Toyota Delivers First Fleet Customer Prius Plug-In

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During a visit to the UK, Toyota Honorary Chairman Dr. Shoichiro Toyoda, personally handed over the keys of a Prius plug-in PHEV, to the car’s first fleet customer, Electricity North West, a utility company which provides power to customers in a region stretching from Greater Manchester in the south, to the Scottish border in the north.

The car in question; was accepted by Susan Stockwell, customer service director for the Electricity North West.

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Then and Now: Toyota Land Cruiser

 
 
 

May 25, 2012
By Edward A. Sanchez at TruckTrend
 
For long-running nameplates and brands, it’s always interesting to look at the evolution of a model. In terms of longevity, there are few that can match the Toyota Land Cruiser, a model that has been in production continuously for more than 50 years. Like two other notable off-road legends — the Land Rover Defender and Jeep Wrangler– the Land Cruiser can trace its origins to World War II, though the revered “FJ” series that made a lasting impression on the American off-roading community did not debut until 1960.1964 Toyota Land Cruiser Station Wagon Jumping Hill

 

Our staff archivist Thomas Voehringer dug up a road test on the 1964 Toyota Land Cruiser “Station Wagon,” the largest of the Land Cruiser variants offered at the time. The closest modern-day equivalent we have test numbers on is the 2008 Lexus LX 570, a mechanical clone of the present-day Toyota Land Cruiser, and the last substantial mechanical update was when Toyota fitted the Land Cruiser and LX with its 381-hp, 401-lb-ft 5.7-liter i-Force V-8.

 

1964 Toyota Land Cruiser Station Wagon Front Closeup 1964 Toyota Land Cruiser Station Wagon On Trail 1964 Toyota Land Cruiser Station Wagon Left Front Angle
 
2013 Toyota Land Cruiser Right Front Angle 2013 Toyota Land Cruiser Left Rear Angle 2013 Toyota Land Cruiser Dashboard
 

To call the differences between the 1964 model and the current model dramatic would be an understatement. In 1964, we said that “it doesn’t give many concessions to luxury.” By contrast, the 2013 Land Cruiser comes only one way: Fully loaded. By we mean standard hard-drive based navigation with an 8-inch touchscreen display, 14-speaker sound system with HD and satellite radio, iTunes connectivity, Bluetooth wireless streaming, Toyota’s Entune multimedia system which includes Bing search, iHeartRadio music streaming, MovieTickets.com, OpenTable restaurant search and reservation service, a rear-seat entertainment system with 9-inch DVD screen with wireless headphones, 10-way adjustable driver’s seat with memory settings (which also includes the setting for the power-adjustable tilt-and-telescoping steering wheel). That’s in addition to four-zone automatic climate control with dust and pollen filtration and separate controls for the driver, front passenger, and rear passengers.

 
1964 Toyota Land Cruiser Station Wagon Rear
 

Of course, all the plushness of the new model comes at a price, both in dollars, and in weight. The 1964 model rang up at a modest $3546.50, including tax & destination. Adjusted for inflation, that would come to $26,322.47, but even doubling that wouldn’t be enough to pay for the 2013 model. In fact, you’d need to nearly triple that sum to pay for the latest Land Cruiser, which rings in at an eye-watering $78,765 including $810 destination charge. Some would argue a more appropriate modern-day equivalent to the original Land Cruiser would be the 4Runner-based FJ Cruiser, which comes to a much more reasonable $26,925 – incidentally, close to that inflation-adjusted figure. Interestingly, the FJ Cruiser’s weight of 4343 lb comes within a little over 100 lb of the original’s weight of 4190 lb. By comparison, the luxo-yacht Land Cruiser waddles on to the scales at 5765 lb.

 

 
2013 Toyota Land Cruiser Right Front Angle Trail
 

While the new model can legitimately be called fat, it can’t be called slow, especially in comparison to the 1964 model. Our 2008 Lexus LX 570 tester wafted from 0-60 in a brisk 6.5 seconds and dispatched the quarter-mile in 14.8 seconds at 92.5 mph. By comparison, the 1964 and its 135-hp, 217-lb-ft 3.9-liter I-6 took a glacial 22.3 seconds to reach 60 and took the entire quarter mile to reach that speed, giving it the unique distinction of being one of the few vehicles to have the same 0-60 and quarter-mile times. Top speed, if you were patient enough, was 74 mph. Ironically enough, the much heavier and more powerful 2008 model had less of an appetite than its ancestor, achieving a combined 13.2 mpg, which we called “thirsty.” But the ’64 returned a combined 12.3 mpg.

