.
“Essentially, we need to get our hybrid and EV numbers up to get higher stock allocations.
“The feebate scheme should be back on the table, urgently. Toyota New Zealand has opened a dialogue with the Minister of Transport, Michael Wood, and will continue to advocate for financial incentives for electrified vehicles.”
TNZ is easily the biggest seller of mild hybrid vehicles in this country – and is now seeing hybrid editions of popular models outselling their fully fossil-fuelled equivalents. However none will conceivably be considered when Government weans off fossil-fuelled cars in public service use and into electric models, as proposed.
the rav4 hybrid has become massively popular and outsells the fully fossil-fuel alternates.
The market leader has just one plug-in hybrid car, a version of the Prius, but will add another, in the form of a PHEV edition of its most model of the moment, the RAV4. It has plans to deliver an electric car in 2021.
Mr Lala has applauded Government for confronting environmental issues, but says it needs to put financial resources behind its policy.
“Companies such as Toyota (NZ) would be willing to supply the public sector with low-emitting vehicles, but not at cost – it needs to be a win-win for both parties.
“With transport emissions accounting for nearly 20 percent of all carbon output, we have a large influence on how New Zealand will progress to a zero-carbon economy. The transition to a low emissions transport market comes with a price tag, but the cost of not enabling a greater uptake of low emissions vehicle could cost Aotearoa/New Zealand and the planet a lot more.”
IF you like the look of Subaru’s second-generation BRZ coupe … then buying it brand-new as a Toyota is your only choice.
In the wake of an unveiling in the United States that curtails conjecture about the engine the co-developed cars will share – it’s NOT a turbo – Subaru New Zealand has said it has no place for the new BRZ in its product planning.
Maybe you’re thinking that’s because the current edition only enjoyed a short life here in New Zealand; being bullied out after a year on sale by hard-arse Toyota New Zealand marketing techniques to promote its own doppelganger, presently known as the GT86, destined to be called GR86?
Not really.
Subaru NZ boss Wallis Dumper says the crux of the matter is that a rear-drive coupe doesn’t fit in with a national focus on being an all-wheel-drive specialist.
“It’s not all-wheel-drive so we won’t be letting it impact on our production allocation,” Dumper explained.
So, the next new Subaru here will be the 2021 Outback, already on sale in America, that will arrive with an engine BRZ/86 fans might have well imagined was coming to the sporty coupe: A turbocharged 2.4-petrol.
Assuming the Outback’s engine could even install in the new BRZ, and would be tuned as it will be for the SUV, then the BRZ would have delivered with 193kW power and 375Nm torque rather than the 170kW and 249Nm it apparently will get from its naturally-aspirated 2.4.
As is, the new engine is generating 11 percent more power and 15 percent more torque than the current generation car’s 2.0-litre. It also continues to run through six-speed transmissions, the auto now having a Sport function, and sending out the oomph through the rear wheels, with the vehicle stability control system offering five settings now to alter the degree of skid-tastic fun.
Macpherson strut front suspension and double-wishbone rear suspension also carries over and even though the chassis is thought to be an improved version of the current cars, the two generations are only identical in width. The next-generation is 25mm longer, 13mm lower and 6mm longer in wheelbase.
The car is stiffer and has become more responsive through a 60 percent increase in front axle rigidity and an overall rigidity boost of 50 percent. The centre of gravity is lower than before and a “near perfect weight distribution” is claimed. The BRZ weighs 1315kg in manual form, aided by an aluminium roof, bumpers and bonnet.
The look of the new model suggests Toyota has taken leadership with the styling; the overall look clearly builds on the current design story but is more in tune with current Toyota themes, including some of the boldness shown on the new GR Yaris.
And, yes, that’s the family the 86 is to enter. The Gazoo Racing performance clan created by Toyota is the right home for a car that will join that Yaris and, of course, the Supra. So, it’s going to be GR86.
Gazoo’s influence seems to show on the BRZ featuring in brand-supplied photographs, with one website figuring the 18-inch rims are identical in design to those fitted to the GR Yaris.
WHAT two-seater sports car sold in New Zealand is built by Magna Steyr in Graz, Austria, and runs an in-line six-cylinder petrol engine generating 285kW?
The answer used to be just one car: BMW’s Z4, in M40i trim.
But now it’s two, the other being the Toyota Supra.
The Japanese product has updated – a year after both it and the Z4 introduced – to the same performance tune that the BMW has had from day one.
Confused? Only if you’ve forgotten – and for marketing purposes, it’s not for these respective brands to remind – that these models are twins, in sense they share common platforms, drivetrains and a lot of hidden stuff.
