Toyota Yaris Cross: When small goes big

Toyota Yaris Cross: When small goes big

PEOPLE who want larger small cars, those desiring hybrid but prefer not to draw attention to themselves, folk keen on off-road styling yet have no desire for any beyond seal ability.

In a nutshell, the Yaris Cross is for you.

With small crossovers being chic, petrol-electric interest rocketing, and an increasing count of consumers looking outside of the box … well, you can see why Toyota is confident about achieving big things from a car that slots a body shape inspired by its larger sports utilities onto a platform shared with the smallest tyke it sells.

Sure, from driving the hybrid editions in base GX (the silver car) and line-topping Limited (in red) formats, some personal irks were noted.

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Toyota GR Supra, GR Yaris: So bad, so very good

Gazoo Racing … funny name, riotous cars. Especially the baby.

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TOYOTA GR Supra

Price: $98,990

Powertrain and economy: 3.0-litre turbo inline six, 285kW/500Nm, 8-speed automatic, RWD, combined economy 7.7L/100km.

Vital statistics: 4379mm long, 1292mm high, 1865mm wide, 2469mm wheelbase, luggage capacity 290 litres, 19-inch alloy wheels.

We like: Improved performance and driving feel, sounds better too.

We don't like: Tight for headroom, misses out on best iDrive format.

TOYOTA GR Yaris

Price range: $54,990

Powertrains: 1.6-litre petrol inline three-cylinder petrol turbo with 200kW/370Nm, six-speed manual transmission, AWD, combined economy 7.6L/100km.

Vital statistics: 3995mm long, 1455mm high, 1805mm wide, 2558mm wheelbase, luggage capacity 141 litres, 18-inch alloy wheels.

We like: The entire concept, a stupendous achievement.

We don't like: Driver’s seat set a touch too high, they can’t build it fast enough.

 

THE old axiom about actions speaking louder than words?

From impression gained from driving the two cars it offers in New Zealand, it’s emphatically true for Gazoo - potentially at a faster rate than those who still ask ‘Ga-who?’ might imagine.

If ever there’s ever a safe bet to be laid, it’s that Toyota’s quirkily-named, come-from-nowhere motorsports and performance road car division, Gazoo Racing, aka GR, is well on the way to become a Manga-quality mega hero.

Two cars in, GR Supra and GR Yaris, and so many more to come … next year’s GR 86 coupe, a GR Corolla rumoured to share the GR Yaris’s all-wheel-drive hardware and the pinnacle achievement, a $1 million-plus two-seater exotic hypercar based on the Le Mans-winning Toyota TS050 endurance racer, but road legal, with a race-proven twin-turbo V6 hybrid engine. That’s the GR Super Sport, built by the same people who gave the world the astounding Lexus LFA, which in development raced with Gazoo branding.

And that’s just from GR proper. In the wings are two other sub-families, each playing to an extreme.

One is GRMN; Gazoo Racing Meisters of Nurburgring. GRMN’s job is to deliver treatments reserved for track-focussed models. GRMN versions of GR Supra and GR Yaris are already in development.

At the other end of the scale, there’s ‘GR Sport’, an accreditation for cars that will adopt some of the hardcore look, none of the wallop. They’ll have sporty styling cues and modified suspension; a similar approach to that taken by Ford with its ST and ST Line cars and Hyundai with N and N-Line ranges. The C-HR is confirmed. Perhaps the RAV4, the Hilux and the next-generation, aka 300-Series, Land Cruiser might also benefit.

So there’s a lot going on; enough to suggest it’s only a matter of time before the the Gazoo name carries the same cachet with the general motoring public as AMG, BMW M and Audi’s RS.

Which brings us back to what’s here now. GR Supra, with an update that leaves it closer to being what it supposedly should always have been – in simple terms, a Toyota-designed take on the BMW Z4, specifically the range-topping M40i - and GR Yaris.

Both great for brand cred, not so good for Toyota’s bottom line; the make tacitly admits the true cost of the GR Yaris especially, through being so specialist (the only exterior parts from the ‘donor’ are headlights, tail-lights, wing mirrors, and shark-fin antenna), is way higher than what they charge customers. Don’t feel bad. Toyota doesn’t. Particularly unfussed is Toyota’s chairman, Akio Toyota. He’s a petrolhead, with a genuine passion for motorsport – expressed in hands-on fashion, notably when he raced the LFA in the daunting Nurburgring 24 Hour – he says cars like these will lift Toyota’s image. Hard to disagree.