 

 
2013 Toyota Land Cruiser Interior
 

To nobody’s surprise, braking performance on the new model is much-improved over its predecessor, with the 2008 taking only 133 ft. The four-wheel-drum equipped ’64 hauled down from 60 in 164.5 ft.

 

Although the new Land Cruiser is still considered to be one of the more capable off-road models sold today, it is no longer the bare-bones bargain it once was. That role is now being filled by the aforementioned FJ Cruiser. Although persistent rumors of the FJ’s discontinuation have been floating around for the last several years, it’s still around, and looks like it will continue into 2013, though nothing official has been released on the ’13 model.

Either way, if you’re looking for Range Rover-rivaling luxury or value and simplicity, Toyota has you covered with the new Land Cruiser and FJ Cruiser. The original Land Cruiser’s transformation over the last five decades is nothing short of drastic, and although it is vastly more powerful and luxurious today, the tripling of its price tag in real dollars seems as if value has been tossed out of the equation in the process. Do you think the Land Cruiser’s change over the decades has been for the better? Does the introduction and availability of the retro-inspired FJ Cruiser make up for it? Share your thoughts below.

2013 Toyota Land Cruiser Left Angle Driving 2011 Toyota Land Cruiser Drivers Side Front View Toyota Land Cruiser Type 25 BJ Front Three Quarters
 
Toyota Land Cruiser 90 Series Colorado Front Three Quarters Toyota Land Cruiser 80 Series Front Three Quarters Toyota Land Cruiser 60 Series Front Three Quarters
 
Toyota Land Cruiser 50 Series Front Three Quarters 2013 Toyota Land Cruiser Front Three Quarter 2011 Toyota Land Cruiser Rear Three Quarters View Off Roading

Auto legend Carroll Shelby dead at 89

CARROLL SHELBY 1923-2012

Auto legend Carroll Shelby died last night at Baylor Hospital in Dallas at the age of 89. The cause of death wasn’t disclosed.

After a successful career as a race driver was shortened by a health issue, Shelby turned automaker in the 1960s. He fathered the Cobra, an Anglo-American hot rod of crude conception but stunning effectiveness that swept the tracks of North America and wrested a world manufacturer’s title from Ferrari.

Additional success came with his makeovers of the Ford Mustang, which resulted in Trans-Am racing titles and the ferocious Shelby GT350 street car. His partnership with Ford blossomed into a friendship with Lee Iacocca, father of the Mustang.

In the 1980s, after Iacocca went to Chrysler, Shelby formed a venture with Chrysler that produced a number of specialty cars and trucks. He maintained a multifaceted automotive “skunkworks,” doing advanced research and development for other clients.

From 2005, these included Ford, with whom Shelby patched up an old grievance so that they could partner on a fresh range of super-hot Shelby Mustangs.

Other businesses

Yet, impressive as his accomplishments were on the automotive scene, that was only one of the arenas through which he moved with equal facility: ranching, real estate development, hotels, food production, aircraft dealing. In every field that caught his interest, he was able to exercise a powerful combination of intelligence, curiosity, vision, timing, guile, cunning and charm, plus what he described as “the work ethic.”

Not the least of Shelby’s secrets was an easy, natural manner, a flashing grin and an almost old-fashioned sense of courtesy, which quickly made firm friendships and networks of important contacts.

Perhaps the most remarkable, most inspirational fact about Shelby’s life was that he worked so hard despite a serious physical limitation — a hereditary heart defect that led to four hospitalizations in 15 years for surgery, then a 1990 heart transplant.

Six years later, at age 73, he received a kidney from one of his sons, Mike Shelby.

In company with so many of the world’s outstanding achievers, Carroll Hall Shelby had modest beginnings.

He was born on Jan. 11, 1923, in the small east Texas town of Leesburg, the son of a rural mail carrier. When Shelby was 10, the family moved to Dallas, where his father became a postal clerk and the boy discovered auto racing.

Carroll Shelby in a recent photo. In a 1990 interview with Autoweek, he said: “I really consider myself a damn lucky individual.”