It’s not fair to say just the bodywork stylings are different, because the BMW does offer a plusher experience and more tech (like, it has a higher grade iDrive, for instance) to justify it costing $35,000 more than the Toyota.
But even so, the other major difference has been in the state of tune of the common engine under their bonnets.
While the turbocharged 3.0-litre created the same 500Nm torque in either installation, the BMW had 35 extra kiloWatts.
This showed on timepieces – with 0-100kmh achieved 0.2 seconds ahead of Supra – and was also felt on the road; the Z4 had more edge.
Back at launch, BMW intimated the reason it had a feistier engine was thanks to involvement from M Division, it’s in-house sports department. Yet even then, there was talk that, in time, Toyota would get the same service.
And so it’s come to being. Having started with 250kW, Supra now has 285kW. Same as the Z4. So now it also clocks 0-100kmh in 4.1 seconds. It aslso, according to Toyota, feels friskier and more alert. Sensations this writer picked up on when driving the BM W and Toyota back-to-back months ago.
How’s the gee-up achieved? Early adopters hoping for their cars to enjoy the extra gee-gees will doubtless be saddened, if not annoyed, it’s not the matter of rechipping an engine management computer.
Toyota cites tweaks to the twin-scroll turbocharger, a new exhaust manifold that now sits separate from the cylinder head, a new piston design that reduce compression ratio, and a raft of other mechanical changes.
Beyond the engine changes, the 2021 Supra also gains new under-bonnet aluminium braces which connect the strut towers to the radiator support for improved rigidity. It’s still paired with an eight-speed automatic.
One nice thing: It’s not just the sprint time that’s reduced. So has GR Supra pricing, albeit by $1000. It now starts from $98,990.
Unless, of course, you manage to secure one a limited edition model, identified by being painted in Horizon Blue, and paired with 19-inch matte black wheels. That’s trim still commands the old price.
Just two are being brought in. There’s one here already and it has clocked some kays, being the personal drive car of Toyota New Zealand boss Neeraj Lala.
TIRED of being second best?
Toyota New Zealand tends to affect an off-hand attitude when subject of how the current generation Hilux has been out-performed by a certain other ute in the sales stakes. They talk about how their truck plays its own game and say they’re more interested in optimising customer well-being than beating the Ford Ranger for registrations.
Well, it’s all just brave talk. Assuredly, they want to even the score in respect to perception of which is the better rig. And they would love to reclaim top spot on the sales chart; a place Hilux hasn’t occupied since 2016.
The updated Hilux is a massive improvement on its forebear. TNZ’s claim that the 2020 edition has turned up the heat on the hotly contested utility market with a more powerful turbo-diesel engine, more capability and a tougher exterior design. The new technology and added safety features also do it proud.
Still, it doesn’t hurt to have a hero. That vehicle is Mako, a local development of the SR5 Cruiser wholly carried out by Kiwis – one particular involver for deciding suspension and tyre choice was Tony Groome, a well-known Manawatu off-roading identity who has been working with the brand for some years.
Mako carries a $21,000 premium over the donor: So, a $79,990 buy-in.
The obvious rival is the Ford Ranger Raptor, that costs $5000 more, but it could just as reasonably be considered an alternate to the $74,990 Nissan Navara N-TREK Warrior and - though it is basically about to cease local representation - Holden Special Vehicles’ Colorado SportsCat, which sat at $82,990. Perhaps even the $82,990 Volkswagen Amarok V6 Aventura.
Toyota NZ didn’t so much launch the Hilux Mako as deliver it … by Blackhawk helicopter, to a media stop at the Cape Egmont Boat Club.
Yesterday’s story gave a brief summary about Mako and TNZ’s hopes; that, despite being available to customer order and technically a “special launch edition”, will be part of the regular range for the foreseeable future.
Today it’s time to dissect the beast.
What’s in a name?
Specifically, why call it Mako rather than re-use Gladiator, the name given to the beefed one-off TNZ created for Fieldays a few years back?
There’s a matter of copyright: You might realise that Jeep’s new Wrangler ute is called the Gladiator. That nameplate is employed worldwide and TNZ realised that now the American model is on sale here, it would assuredly be picking a legal stoush by continuing with a name that had been previously uncontested.
Another reason? A new name imprinted that, even though what we get now does have an association with that special model it created (more in a minute), this is a different deal, being a volume consideration.
Heres’s the one - or, rather, the one-off - they did earlier … the Hilux Gladiator.