His ‘no matter what’ resolve was tested by the GR Yaris. The tester being stickered up as a WRC works car made for an eye-catching but somewhat ironic exercise, given this car now won’t ever get to test its mettle in the World Rally Championship. 

No, really, it’s true. When Toyota heads into the 2021 season, it’ll be with the same double drivers’ title (2019, 2020) winning car it’s been campaigning since 2017, not this new one which, despite being created with express intent of taking over that job for this year and next, before handing over to a new car designed for 2022’s hybrid category, now cannot. Coronavirus disruption did for the car, sadly. 

Such a shame we’ll never see it compete. Such a great relief Toyota didn’t junk the spin-off road-legal model, demanded to fulfil homologation requirement, or dilute its special fundamental ingredients.

Everything demanded for competition - from the unique bodyshell with carbon fibre roof through to that complex four-wheel drive with limited-slip differentials on both axles and, far from least, the world’s most powerful three-cylinder engine - comes to the street, with reminder of what could have been provided by the plaque near the handbrake that reads 'developed for FIA World Rally Championship.

Such a delight that the good work undertaken by Toyota under guidance from its rally experts, led then by no less than four-time world champ Tommi Makinen (he’s since been elevated to be come Toyota’s global motorsport advisor), to create the first properly bespoke model from Toyota in two decades since Celica GT-Four (from which it steals the internal power-per-litre title) works brilliantly on the road.

How good is this car? Here’s an example: I drove it and the updated Supra across the same roads and found they maintained much the same pace and achieved much the same travel time.

The difference was in the conditions on their respective days. The Supra took on a favourite, and eminently challenging road, on a dry day. When the Yaris took on the same run a week later, it was in the heaviest rain I’ve experienced this year. And yet … well, it simply stunned. And, just to reinforce, while each car was driven swiftly, each exercise was with respect to safety. So, no careless crossing the centre line, little tyre-squealing, no disregard for posted speed limits.

Sure, if contest is considered, it needs to be as here; right roads, right days. In a straight line, the in-house GR fight is emphatically a one-way contest. As big-hearted as that tri-cylinder feels and sounds (though how much of that note is real, how much synthesised is fair to ask), with 0-100kmh in 5.2 seconds, the berserk baby is almost a full second behind GR Supra in a sprint to the highway limit.

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It’s when A to B is reached, as it was on my days, via sinuous and continual cornering … well, that’s where the GR Yaris’s alacrity and athleticism, mostly in third gear (which it can hold from 60kmh to around 114kmh) is all the more gut-pounding. There were occasions when I had to slow to take a breath. Honestly, it’s that relentlessly rapid and rabid.

I mean, it’s not as if I wasn’t prepared. I know rally-set specials; having had wheel-time in virtually every Evo and STi, the Escort and Sierra Cosworths, even an Integrale Evo (ok, that was as a passenger). Funnily, the most memorable of those was … you guessed it, the Tommi Makinen Lancer Evo 6.5, tried in fully unrestricted form, owned then by one of several friends who hold NZ national rally titles. I wish I could have shared the GR with those guys, gauged their impressions.

It’s not just the sheer energy that leave indelible impression that this is a tangible effigy of what might have been a championship-winning racer; the sheer surgical precision of the thing is equally awe-inspiring. A chassis that exploits Toyota’s New Global Architecture platforms (TNGA) by combining an existing Yaris ‘GA-B’ platform up front, with Corolla’s ‘GA-C’ underpinnings towards the rear might sound make-do, but it does really nicely. Brakes with rotors larger than those on the Supra, top-shelf tyres – Michelin Pilot Super Sports, as per Supra, though in smaller size - speak to the quest for perfection with this exercise.

Even moreso the 'GR-four' all-wheel-drive system. The main component is a multi-plate clutch coupling unit located in the back of the car, in front of its rear differential, but further tricks include differing final-drive ratios front to rear, in order to assist in torque manipulation. The system has a theoretical torque-split range, front to rear, from 100 to 0:100, but this is not possible in reality. 

What is possible is 60:40 in Regular mode, 50:50 in Track mode, or 30:70 in Sport mode, the latter often being the go-to for most of the driving I entertained, because it makes the car more tail-biased; almost like a rear-drive car, certainly better than some previous rally-ready and even some current road-tuned AWD cars.

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You need work the six-speed manual, but that’s part of the joy. The pedal set also feels entirely designed around heel-toe footwork (if you’re not so flash, the car features auto-blipping) and when into the zone, it’s one of the most communicative cars I’ve met; the purity of its driver focus is something else.

