Category: Uncategorized

Toyota boss to take wheel at Nurburgring – globalpost

By , May 14, 2013 7:02 am

The motor-sport loving president of Japanese auto giant Toyota, will get behind the wheel in the Nurburgring 24-hour endurance race in Germany later this month, a company spokesman said Wednesday.

Akio Toyoda, the grandson of the group's founder, will be one of a team of four driving a Toyota car at the Nurburgring Circuit in the village of Nurburg, south of Cologne, on May 19 and 20, the spokesman said.

It will be his first participation in the world-class race since becoming the company's top man in June 2009. He previously took part in the endurance race in 2007 and 2009 when he was vice president.

"It's not merely a private activity," the spokesman said. "This is part of the company's effort to produce good cars by judging the performance of our production under such severe conditions."

In 2009, his team driving the Lexus LF-A supercar crossed the finish line in 87th in a field of some 170 cars at the circuit known for the 300-metre (990-foot) change in elevation, Kyodo News said.

 

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/afp/130501/toyota-boss-take-wheel-at-nurburgring

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Toyota Returns to Pikes Peak with a 536hp EV – Motortrend

By , May 9, 2013 1:45 pm
Toyota Returning to Pikes Peak With Revised 536-HP Electric Car

Toyota Motorsport GmbH is bringing an updated version of its electric racing car, the TMG EV P002, to this year’s Pikes Peak hill climb. The car finished the 12.42-mile Pikes Peak race in 10:15.38 minutes last year, and Toyota hopes for an even faster time this year.

Toyota says that information gleaned from last year’s Pikes Peak race, as well as testing on the Nürburgring in Germany, has allowed the team to improve the power of the TMG EV P002′s twin electric drive motors. It now produces a combined 536 hp and 885 lb-ft of torque, the motor top speed has been increased from 5000 rpm to 6000 rpm, and the carhas a claimed top speed of 143 mph. The car draws energy from a 42-kWh lithium-ceramic battery pack, and will be piloted by 61-year-old racer Rod Millen.

Toyota TMG EV P002 profile 300x187 imageBecause the hill climb takes place on a mountain, Toyota decided to bring its own dedicated recharging truck to juice-up the TMG EV P002 before races. The modified Hiace (a commercial van not sold in the U.S.) has an on-board 42-kWh lithium-ion battery that is charged ahead of time. The van can then be used as a mobile charging station to charge the race car ahead of its Pikes Peak run.

Last year, an earlier version of the TMG EV P002 (pictured below) set a new electric-car lap record at the Nürburgring, with a time of 7:22.329 minutes. The 2013 Pikes Peak International Hill Climb takes place Sunday, June 30.

Source: Toyota

Read more: http://wot.motortrend.com/toyota-returning-to-pikes-peak-with-revised-536-hp-electric-car-365043.html#ixzz2SpoBCvjz
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TOYOTA CELEBRATES SPORTING GLORIES PAST AND PRESENT AT 2013 GOODWOOD FESTIVAL OF SPEED – Toyota UK

By , March 20, 2013 4:51 pm

TOYOTA CELEBRATES SPORTING GLORIES PAST AND PRESENT AT 2013 GOODWOOD FESTIVAL OF SPEED

KEY POINTS

  • Toyota’s Le Mans and World Rally Championship cars out in force at Goodwood Festival of Speed
  • Plans to present three generations of the Celica GT-Four WRC car in action, plus the mighty Group B twin-turbo Celica and Corolla WRC
  • Toyota TS010 and TS020 1990s Le Mans racers to be joined by the current TS030 Hybrid World Endurance Championship contender
  • Multiple GT86 versions lined up for inclusion, including Gazoo Racing’s Nürburgring 24 Hours machine and the UK-developed R3 rally car and GT4 British GT championship racer
  • Proposed first UK appearance of FT-86 Open GT86 convertible concept
  • British stars on display, including 2013 BTCC Avensis and historic AE86 rally car
  • Festival also set to welcome back the NASCAR Red Bull Toyota Camry and Rod Millen’s Pikes Peak Tacoma

Toyota will celebrate its past and present sporting achievements with an illustrious array of race and rally machinery in action at the 2013 Goodwood Festival of Speed (12 – 14 July).

It plans to bring together three generations of the Celica GT-Four on the rally stage, reviving the sound and speed of its most successful World Rally Championship contenders. It’s expected the ST185 will lead the way, 20 years on from claiming Toyota’s first WRC manufacturer’s title and a driver’s championship for Juha Kankkunen. The Celica ST165 and ST205 are also expected to be in action.