Photo credit: Roger Hart/Autoweek

“I used to ride my bicycle to the old bullrings around Dallas when I was a kid, 12 or 14 years old,” he recalled decades later. “So I’ve always had my interest in cars, that’s always been my No. 1 interest.”

Life of satisfaction

From his youth, Shelby maintained commercial interests all along. As he once noted, he was a child of the Depression, and the experience was formative.

He’d always had something going — from paper routes, delivering for drug stores on his motorcycle and caddying on golf courses in the beginning, to buying and selling cars during his racing career. With Jim Hall and his brothers, Shelby was a partner in a Dallas dealership.

In a 1990 interview with Autoweek, Shelby said he felt grateful for “being able to do the things that I’ve wanted to over practically a lifetime and been lucky enough to have been successful enough out of them that as I grow into, ah, into old age that I can look back with satisfaction over a life well spent. I really consider myself a damn lucky individual. I don’t think you can ask for much more outta life.”

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EXCLUSIVE! The First Scion FR-S in North America Delivered At Longo Scion!

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May 3, 2012 - El Monte, CA - It's been a long wait, but history has been made. The first Scion FR-S (a.k.a. Toyota 86 & GT 86 outside of North America & Subaru BRZ globally) has been delivered to the first lucky enthusiast of the "First 86 Program". Earlier this year at the 2012 Detroit Auto Show, Scion USA announced a program where enthusiasts had a chance to be selected as one of the "First "86" to purchase an FR-S.

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It's here!

Akio Toyoda: Toyota’s comeback kid

 

The grandson of the founder has the carmaker back on track after a spell of bad luck and breakdowns.

 

By Alex Taylor III, February 9, 2012

Toyota president Akio Toyoda is also a certified test driver.

Toyota president Akio Toyoda is also a certified test driver.

 

FORTUNE — When the final tally was made for 2011, Toyota Motor (TM), formerly the world’s largest automaker, slipped to third place in production behind General Motors (GM) and Volkswagen. It’s not surprising: Toyota has endured a string of calamities over the past three years — natural and man-made — that would make even the company’s famous paranoia seem like sunny optimism. The latest is endaka, the strong yen that causes everything that Toyota manufactures in Japan to be more expensive and undermines its profitability. A November issue of Automotive News predicted “more misery” for Toyota as “sales slip, floods delay, shoppers stray.”

At the head of the company all this time has been a young president who was effectively born into the job and has little experience in crisis management: Akio Toyoda, the grandson of the company’s founder. For a decade, while the automaker was being run by professional managers, Akio rose up the corporate ladder without making much of a mark. (For the sake of clarity, we’ll use his first name, pronounced a-KEY-o, in this story.) Thrust into the presidency in 2009, he immediately had to cope with a global recession, massive recalls, and a deadly tsunami. Auto production plummeted, and at the same time Toyota lost its most important competitive advantage: its reputation for exceptional quality. Americans saw Akio apologizing before Congress and later tearing up in a YouTube video. U.S. market share tumbled. After reaching 18.3% at the end in 2009, it fell all the way to 12.9% for 2011. Emboldened by the recall crisis, competitors spread word that Toyota, once considered the unstoppable force of the automotive world, had been reduced to the status of also-ran.

But I had been hearing different things — that Toyota had coped remarkably well with the tsunami, and that the recall crisis had served as a wake-up call for a company grown complacent. With a big boost from its new president, who took an intensely personal interest in its products, it was connecting with customers again.

The University of Michigan’s Jeffrey Liker, a leading Toyota scholar, told me, “Akio has reenergized the company. He’s promised to be the closest president ever to the gemba [where the real work is happening].”

Toyota’s big product offensive

The Toyoda scion was traveling to the U.S. more frequently to fire up dealers and had taken charge personally of the sagging Lexus brand. Independent studies were beginning to show that Toyota cars were regaining their reputation for quality and value. With 19 new or redesigned models coming in calendar 2012 — an exceptionally large number — including a big expansion of the Prius hybrid line, the Toyota steamroller seemed ready to regain its old momentum.

One of Toyota’s guiding principles in times of crisis is genchi genbutsu, or “go and see.” So to find out for myself what the changes meant for a company I had been covering for more than 20 years, I interviewed Toyota executives in California and New York, and then flew to Japan.

