![]() Toyota was the first car maker to put "Hybrid car" in production. In December 1997, it launched the Prius in Japan, initially for low-volume production. 2 years later, it went on sale in the United States and attracted many environmental-conscious customers, especially in California. In 6 years, some 120,000 units were sold, which is quite an unexpected success.
Like the first generation, the new Prius uses a compact hybrid power unit in which a 1.5-litre straight-four engine is mated inline with an electric motor and drive the front wheels. The petrol engine uses direct-injection to save fuel and VVT-i to improve power and torque. It produces 78 horsepower, 8 up from the previous generation. However, the focus of improvement is on the electric motor. It is now supplied by 500V AC instead of 274V AC and generates 67hp, up from 44hp. This allows the new Prius to accelerate much quicker - 0-60mph is expected to be reduced from 12.5 sec to 10.5 sec. Simultaneously, fuel consumption is improved from 52mpg to 55mpg because the powerful electric motor can be used more frequently than before.
To compete with family cars, the new Prius grows a lot in all dimensions - 14cm longer, 3cm wider, 2.5cm taller while the wheelbase extends by a massive 14cm. American authority EPA even classified it in the same class as Toyota Camry, which is actually a little exaggerate. Of course, the Prius is not as roomy as Camry, but it is considerably roomier than its predecessor, offering a lot more shoulder room and leg room to rear passengers. The only area not improved is the rear headroom, blame to the fastback roof which is necessary to achieve the 0.26 drag coefficient (down from the already remarkable 0.29). The interior of Prius is a showroom for technology - a digital instrument reading at the bottom edge of windscreen, a smart center console with big LCD display and a lot of metallic finish throughout the cabin. It looks fresh and matches the character of this car.
Outside,
the Prius looks fresh and sophisticated. Its proportion imitates Audi
A2
but fails to deliver the same style and premium feel. That’s not a
problem,
as Toyota will prove its success in sales figures. At the time of
writing,
strong demand in the US and Japan already forced Toyota to increase
annual
output to 47,000 units. |
The above report was last updated on 19 Dec 2003. All Rights Reserved. |
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