This celebrated trio, which claimed 30 WRC victories, will be joined by the mighty Group B Celica twin-turbo TA64, one of the most powerful rally cars ever built, and the championship-winning Corolla WRC.

Goodwood will also provide a rare opportunity to see the evolution of Toyota’s recent works Le Mans cars, with the TS010 and TS020 of the 1990s joined by the current Toyota Racing TS030 Hybrid. In 2012 the TS030 Hybrid claimed three race wins in its first year of FIA World Endurance Championship competition. This year it will be returning to the track and aiming to clinch a maiden Le Mans 24 Hours victory for Toyota.

The Toyota GT86 has earned worldwide acclaim as a true driver’s car and its remarkable handling abilities will be demonstrated by multiple versions of the sports coupe that have been engineered for both race and rally competition. Gazoo Racing will be fielding its Nürburgring 24 Hours machine for runs up the Goodwood hill, and the GT4 model prepared to British GT Championship specifications will also be appearing.

Toyota also plans to give Goodwood crowds the first UK view of the FT-86 Open, a convertible concept that prompted enthusiastic press and public reaction when it debuted earlier this month at the Geneva motor show. A GT86 TRD will display the package of authentic performance and styling features now available to UK customers, and an R3 rally-prepared model will show just what the car is capable of on a gravel special stage. The Corolla AE86, one of the classic sporting Toyota of the past that inspired today’s GT86, will be represented by Midgley Motorsport’s Team Toyota GB-liveried rally car.

For members of the public who would like to try out the GT86 for themselves, Toyota will be offering drives as part of its participation in the Moving Motor Show, the festival’s curtain-raiser on 11 July.

Frank Wrathall’s 2013 British Touring Car Championship Avensis will be returning to the festival, while other Toyota stars scheduled to travel to Goodwood from the USA include the NASCAR Red Bull Camry and Rod Millen’s Pikes Peak Tacoma, a perennial favourite with the festival crowds.

There will be more to enjoy in the Toyota pavilion, which will have a display dedicated to the GT86. The standard road-going model and TRD version will be on show, together with design concepts. It is hoped these will include the soft-top FT-86 Open. For a taste of the GT86’s distinctive handling character, visitors will be able to take a virtual drive in a new GT86 simulator. The contemporary cars will be joined by the rare and beautiful 1960s 2000GT and a replica of the Team Toyota GB AE86 Corolla touring car that won back-to-back British championships in the 1980s.

ENDS

 

 

For further information, please contact one of the following:

Nik Pearson on 01737 367264 or by e-mail at nik.pearson@tgb.toyota.co.uk
Richard Seymour on 01737 367272 or by e-mail at richard.seymour@tgb.toyota.co.uk
David Crouch on 01737 367307 or by e-mail at david.crouch@tgb.toyota.co.uk
Erica Haddon on 01737 367308 or by e-mail at erica.haddon@tgb.toyota.co.uk
Scott Brownlee on 01737 367266 or by e-mail at scott.brownlee@tgb.toyota.co.uk

 

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Toyota GT86 engineers explored shooting brake and sedan variants, are they still in the cards? – Autoblog

By , March 18, 2013 9:20 am
2013 Toyota GT86 TRD - front three-quarter view

Related Gallery2013 Toyota GT86 TRD

Posted Mar 13th 2013 7:58PM

Comments95

 

According to the Toyota UK blog, engineers for the automaker were so excited developing the GT86 coupe that they investigated producing a whole family of models based on the rear-wheel drive sports car. And at least one engineer – product chief Tetsuya Tada – still hopes it can happen, even if not everyone at Toyota is onboard. Tada: "Actually we tried to do this secretly but the executives found us out. They said: 'What are you doing? Will you please focus on the coupe.'"

Those mooted variants included both a four-door sedan and a shooting brake. Why? Aside from the pure excellence of a lightweight, brilliantly handling hatchback, Toyota was keenly aware of the fact that it may need to spread the cost of development out across several models. Tada says that's part of the reason why it was so easy to create the convertible. The company knew from the outset that a softtop version was in the cards, and built the machine's structure to accommodate having the roof sliced off.

Tada also made mention of the already-announced collaboration between Toyota and BMW. The engineer said that the GT86 was particularly helpful because it demonstrated just how successful a product conceived and designed by two different companies can be. While he didn't say exactly what Toyota and BMW are up to, it's clear the two are looking into a number of possibilities. It's an interesting read with a lot of

 
 
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Someone Paid More Than $10,000 For This “Eleanor” Toyota Celica – Jalopnik

By , March 17, 2013 9:51 am

 

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Someone Paid More Than $10,000 For This "Eleanor" Toyota Celica

I'll never understand all the love for Eleanor.