Of all the woes Toyota has suffered, none has stung like the recall crisis of 2009-10. Ignited by reports of horrific accidents, some fatal, caused by cars that ran out of control and couldn’t be braked to a stop, it eventually involved the recall more than 8 million Toyotas and Lexuses — equivalent to a year’s production. Independent investigations turned up no mechanical or electronic defects — only some misplaced floor mats and sticky accelerator pedals to go along with driver error — but exposed major flaws in the corporate culture. Toyota, it turned out, was still being managed the way it had been in the 1950s: Every decision was tightly controlled in Japan; the U.S. was treated like a vassal state. When American managers found defects in vehicles, they had to follow a tortuous bureaucratic process to register their complaints in Japan, where they were often met with skepticism and defensiveness. As it had long feared, Toyota had succumbed to “big-company disease.”

Consumer confidence in its cars plummeted, and Toyota’s higher-ups were shaken. “We learned we are not so ahead of competitors as we might have thought,” Yoshimi Inaba, who heads sales and administration in the U.S., told me. “We were a little complacent.” Toyota began to develop quicker reflexes. When a defect was identified in a Lexus SUV, Toyota organized a recall in just eight days. But it balked at delegating more executive authority to America. Rather than designate one person to head all of its North American operations, it maintained its traditional silo structure. Its giant sales operation in Southern California, and its equally large manufacturing complex headquartered in Kentucky, continued reporting to different executives in Japan.

 

2012 Lexus LFA: An ultra-exotic two-seater, the $375,000 sports car embodies Toyota's new, more aggressive attitude.
2012 Lexus LFA: An ultra-exotic two-seater, the $375,000 sports car embodies Toyota’s new, more aggressive attitude.
 

Just as it was trying to put the recall crisis behind it, the new management was tested again in March, when an earthquake and massive tidal wave disrupted production. The tsunami damaged plants in the north of Japan, disrupting the supply of over 500 parts, and Toyota couldn’t find replacements. Its first-tier, just-in-time suppliers near Toyota City were not directly affected, but up north were second- and third-tier suppliers that Toyota did not know much about.

Akio assembled general managers of departments such as body engineering and powertrain in Japan, and took the unusual step of instructing them to restore production and not waste time reporting upward. They sent two-man teams of engineers to visit each supplier plant and to identify and locate backup parts until the suppliers were running again. By April, unavailable parts were down to 150, and by May, according to Liker’s count, all but 30 of the 500 parts were available. Toyota solved the problems in half the time expected, but Liker figures the company still lost 800,000 production units — 10% of its annual output. Plans to make up most of the shortfall through overtime work were pushed back by October floods in Thailand that affected about 100 suppliers. As a result, inventories in North America won’t be completely replenished until March.

As I fidgeted through a 14-hour flight to Japan in a well-worn Boeing 777, I wondered what I would find. I figured Toyota had gotten some bad breaks, but I wondered about how committed this ponderous and bureaucratic company was to change.

After overnighting in Tokyo, I moved on to Nagoya, Japan’s third-largest city — one hour and 40 minutes away by Shinkansen bullet train — where Toyota occupies several office buildings. I met with executive vice president Yukitoshi Funo, one of Akio’s key advisers. Funo, who holds an MBA from Columbia and formerly oversaw U.S. sales, told me there had been an upheaval at Toyota. “[Akio] has dramatically changed the way the company is managed,” he said through an interpreter. “There are two major pillars to how he manages: First, be fast; and second, be flexible. Usually Japanese companies are based on a ‘bottom up’ management style, which slows down the pace of decision-making. In looking at other companies, we realized the need for a certain level of ‘top down’ to move quickly.”

Akio shrank the board of directors by half and took out layers of management. Funo revealed a more significant development: Akio has begun meeting informally with his five top advisers every Tuesday morning to review the company’s operations. They work so closely together that Funo called it “pit work” management. No agendas or written reports are allowed, and decisions are made on the spot. “Basically, the six people have a very strong personal bond. So it’s not a very emotional or heated debate as we have a very good understanding among each other.” They can move quickly. After Akio visited Tesla Motors (TSLA) in California in 2010, the Tuesday morning meeting signed off on a $50 million investment in the electric-car maker. Subsequently Toyota agreed to buy $60 million worth of Tesla batteries to power its all-electric RAV 4 crossover.