On that point, bear in mind that when driven with enthusiasm somewhat of an ‘anti-passenger’ car. Rally cars need navigators because otherwise the driver wouldn’t have an edge; in the GR Yaris, anyone occupying the left-side seat might find it too overwhelming an experience if the driver treats favourite roads as special stages as the G-loadings are pretty high. Also, with such a petite frame and all-wheel-drive nature, it changes direction fiercely, turns in sharply, and puts its power down abruptly. Yes, it WILL oversteer, even with all driving aids on, but even then the car’s nature is very wham-bam.

If you wanted a fast car experience and hoped to keep your stomach contents intact, the Supra is the better choice, as it has a more ‘natural’ transition. By degree. It also stomps pretty hard, now. The Yaris adds additional hooligan edge in that tugging on the handbrake triggers the car to disconnect drive to the rear wheels, which is a cool thing for those out to finesse their inner Gigi Galli (don’t know him? Go to YouTube, all is revealed).

The YAris engine is simply epic. Incredibly strong for its capacity and cylinder count; the road tune undoubtedly dictates a greater degree of flexibility to the tune than any race engineer would want but it’s not soft. Max torque piles on in the midrange and the power curve is muscular. Heavy-footed blast-offs are happily accepted, though only when the engine is properly warmed. It’ll remind you to go easy until the temps are right.

Both GRs strike a great look. The Supra’s special edition blue brilliantly highlights the complexity of this shape; reinforcing how the rear end in particular is full of aggression and intent, with its wider high-performance tyres, big aerodynamic diffuser and outrageously shaped lights. The centrally mounted reversing light and the shape of the front bumper are specifically designed to invoke the raised nose of a modern F1 racer. A surprising tribute given how poorly Toyota did in that arena.

The Yaris doesn’t need stickers to reinforce its rally-ready aura. The aerodynamically proficient wide body treatment, the squat stance and impression of it being abnormally wider than it is tall; it’s awesome. The latter is no trick of the eye. Makinen insisted the regular Yaris roofline be lowered and lightened; hence the carbon-fibre composite roof skin. I’d love to see it with a big WRC wing. So, apparently, does GRMN. Their prototype seen testing (at the Nurburgring, of course) had this, vented front guards and a more aggressive front spoiler. Hey, why not?

Slip inside each and it’s the smaller car that feels more spacious, certainly better served for headroom. Supra’s roof design really makes it a tough car for the tall. Side visibility is also limited; you really have to be careful at intersections. With Yaris, it’s the direct ahead view that’s slightly compromised. Looking slightly left you find need to duck to see between the top of the centre infotainment screen and the bottom of the rear-view mirror. When it’s raining, you wish the right-side wiper would sweep closer to the A-pillar; as-is there’s just a sliver of dirty screen to peer around when apexing. A slightly lower seat would be brilliant.

Back in the day, WRXs and Evos had cruddy interiors because the makers knew most owners would rip ‘em out during transformation for competition. It’s not quite like that in the GR Yaris, but you can see where the effort has been made – namely, the Alcantara and faux-leather sports seats and the perfect-sized, GR-branded steering wheel – and where its been relaxed: Plain looking plastics, the infotainment system being nothing particularly flash in respect to operability (though it does have JBL internals).

Supra has higher quality trim but so it should, given the price. Even so, the iDrive is still a whole generation behind the Z4s. The very good reputations of their manufacturing bases – the old LFA line in Japan for Yaris, the Magna Steyr facility in Austria for Supra – shows in their assembly quality. The Yaris has extra kudos from being literally hand-built.

They’re patently very different cars, yet have a commonality in being cars you can truly celebrate. Simply that they exist is wonderful.

If you had to pick just one, it’d have to be the Yaris. No argument, the Supra has become a better car; the engine is much better in this new tune. Changes to the suspension and steering tune also enhance the enjoyability.

And yet, in years to come, when drinks are being shared and tall tales told, it’s less likely to be the primary subject of a ‘my best GR’ reminiscence.

That honour has to fall to the GR Yaris. It is, quite simply, a giant; the start of something really big.

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Toyota Yaris Cross GX hybrid: Moving on up

Timing couldn’t be better for a new Toyota compact SUV that’s basically a Yaris in name alone.