Not Mrs. Franklin Roosevelt, mind you. She was one awesome gal. I'm talking about the "Eleanor" 1967 Mustang GT 500 featured in the 2000 remake of Gone in 60 Seconds. Don't get me wrong, I enjoy that movie as much as the next guy, and I also like Mustangs, especially ones from the 60s. But the Eleanor kit always seemed garish, unnecessary and out of place on an old-school pony car.

It has proven quite popular for some reason, as a bunch of Eleanor replica-makers have popped up since the movie came out. But here's one way to save money: put a strikingly similar version of that garish, unnecessary, out of place bodykit onto a 1970s Toyota Celica liftback.

Sound crazy? Well, someone did it. And a few weeks ago, someone bought it on eBay from an Australian builder. This right-hand-drive 1977 RA28 Celica went for $10,395 at the end of February.

Actually… I like this a lot. Hear me out! I'm not a fan of the Eleanor kit, but that's a damn decent recreation. And a Celica is an interesting and fun choice for it, since it was kind of a Japanese version of the Mustang for a good while.

Plus, this buyer is getting a restored, classic Celica with a manual transmission and a mere 80,000 km on the odometer for just $10 grand. I'll go with nice price on this one even if I'm not nuts about how it looks. Thoughts?

SExpand

SExpand

Hat tip to jjglentz!

 

http://jalopnik.com/someone-paid-more-than-10-000-for-this-eleanor-toyot-453798522?utm_campaign=socialflow_jalopnik_twitter&utm_source=jalopnik_twitter&utm_medium=socialflow

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Toyota pondering high-performance GT86 hybrid? – AutoBlog

By , March 10, 2013 5:17 pm

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Toyota Pro/Celebrity Race Scion FR-S [w/video] – Autoblog

By , March 10, 2013 11:49 am

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Toyota Marks 75 Years With Interactive Family Tree – Autoweek

By , March 6, 2013 3:10 pm

Toyota Century Front 3-4 Toyota
Where did the Toyota Century come from, and why is it still being made? The Toyota timeline offers some answers.

 

By: on 2/26/2013

 

Toyota is celebrating 75 years in the automotive business with style — and a lavish, fully interactive timeline. We spotted it on Japanese Nostalgic Car, and it's been consuming our productivity ever since.

The sheer amount of information the timeline presents can be a bit overwhelming at first. Poke around, however, and you'll be rewarded with more information about every Toyota, ever than you ever wanted to know.

Here's how it works:

First, decide whether you want to search by make, body type or year, and then browse through the respective lists to find a vehicle you're interested in learning more about.

Selecting a vehicle takes you to a segment of a vast, intricate family tree connecting Toyotas of the past and present. Small notations indicate when models entered and exited specific markets and when major changes — such as the transition from rear-wheel to front-wheel drive — occurred.

Once you've honed in on your model of choice — say, for example, the Toyota Masterace Surf — click on its respective photo icon. A popup window will appear with a model description, specifications and the plant in which the car was built. There's also a helpful name origin section, and for some models, scans of period catalogs and video features.

At any point in time, you can select a new model via a bar on the left-hand side of the screen.

As if that wasn't enough, there's also a supplementary engine-type chart — useful for making sense of the often confusing engine codes Toyota employs as well as showing when and where specific engines made an appearance.

We're not sure what percentage of the Toyota workforce was tied up during the production of this incredible family tree, but we're glad it's out there.

And, by the way, happy anniversary, Toyota. We haven't exactly been kind to the Prius, but you've come a long way since the Toyoda Model AA.

 

 

Toyota Lineage family tree anniversary presentation Toyota
Get lost in the Toyotaverse with this detailed, interactive family tree.

 

 

 

 

Toyota Lineage Toyopet Toyota
Once you've selected an interesting model on the Toyota family tree, you can view a popup chock full of specifications, a description and even vintage literature.

 

 

 

Get more car news, reviews and opinion every day: Sign up to have the Autoweek Daily Drive delivered right to your inbox.

 

http://www.autoweek.com/article/20130226/CARNEWS01/130229854

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Toyota i-ROAD leans its way into the city [w/video] – AutoBlog

By , March 4, 2013 4:08 pm

Toyota i-ROAD leans its way into the city [w/video]

Toyota i-ROAD Concept

Related GalleryToyota i-ROAD Concept

Posted Mar 4th 2013 3:45PM

Comments49

 

According to Toyota, the "i-ROAD takes the company closer to its goal of creating the ultimate range of eco cars." As you're surely aware, that range of eco cars includes the enormously successful Prius family, but this new machine is nothing like the hybrid hatchback. And it's not even a car – Toyota calls the i-ROAD a Personal Mobility Vehicle.