Funo said Akio has made another fundamental change in the way Toyota is managed. Traditionally, Toyota has rotated its top executives, so a sales specialist could be assigned to purchasing, or a product engineer to manufacturing. Now they stay within their specialties so that they can leverage their experience. “It’s very American,” said Funo. “I’m not really sure how what he learned at Babson [the Boston college where Akio studied business] has affected how he is running the company. But he is not typical Japanese management.” That turned out to be an understatement.

The next day I made the 40-minute car ride to Toyota City to meet with Takeshi Uchiyamada, Toyota’s top engineer and another participant in the Tuesday morning meetings. In 1993, Uchiyamada accepted the challenge of Toyota’s elders to develop a car with 50%-better fuel economy; today he’s known as the father of the Prius. More than 3 million of the hybrids have been sold since 1997, and it has been expanded into a sub-brand with additional models.

Akio is pushing Toyota to make “always better cars,” and Uchiyamada is the point man. For years enthusiasts have complained that Toyota treats cars like transportation appliances and allows companies such as Hyundai to seize design leadership. Uchiyamada says the critics were right. He told me: “Basically, Toyota’s growth had been underpinned by QDR [quality, dependability, reliability] that was very high compared with competitors’. However, since the Lehman shock [in 2008], large-scale sales of Toyota vehicles have decelerated. Compared with past practices, we need to make products that are even more attractive. We have stepped up our efforts emphasizing design, high quality of the interiors.”

Appearances count, but Uchiyamada has no intention of allowing Toyota to lose its green credentials either. This spring Toyota will launch the plug-in Prius, a $32,000 car that he believes is the best short-term solution to freeing the automobile from gasoline. Unlike conventional hybrids, the plug-in has a large battery that can power the car for up to 15 miles on electricity alone and be recharged at home. “I think the plug-in is the most practical technology of the future that will see great potential for mass dissemination. It can be recognized as an electric vehicle without having to worry about running out of battery. If the battery runs out, the car can be driven as a normal hybrid, so the amount of battery mounted in the vehicle can be minimized.” I asked him how he compared the Prius to the much-publicized Chevrolet Volt, and he gave me a surprisingly candid answer. “The Volt has a longer driving range in EV mode, but for that they have greater battery volume. After the battery runs out, the Volt’s power performance deteriorates when driven by a gasoline engine. So I believe the cost of the Volt will be higher than the Prius plug-in.”

Akio Toyoda’s Toyota timeline

When my interview with Uchimayada concluded, it was time for the meeting with Akio. It was to be held in a characteristically Japanese setting: a meeting hall in a private park near Toyota headquarters, where the company had reassembled the former residence of Kiichiro Toyoda, Akio’s grandfather. Akio bounded into the interview room with the energy of a TV game show host, clearly more confident and relaxed than the man I had met 2½ years earlier, just after he had become president. Seated at a table across from me, he took questions in English and watched me intently while the interpreter translated his answers from Japanese.

 

Akio Toyoda at the Toyota Gazoo Racing Festival at the Fuji Speedway in Japan
Akio Toyoda at the Toyota Gazoo Racing Festival at the Fuji Speedway in Japan

Unlike his gray-suited, office-bound predecessors, Akio, 55, is more comfortable in a fire-resistant Nomex suit and crash helmet than he is in a coat and tie. A certified test driver, he evaluates as many as 200 Toyotas and competitive vehicles annually, and appears happiest when he’s behind the wheel. After speaking at a U.S. dealer meeting in Las Vegas last April, Akio unwound by driving an 850-horsepower NASCAR stock car at a nearby speedway. His passion, he says, has made it easy for him to settle into his job as president. He explained, “I was very glad to hear from my father [honorary chairman Soichiro Toyoda], ‘I leave everything in your hands.’ Of course, over the past two years the environment has seen dramatic change, but one thing I maintained, which I think protected me from these hardships, is that I love cars, and I kept saying to people constantly that we need to come up with always better cars. Whenever a new car is launched I have to drive it myself. So by trying out as many vehicles as possible, I think I can compare Toyota cars with comparable vehicles, and by driving directly I can understand the strategic direction of the company.”