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Price: $33,990
Powertrain and economy:
1.5-litre three-cylinder petrol engine, 67kW/120Nm, total hybrid system output 85kW. Continuously variable automatic. Official combined economy 3.8L/100km, CO2 86g/km.
Vital statistics:
4180mm long, 1765mm wide, 1590mm high, 2560 wheelbase, 16-inch alloys and 205/65 R16 tyres.
We like:
Looks distinctively different to Yaris hatch, impressive interior room, good ride and handling, hybrid economy.
We don’t like:
Lane trace assist is quite touchy, rear doors don’t quite open wide enough.

TALK about perfect timing. At the very time when compact SUVs take over as the most popular model type in New Zealand, Toyota introduces its first-ever offering in that market segment.

The vehicle is the Yaris Cross, which is related to the new Yaris hatch in that it is built on essentially the same platform, has the same petrol and hybrid powertrains, and boasts pretty much the same interior.

But it is in fact a much different vehicle. It doesn’t share any body panels, it is bigger and rides on a longer wheelbase, and has the SUV-style higher ride height via 30mm greater ground clearance.

All this means that although Toyota New Zealand is happily marketing the Yaris Cross as a member of the Yaris family, just as it is with the stonking little Yaris GR hot hatch, the reality is it is a separate model.

And that places the vehicle in a perfect position to take full advantage of the booming state of the compact  SUV segment.

Consider these statistics. Last year it was medium SUVs that were the most popular passenger vehicle genre with a 19 percent share, while the compact models held 15 percent. But this year to date to the end of October this gap had closed to 20 percent for mediums and 19 percent for compacts – with a feature of October’s sales being a complete reversal of fortunes, with the compacts taking 23 percent and the mediums 18 percent.

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Expect that gap to become more pronounced over the last months of 2020, because since the end of October we’ve seen the arrival of Ford’s nice new Puma as well as the launch this new addition to the Toyota SUV lineup.

And something that gives the Yaris Cross a potential edge over all the competition is that it is available as a petrol-electric hybrid. In fact the majority of the Cross models on offer are hybrids. The range begins with a standard petrol-engined $29,990 GX, and then moves into the hybrids – an entry GX for $33,990, a higher-spec Limited for $38,990, and topping out with a Limited with two-tone paint scheme for $39,490.

It all impresses as a rather intelligent pricing structure. The entry GX petrol’s list price is exactly the same as several other small SUVs currently on sale here including the Honda HR-V, Hyundai Venue, Mitsubishi ASX and Suzuki S-Cross.

And then there are the hybrids, which are unique in the small SUV segment. So really, it could be said that from the powertrain technology perspective the only vehicles the Yaris Cross hybrids compete against are other Toyota hybrid SUVs – the slightly larger and more powerful C-HR which costs from $36,990, and the medium-sized RAV4 from $38,990.

In many respects it is notable that the Yaris Cross has arrived in New Zealand at roughly the same time as the Ford Puma. That’s because they have a certain similarity of looks, both of them light years away from the more traditional SUV-lite design menus of other compact SUVs currently on the market.

Maybe it’s because of their European design influences – the Puma is a Ford of Europe product and is assembled in Romania, and while the Yaris Cross comes out of Japan, it is the result of a collaboration between Toyota design studios in Europe and Japan.

Compared to the swept looks of the Yaris hatch, the Yaris Cross has more chunky and rugged styling, particularly a distinctive frontal area and big squared-off wheel arches. As I said before, it doesn’t share any body panels with other members of the Yaris family.

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While the Cross shares Toyota’s new TNGA-B vehicle platform with the hatch, it has a slightly longer wheelbase, the bodyshell is 240mm longer, and the roof is 90mm higher, all of which translates to superior interior room.

Our drive has been in a GX hybrid, which being an entry model is fitted with 16-inch wheels and tyres that to my eyes don’t seem quite big enough to fill the vehicle’s very large squared-off wheel arches that are framed with protective cladding. The Limited models have 18-inch wheels which I’m sure would look better.

Yaris Cross is a nice-looking small SUV though, with a particularly distinctive frontal design. The rear opens up to reveal 390 litres of load space with all seats in use, which is among the best of the compact SUV class, and the cargo area features a rear seat that can be split 40/20/40, and a 60/40 split adjustable deck board, for better versatility of use.

Interestingly, the Cross is also rated to tow 400kg. Being a hybrid, that’s less than the 1250kg tow rating of the standard petrol model, but at least it can tow – which is something the likes of the Yaris hatch hybrid and the Corolla hybrids can’t do.

Under the bonnet is exactly the same powertrain as the hatch hybrid. The petrol engine is a de-specified 1.5-litre three-cylinder Atkinson Cycle unit that for the hybrid application delivers 67 kW of power at 5500rpm, and 120 Nm of torque from 3800 rpm to 4800 rpm. When combined with the electric motor the total system output is 85kW.