Toyota's i-ROAD Concept, which debuts at this week's Geneva Motor Show, is adorned with just three wheels, meaning it's just as much a motorcycle as it is a car, and the driver and passenger sit in tandem style instead of side-by-side. This arrangement allows for a very thin 850mm width, which is about the same as a large motorcycle. Because the cockpit is enclosed, the occupants don't need helmets, nor are they open to the elements outside.

Also like a traditional two-wheeler, the i-ROAD tilts through the turns and when driving on uneven surfaces. Toyota says its computer-controlled Active Lean technology automatically balances the vehicle with no input from the driver.

Despite the automaker's expertise in hybrid drivetrains, the i-ROAD is a pure electric vehicle, and Toyota says it "believes in the feasibility of EVs to serve as a main mode of transport for short urban journeys." There's a two-kilowatt motor in each front wheel, meaning the i-ROAD offers up just over five horsepower, which isn't a lot but should be enough to get moving up to city traffic speeds (no performance specs are available).

An on-board lithium ion battery allows for a range of around 30 miles, after which the vehicle can be recharged in three hours using "a conventional domestic power supply." We're a little unsure of what Toyota means by that – using a 110-volt outlet or a 220-volt outlet, or perhaps a unique charger? – but you're welcome to see the press release yourself below, along with a video showing the leaning three-wheeler in action.

Show full PR text
TMC to Premiere 'Toyota i-Road' Personal Mobility Concept at 2013 Geneva Motor Show

Toyota City, Japan, March 4, 2013-Toyota Motor Corporation (TMC) will debut the "Toyota i-Road" personal mobility concept at the 83rd Geneva International Motor Show1 to be held in Geneva, Switzerland from March 5 through 17. The concept, a three-wheeler with motorcycle-like maneuverability, is ideally suited for short-distance urban travel and was designed to be a new way to enjoy mobility.

The Toyota i-Road is an ultra-compact, tandem two-seater electric vehicle developed under the theme of compact and refreshing mobility. While offering an enjoyable and novel riding experience with the same level of convenience as a motorcycle, the Toyota i-Road represents a way of overcoming various obstacles, such as congested city roads, lack of parking, and other commuting issues, in the path of the development of low-carbon and sustainable urban areas.

The ultra-compact body not only offers excellent maneuverability, but also minimizes space needed for parking. The adoption of a newly developed, automatic active-lean system provides great response and an exhilarating driving experience. The Toyota i-Road features a closed cabin so that passengers can proceed helmet-free to their destination in comfort, shielded from the weather in all seasons.

TMC will continue research and development toward the practical adoption of the Toyota i-Road as the first in a new category of electric vehicles.

Main Features
I. Ultra-compact with outstanding maneuverability
With a length of 850 millimeters, the Toyota i-Road has outstanding maneuverability and can be driven smoothly along roadsides, leaving road lanes open for other traffic. In addition, the Toyota i-Road's small size allows it to occupy only three-quarters to one-half of a conventional parking space, boosting efficient use of parking areas.

II. Convenient, fun and exhilarating
A newly developed active lean system optimally and automatically controls vehicle body angle, ensuring stable ride and providing an unprecedented feeling of oneness with the vehicle significantly different from driving a car or motorcycle.

III. High-comfort enclosed cabin
Unlike similar vehicle concepts, the Toyota i-Road is equipped with a roof and doors so that the cabin is shielded from the weather to ensure comfort and from road noise to allow occupants to enjoy music. The enclosed cabin is equipped with two single seats positioned in tandem.

IV. Environment-friendly electric vehicle (EV)
As the Toyota i-Road is powered by an electric powertrain, it features a quiet ride and produces zero emissions during operation. Driving range on a single charge is approximately 50 kilometers2.

WORLD PREMIERE FOR TOYOTA I-ROAD AT GENEVA MOTOR SHOW

KEY POINTS

Toyota i-ROAD, a new form of transport, making its debut at Geneva
Compact, all-electric, three-wheeled personal mobility vehicle (PMV) with a comfortable, enclosed two-seater cabin
New Toyota 'Active Lean' technology automatically balances the vehicle when cornering or travelling over stepped surfaces
850mm width is no greater than a conventional two-wheeler, making i-ROAD as easy to manoeuvre as a scooter or motorcycle through urban traffic.
Zero emissions, near-silent EV powertrain gives a range of up to 30 miles, with recharging from a conventional power supply taking just three hours
Toyota's new i-ROAD personal mobility vehicle (PMV) makes its world debut at the Geneva motor show, a new, flexible form of transport designed for city streets.