Much of his wheel time recently has been in a Lexus. Although it is intended to be a global brand, the Lexus has never caught on in Europe, and its aging designs were turning off U.S. buyers. Akio bypassed several layers of management to take direct responsibility for the brand and invested hours fine-tuning the ride and handling of the latest model, the 2013 GS. To give Lexus a sportier image, he also championed the development of the $375,000 LFA, a carbon fiber supercar, and personally tested the car on Germany’s famed Nürburgring, where speeds top 180 mph.

“It has a limited production run of 500 units,” he said of the LFA. “It seems to be a very secret sauce.”

Does it make sense for the head of a company as large as Toyota to spend so much time evaluating its products and micromanaging small details? Well, it worked for Steve Jobs, and Akio believes it is an essential component of his leadership. “As you know, our cars are evaluated as good, not emotional,” he said. “I think it’s possible for Toyota to improve upon the emotion of cars. There are capable engineers who are about to do that. So what I think is needed is to really have a champion to encourage people to take action on that, to serve as a leader to address any problems after a challenge.”

The smooth functioning of his Tuesday morning group makes it possible for Akio to spend more time with product development. “Actually I was very uncomfortable since I was a little boy with so-called yes-men who were just obedient to what I said. These five executive vice presidents who support me are experts in their respective areas, with experience of more than 40 years. I am the ultimate person in charge of this company, [but] I found it is very important to ask them for their views.”

One topic on which advice is plentiful is how to deal with the strong yen, which has appreciated 35% since 2007 and is at a 65-year high. At 77 to the dollar, the currency cost Toyota $1 billion in profit during the quarter ended Sept. 30; Toyota needs an exchange rate of 80 yen to the dollar to remain profitable. It is working with its suppliers to reduce costs, but the currency imbalance threatens the future shape of the company. Already two-thirds of Toyota production comes from overseas, compared with half as recently as 2006. Akio has pledged to maintain a manufacturing base in Japan with a capacity of 3 million cars to protect parts makers and its skilled-labor supply, but Funo said that number “is not carved in stone” and that Toyota may shift more production to the U.S.

I had more questions to ask Akio, but my hourlong time slot had expired. He stayed around to shake hands and pose for pictures. Then he ducked into a black LFA and drove off, the sound of the exhaust growling in his wake.

Most of my concerns about Toyota had been addressed. No company is better at the nuts and bolts of the car business, but years of success had hardened some ill-advised practices that are now being discarded. Akio had personally taken on its most persistent shortcoming — an inability to connect emotionally with customers through its products — and he was making progress. Toyota does not make a practice of showing future models to outsiders, but I learned from dealers that the 2013 Avalon sedan, due next spring, will be something special in style and appeal. If subsequent models achieve a similar high standard, then Akio’s mantra of “always better cars” may join the Toyota lexicon alongside genchi genbutsu.

This article is from the February 27, 2012 issue of Fortune.

2012 Toyota Venza Review

 

Toyota Venza debuts for 2009 as a deep hatchback supported on the Toyota Camry with character for up to five group. It is gettable with the land of the four-cylinder or V-6 and can hold either confront or all-wheel track. The Venza 2012 who now assumes the traditional organisation of Toyota with LE, XLE and Small spruceness levels. The Minor comes only with V-6 engine and add guidance scheme, panoramic solid roof and high-intensity expel headlamps.

The Venza 2012 really jolty seem of the SUV jumps, but also high-performance countenance restive dodges from many elector as excavation. As a outcome, there is a programme that has already been on the market for trey years and yet comfort sensing small and match. In 2012 Toyota Venza LE arrive basic with 19-inch snowflake (20 inches on the V6), pistol headlights, foglamps, reclusiveness render, voyage moderate (including powerfulness lumbar), a tilt-and-telescoping management helm, mischance machine covert, and Bluetooth with audio moving. Fit method LE includes six speakers, CD player, equipment receiver, subsidiary audio diddly and USB/iPod port. Although functional hatchback embody call, the Venza open of performing writer fashionable straight. Commendation car proportions and styling riveting, featuring a elevate taillights swoopy. The anterior of the Venza is distinct by its comprehensive grille which can be easily at base in an SUV
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Toyota Motor Corporation Vehicles Dominate J.D. Power and Associates 2012 Vehicle Dependability Study

Published: Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2012 – 7:11 am

TORRANCE, Calif., Feb. 15, 2012 — /PRNewswire/ – Eight Lexus, Toyota, and Scion models captured segment awards in the 2012 J.D. Power and Associates Vehicle Dependability Study, a performance equal to all other vehicle brands combined and more than twice as many as the runner-up nameplate.