So, anyway, it came down to picking a name that was even tougher. TNZ CEO Neeraj Lala claims credit. He’s got a thing for sharks and one kind in particular: The “toughest, strongest, most aggressive” species roaming the open ocean.
“If you look at the front of the truck, it actually looks like a shark.” A motif in the front badge logo, and the bonnet decal, represent a shark fin.
Shouldn’t a shark have extra bite – why no under-bonnet modifications?
Outwardly, TNZ will maintain the 2.8-litre now that it has been upgraded to create 150kW – a 20kW increase over the pre-facelift output – and 500Nm (up 50Nm) is quite enough, with much improved low to mid-range oomph.
Beyond that, retuning the engine would have become an expensive and long-winded exercise, and not a job Toyota Motor Company would have allowed to be left to a local tuner. Japan would have wanted any recalibrations to meet their most stringent requirements. Same goes for any transmission fettling.
So, basically, oily bits were a no-go area though Lala prefers to say it was “an area we didn’t explore. From own our testing we thought the power and torque were quite satisfactory, pretty good.”
Anyway, unchanged performance is par for the course in this category. Raptor shares its 2.0l biturbo engine with other Rangers. The N-TREK and the SportsCat also carry unaltered versions of their donors’ drivetrains.
How much of it is just a dress-up?
Probably around 50 percent at most. Assuredly, there are extensive body modifications that are basically bolt-ons for visual effect: The unique fender flares, side steps with “Mako” logos, T Custom Sports Guard non-slip deck liner, damper-shocked soft-close tailgate and heavy duty rear step bumper are examples of this. Likewise, on the inside, the front chairs are replaced by higher-backed and bolstered motorsport-style items (akin to Gladiator’s tombstone seats), trimmed in full custom leather by a local supplier. And yes, they’re still heated. It also achieves a bespoke steering wheel that’s thicker-rimmed than the standard item and a leather centre console lid.
However, there are also a lot of specially-engineered bits that make real difference in how it performs. These are the items that will make the Mako feel substantially different to the donor.
So examples?
Well, most obviously the suspension, the wheels and the tyres.
Lala says the determination to fit out the Mako with a full ARB Old Man Emu BP-51 shock set came from having testing “the key competitor in the segment”. Let’s call it Raptor.
However, their choice was also made through previous experience: It’s been a popular aftermarket kit with Hilux customers who are serious about off-roading. We’ve driven a earlier gen Hilux with it - and were hugely impressed. And yes, you’re correct in assuming TNZ’s first use was with the Gladiator.
A fit-out that has required low volume certification gives a 40mm front and 50mm rear lift and has microcharger adjustable compression and rebound control. No clearance and departure angle information was provided. The rear springs are tweaked, too; they’re now to what’s being called Dakar spec. Says Lala: “This upgrade was the thing that we really needed to work hard on. We think it’s one of the best suspension packages on the market.”
Going to a bigger wheel and tyre was also a Gladiator 101, but Mako is less extreme. Those 18-inch Black Rhino rims sourced from the US are two inches smaller than the Gladiator’s, though with Maxxis Razr 265/60 all-terrain tyres, the rolling radius is likely around the same as with the show truck, which wore 33 inch by 12.5 inch Atturo Trail Blade M/Ts. Mako’s is a better blend for on and off-road capability, TNZ has decided.
Mako’s brake package is more extreme. The Fortuner SUV is a wagonised Hilux, but it has 15mm larger rotors and four-piston calipers. They’ve been used here. Also, Mako has harder brake pads than a regular Hilux. Braking performance is “significantly improved.” Braided front and rear brake lines are also used, to contribute to improved pedal feel.
Am I right in thinking that front bullbar looks familiar?
If so, then you’ve been checking out Toyota Australia’s Hilux Rugged-X, which is their own variant – now in its second-generation – homegrown for bush-bashing. The Rugged-X’s hoopless steel front bar is a special piece of kit that the Aussies were previously reluctant to share.
The whole shebang – and that includes an integrated LED light bar and bash plates – is designed to ensure the vehicle’s crash test integrity is exactly the same as it is with the regular bumper; achieving this – and also allowing donor car’s parking sensors to remain operable - has required some incredibly complex engineering.
The piece was further altered for Mako, says Lala. It’s had a custom modification to account for localised finishing, such as the garnish under the headlight. “That’s unique to here, so we had to modify the bumper to fit.” Side fog lamps were also integrated here.
In case you’re wondering, other common Mako/ Rugged-X elements are those red recovery tow hooks, fender flares and the heavy-duty rear bar with step.
Are there any options?