That’s sufficient to give the vehicle totally acceptable urban performance. Under accelerator load the little petrol triple can get a bit noisy in a three-cylinder raucous sort of way, but overall things are very good.

During our time with the Cross we took it on a decent road trip, and I was impressed with its open road performance, ride and handling. It really does drive like a slightly higher-riding hatch, improved visibility and all.

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Obviously helping things along in this regard is the Yaris Cross’ TNGA-B platform which gives it exceptional rigidity. The vehicle also carries the latest generation of the Toyota Safety Sense active safety and drive assistance package, which features such items as a pre-collision system with autonomous emergency braking, blind spot monitor, lane tracing assist, all-speed dynamic radar cruise control, automatic high beam, and eight airbags.

There are also two new safety features – emergency steering assist, and crosswind assist.

Emergency steering assist kicks into action when there is a possible collision risk in the vehicle’s lane of traffic, and the driver needs to swerve to avoid an impact. The system provides additional steering torque to help get the vehicle out of the way.

Crosswind assist uses the vehicle’s stability control system to help reduce unintended lane departure caused by a sudden crosswind gust. When it detects such a deviation, it calculates the necessary brake force required according to vehicle speed and the intensity of the deviation, and it operates the brakes on the side of the vehicle hit by the gust.

It wasn’t particularly windy during our drive, so crosswind assist wasn’t put to the test – at least I think it wasn’t, as such systems are normally so fast-acting that they have started and finished their tasks before those aboard know it.

An obvious feature of any hybrid vehicle is fuel economy. Toyota claims an average fuel consumption of 3.8 L/100km with the Yaris Cross, which I was unable to achieve. But that was because such official figures are never attained in real-world conditions anyway, particularly on New Zealand’s coarse chip highway seal. But I did achieve a 4.7 L/100km average.

The interior of the Yaris Cross is essentially the same as the Yaris hatch. At the GX level of specification the seats are black fabric with khaki-accented side bolsters. There’s also felt material used for the door trim.

Audio and entertainment is access via a 7-inch touchscreen, and the system enables both Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. Surprisingly, the vehicle doesn’t feature satellite navigation which I thought was just about a given in all vehicles these days. It is available in the Limited models, however.

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Something else the GX doesn’t have, which also surprised me a little, is push-button start. I lost count of the number of times I chucked the keys into the centre console before realising I had to use them to start the vehicle. It wasn’t an issue – just a surprise.

Overall though, the Yaris Cross interior as spacious and comfortable. It has more room thanks to the fact the vehicle is longer, wider and taller, and it eats the hatch in terms of rear luggage space – which I should add, is close to double that of the larger Corolla hatch which is notorious for its lack of cargo room.

In fact the whole of the Yaris Cross experience is comfortable. I like the concept of a small SUV that is practical and rated to tow, offers the environmental and economic benefits of hybrid technology, and is a good drive both around town and out on the open road. This vehicle does all of that in spades.

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Toyota Hilux 4WD SR5 Cruiser: New tricks for the top dog

The plush edition of this toiler accounts for almost half of Hilux volume. So it needs to be good.

Images: Colin Smith and supplied.

Images: Colin Smith and supplied.

Price:  $58,990

Powertrain and performance:  2.8-litre four-cylinder 16-valve turbocharged diesel engine. 150kW/3000-3400rpm, 500Nm/1600-2800rpm. Four-wheel-drive. Combined cycle fuel consumption 7.9L/100km (claim), 9.3L/100km (road test).

Vital statistics: Length 5325mm, height 1815mm, width 1900mm, wheelbase 3090mm. Wheels: 18-inch alloys with 265/60 R18 Dunlop Grand Trek PT tyres.

We like: Comprehensive safety and driver assist features and improved response from the upgraded diesel engine. Larger touchscreen and long-awaited addition of Apple CarPlay and Android Auto.

We don’t like: Unsure if the claimed fuel consumption improvements are achievable.

IT WAS a very brief reign for the 4WD SR5 Cruiser as the flagship of Toyota’s upgraded 2021 Hilux range.

From an evening press conference till afternoon tea the next day the SR5 Cruiser was king of the hill in the Hilux family.

Then the Raptor-hunting Hilux Mako arrived from out of the sky – slung below a Blackhawk helicopter – and immediately the SR5 Cruiser seemed like just another Hilux.