The study also found:

  • Lexus is the number one nameplate improving by 23 fewer problems/100;
  • Toyota is the highest ranked non-premium nameplate and tied for third place overall, improving by 18 fewer problems/100; and
  • Scion achieves its highest ever position at fifth place, jumping up 17 positions and improving by 55 fewer problems/100.

“We are extremely pleased that not only did we win awards in eight of the 14 model segments, but that in two segments we finished one-two and made the podium in 12 segments overall”, said Jim Lentz, President and Chief Operating Officer Toyota Motor Sales, U.S.A., Inc

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Buemi to race for Toyota at Le Mans

Sebastien Buemi will remain with Red Bull as a test driver in 2012

© Getty Images

 

ESPNF1 Staff

Sebastien Buemi will combine his Red Bull testing duties with a drive for Toyota at the Le Mans 24 Hours this year.

Buemi was announced as the Red Bull test and reserve driver for 2012 in early January having been replaced at Toro Rosso. It’s now been announced that alongside that role he will race for Toyota in Le Mans, joining Anthony Davidson and Hiroaki Ishiura in the Number 8 car this year. Toyota is running a hybrid car this year in the LMP1 class, with one car competing in the full World Endurance Championship season and Buemi’s car running just at Le Mans. Buemi said it was exciting to be racing in a forward thinking car.

“I am really proud to be a Toyota Racing driver at Le Mans; it’s a huge event and one of the biggest in motorsport,” Buemi said. “It’s particularly great to be going there as a Toyota driver because my grandfather has been a Toyota dealer for over 40 years so I’ve basically grown up with the brand.

“It’s also exciting to be driving a hybrid car; I think this is the future and it’s nice to see Toyota pushing a lot in that direction. I’ve driven hybrid cars in the past – the first and second generation Prius – but the TS030 HYBRID is something else. I’m looking forward to racing it; LMP1 cars are fast and it’s a professional environment so it is going to be a very positive experience for me.”

Toyota GT-86 and Subaru BRZ purist-spec versions released (JDM)

Toyota and Subaru are saluting driving enthusiasts by offering a stripped down purist version of the GT-86/BRZ in Japan. When we say “purist,” we are referring to the absence of features that racers would be least interested in having on their cars, therefore, lowering the price while potentially increasing performance.

Set to hit the Japanese market in March for a base price of 2,058,000 yen (~$26,490 / ~£16,750) for the BRZ and 1,990,000 yen (~$25,625 / ~£16,200) for the GT-86, the purist package, known as RA and RC, respectively, receives an interior without air-condition, stereo/speakers, cup holders, door lamps, leather wrapped steering wheel; hand brake and shift knob, aluminum pedals, decorative silver trim inside, stainless sill plates, and no trunk lamp; trim or matt.

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Toyota CEO Caught on Film Drifting a GT 86 (Scion FR-S) VIDEO

When you’re the CEO of a company, it must bring a sense of pride when a successful product is finally completed after years of hard work.

Steve Jobs over at Apple had great pride in every iPhone that was released, and probably had a huge sense of satisfaction not only using the product he helped develop, but seeing the benefits it has on all the people around him. Akio Toyoda, CEO and President of Toyota, must be extremely proud with their new GT 86 sports car, but boy does he reap all the benefits of being the head of one of the largest automakers in the world.

Toyoda got behind the wheel of their newest creation, but being the CEO means you get to do anything you want without having to answer to anybody. So what better way to really enjoy the newest toy your company has to offer than to take it out onto a dirt track and going sideways in it? Easy, take it out on a giant snow field and go drifting in it.

And judging by the huge smiles on Toyoda’s face in the video, he loves the new GT 86 as much as we did. Autoguide had the opportunity to put the Scion FR-S to the test – you can read our review here – and we would certainly be proud of it if we were in charge of running the famous Japanese automaker. Too bad we didn’t get the chance to take it sideways in the dirt and snow though.

Get more info and news on the GT 86/FR-S forum.

 

 

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