Just one. The towbar kit, which also includes provision of the rear recovery hooks. We assume buyers could also install diff lockers, which are available with the Old Man Emu kit. Again, we’ve tried a Hilux with these and were stunned by what the rig could do.
Does the rework affect the warranty?
Not at all. It has the same cover as any other Hilux, so up to five years warranty, roadside assistance, WoF coverage and capped-price servicing. Plus the price is fixed and not subject to any fluctuations that might impact of the cost of individual add-ons. So the sticker is a Toyota Driveway Price (TDP) that includes on-road costs. As mentioned yesterday, Mako also maintains the same 940kg payload and 3500kg braked tow rating as other double-cab 4WD Hilux models.
When and how can I buy it?
The second part first. It’s not a showroom model. Vehicles are pre-ordered and then put together, at the company’s refurbishment plant in Thames; so it’s a total custom build. Buyers can get to choose colours and will get updates on the progress of the refettling. At the moment there is just one example in existence and the programme really will take a couple of months to get going. Parts are still arriving and though build begins just before Christmas, the production process won’t really get up to full speed until early next year. Deliveries will probably begin in February.
If the build volume is uncapped how special will it be?
TNZ has decided not to make this a limited-count product but, at same token, even a best-hope forecast is of 400 units a year – and that’s based on pre-Covid market conditions – and the more likely achievement of 250 per annum means it’s hardly going to be a common sight.
“It is the first time we’ve offered a customer a bespoke, built-to-order product … there’s so much uncertainty in the market in respect to volume. In the current situation, I think we can still achieve 250 plus.”
If you’ve ordered a 2020 update SR5 Cruiser, expect a call from TNZ. That status lends first opportunity to buy into enhancements that the Australian motoring press say likely delivers a better hard-out Hilux than they get.
One has already called it the world’s toughest Hilux.
UP to 250 units a year, perhaps even 400 if the market returns to pre-Covid health.
That’s the annual volume prediction Toyota New Zealand’s boss Neeraj Lala has cited for the new top model of the Hilux range, that he helped configure and personally named.
Hilux Mako is a $79,990 re-engineering of the $58,990 SR5 Cruiser doublecab that, until today, was thought to be the market leader’s flagship variant in the refreshed 2020 line launching to the public on Thursday. It’s auto only and the 2.8-litre engine remains in its standard tune, but a lot else changes.
An entirely New Zealand-devised, designed and built creation, that will be built to order at TNZ’s Thamese vehicle operations plant, Mako is obviously tougher-looking than the donor – or any other ‘mainstream’ Hilux – and that’s not just for show: It’s prepped for tougher terrain as well.
Lala says the Hilux Mako will be the ultimate bespoke ute, for customers who want a fully kitted out Hilux.
“We’ve taken a great truck and added some kiwi-muscle and flair. I’ve had lots of direct feedback from customers, and they wanted more power, a better ride and premium interior comfort – the Hilux Mako delivers on all those requests.”
“From my experience in the US with the Scion brand, customisation was the backbone of forming an unbreakable bond with customers. In fact, customers would go to extreme lengths, some legal and some even illegal as they really pushed the boundaries of customisation,” says Neeraj.
“We have pushed the boundaries under the careful watch of local Toyota engineers to produce a unique bespoke truck that I think customers are just going to love..
Toyota will build a few Hilux Makos for demonstration purposes, but every vehicle will be custom-built for the owner.
Customers are able to place their orders now for the vehicles to be built and delivered in the first quarter of next year.
The edition has 18 inch matte black alloy wheels with Maxxis Razr off-road tyres, fender flares, tinted front windows, a replacement front bumper steel bulbar, and a replacement rear heavy duty bumper.
To improve comfort and control – both on and off road – the suspension is upgraded with ARB’s Old Man Emu BP-51 shock absorbers. The BP-51 high-performance by-pass shock absorbers have user adjustable compression and rebound damping control. They provide optimal performance for challenging terrain, towing or carrying loads.
Also, to improve control, the brakes will be upgraded with larger diameter front discs. The brake lines also get an upgrade to stainless steel braided lines that help increase hydraulic pressure on the pedal and the feel and feedback, improves safety, and are more durable in harsh conditions than standard rubber lines.
Inside, the Mako receives airbag-compatible custom sports leather accented front and rear seats with unique seat stitching and headrest branding.
Underpinning the accessories will be the latest 2021 SR5 Cruiser with its more powerful 2.8L turbo diesel engine, the latest in Hilux safety features and smart phone connectivity.
The only option is a $1500 towbar/rear tow hook kit.
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