Only available in Double Cab configuration with an automatic transmission, the SR5 Cruiser is positioned to showcase the full extent of 2021 upgrades across the Hilux range.

It’s only in partnership with the six-speed automatic transmission where the latest 50Nm torque boost to 500Nm from the 2.8-litre diesel engine is available.

And it’s the double cab configuration which benefits from the full scope of suspension upgrades that deliver noticeably more settled medium-speed and highway ride comfort.

In spite of a $2500 price increase the MY21 SR5 Cruiser still finds an important sub-$60k price position at $58,990 (including on-road costs and the other benefits of Toyota’s Drive Happy programme).

Other aspects of the MY21 upgrade have seen the 4WD SR5 Cruiser specification boosted with the introduction of a nine-speaker JBL audio system, an auto-dimming interior mirror, stylish blue ambient lighting in the door trims, new matte and piano black interior surfaces, an upgraded instrument cluster and multi-info display and a new leather accented two-tone grey/black seat trim.

Exterior highlights include new 18-inch alloy wheels in a two-tone grey/black finish, the addition of welcome lights in the door mirrors, a unique black tailgate garnish and Cruiser-specific darkened detailing around the grille, bumper, headlight and fog lamp accents to give a much more defined front-end look to the Hilux.

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It’s not just a 20kW power increase and 50Nm torque boost for the 2.8-litre diesel. It’s more refined with quieter cold start and warm-up idle characteristics.

It’s not only evident the revised engine has stronger low-rpm muscle but it also continues to deliver power toward higher revs which has benefits for highway overtaking response.

The boost in power and torque is achieved by a new cylinder block and pistons, a bigger turbo, new exhaust manifold, increased fuel injection pressure and cooling improvements.

The new output figures are 150kW and 500Nm but the big torque number only applies when the Hilux has the six-speed automatic transmission. With the manual gearbox (not relevant to the SR5 Cruiser grade but available in SR5 level) there is an unchanged 420Nm torque peak.

Improved performance is accompanied by a claimed 10 percent reduction in fuel consumption and 11 percent lower CO2 emissions.

Toyota now claims a combined cycle figure of 7.9L/100km but even with much of my driving on the highway I could only manage 9.3L/100km and was left wondering how much the number would improve with a bit more mileage.

Toyota engineers have made chassis and suspension improvements that achieve more compliance and control from the initial suspension response across bumps and corrugations.

Shock absorbers, spring rates and suspension bushes are all updated for 2021 while a new variable flow power steering pump requires reduced low speed steering effort but provides a pleasingly direct feel on the highway and back roads as the assistance level reduces.  

The more settled feel of the highway ride quality also comes from an extra leaf spring being added to the rear suspension of all diesel double cab models.

The refinement focus is continued with changes to the cab mounting points for improved vibration insulation.

The overall feel of the new SR5 Cruiser is a more refined on-road performer with crisper throttle response. The driving characteristics include a more precise feel and suspension that copes better across both higher frequency corrugations as also single input bumps and broken surfaces.

The other significant MY21 Hilux changes come within the cabin with the immediately noticeable change being a larger 8.0-inch touchscreen – in place for previous 6.0- and 7.0-inch screens – for all models.

That change is accompanied by the long-awaited introduction of Apple CarPlay and Android Auto functionality. That least when Toyota finally makes the move it is adopted as standard across the full range including the entry-level WorkMate models.

The revised 4.2-inch multi-info display now includes a digital speedo readout.

While rugged off-road capability remains a key part of the Hilux 4x4 skillset there is also the on-road benefit of the standard across-the-range Toyota Safety Sense package.

TSS content includes Dynamic Radar Cruise Control with pre-collision safety and autonomous emergency braking, lane departure alert and road sign assist on all models. There are seven airbags and the 2019 5-star ANCAP rating carries over.

Hill-Start Assist Control is standard and all 4x4 models now have Downhill Assist Control (previously the SR Double Cab 4WD manual missed out on this feature).

It’s been interesting to follow the fortunes of the eighth generation Hilux since it launched in late-2015. The Ford Ranger had taken ute market leadership the previous year as the previous generation Hilux became very long in the tooth.

Since then Hilux has sold in record numbers but has never dislodged the Ranger from No.1 spot for more than an occasional month. Yet last month, it’s first in the market, Hilux beat the Ford on count to take the top step. How many of these were old models at an attractive run-out price; how many were dealer demonstrators? Still, it outwardly seems a good start.

The MY21 is the best-looking Hilux yet and with its improved performance and refinement plus new technology features it has the best chance yet of ute market leadership.