Seating two in tandem and under cover, i-ROAD is an electric vehicle with a range of up to 30 miles (50km) on a single charge. Using 'Active Lean' technology, it is safe, intuitive and enjoyable to drive, with no need for driver or passenger to wear a helmet.

It's the latest concept to emerge from Toyota's 40 years of research and development of vehicles that use less energy, place less of a burden on the environment and are practical in meeting people's everyday transport needs. i-ROAD takes the company closer to its goal of creating the ultimate range of eco cars.

Toyota is paving the way for several types of eco car to co-exist in the future, by adapting its Hybrid Synergy Drive technology for use in plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs), electric vehicles (EVs) and fuel cell vehicles (FCVs). While hybrids, plug-in hybrids and FCVs are ideal for mainstream use over medium to long distances, Toyota believes in the feasibility of EVs to serve as a main mode of transport for short urban journeys, and has 10 years' experience in the research and development of PMVs.

People using this kind of vehicle want something that is more comfortable, offers better weather protection and is safer than a two-wheeler such as a scooter or motorcycle, but has similar benefits of low running costs, easy parking and around-town manoeuvrability.

The ultra-compact, three-wheel i-ROAD measures 2,350mm long and 1,445mm high and has a 1,700mm wheelbase. It's most significant dimension, though, is its width: at only 850mm, it is no wider than a conventional two-wheeler. Not only does this make for easy manoeuvring through congested traffic, it also means four can be parked in a single parking bay.

The zero-emissions, all-electric powertrain uses a lithium-ion battery to power two 2kW motors mounted in the front wheels, giving brisk acceleration and near-silent running. Driving range is around 30 miles, after which the battery can be fully recharged from a conventional domestic power supply in three hours.

Toyota's new and entirely intuitive Active Lean technology is the key to i-ROAD's high levels of stability, safety, comfort and fun-to-drive character. The system uses a lean actuator and gearing mounted above the front suspension member, linked via a yoke to the left and right front wheels. An ECU calculates the required degree of lean based on steering angle, gyro-sensor and vehicle speed information, with the system automatically moving the wheels up and down in opposite directions, applying lean angle to counteract the centrifugal force of cornering.

The system also operates when the PMV is being driven in a straight line over stepped surfaces, the actuator automatically compensating for changes in the road to keep the body level. The minimum turning circle is just three metres.

No special skills are needed to pilot i-ROAD; the Active Lean system offers a unique driving experience with the enjoyment of riding a two-wheeler, but with no need for the driver to stabilise the vehicle when manoeuvring at low speed, or when stationary.

As the driver doesn't have to put his or her feet on the road surface at any time, i-ROAD can be fitted with a safer, weatherproof, closed body and so can be driven without wearing a helmet. This design also allows for a more car-like environment on board, with the potential for features such as lighting, heating, audio and Bluetooth to be provided.

Toyota envisages its i-ROAD concept has the potential to play a significant role in reducing urban traffic congestion and air pollution. Commuters can use public transport or conventional private vehicles to travel to urban perimeter transportation hubs where they will transfer to the Toyota i-ROAD to complete their journeys into the city centre.

The new Toyota PMV's compact size, manoeuvrability, easy parking, rapid charging and choice of an open or closed cabin make it an ideal urban vehicle, designed to reduce congestion and CO2, NOx and particulate emissions without compromising individual freedom of mobility.

 

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The Toyota FT-86 Open is the Scion FR-S convertible – Road and Track

By , March 4, 2013 1:00 pm

Ragtop "concept" looks like a shoo-in for production

By Alex Nunez February 28, 2013 / Photos by Toyota

 

Ditch the Bayliner interior and the giant wheels sporting rubber-band-profile rubber, and the Toyota FT-86 Open "concept" you see here is your inevitable Scion FR-S convertible. It looks…great, actually.

Toyota says that "prototype engineering assessments are taking place." That's mumbo-jumbo for, "it's coming." Don't be surprised if Toyota announces a production timeline at the car's press conference in Geneva next week. The automaker even sneaks in a little top-drown drift sequence into the end of the clip, as if to drive home just how ready to go the show car is.

Tell your mom it's time to sell her Solara and get on the waiting list for one of these.

 
 

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