Future models - Toyota - NS4Detroit show: New direction for Toyota hybridPlug-in future: The mid-sized Toyota NS4 hybrid sedan concept made its public debut at the Detroit motor show this week. Non-Prius mid-size NS4 concept showcases Toyota’s plug-in hybrid future – and more11 Jan 2012 By TERRY MARTIN TOYOTA has signalled its intention to expand its dedicated-hybrid model range beyond the Prius stable with the world premiere of the medium-sized plug-in NS4 concept at the Detroit motor show this week. Emerging in a heavily curved, five-door liftback body style, the NS4 is described as a dedicated plug-in hybrid “separate from the Prius family” and is billed as representing a new styling direction for the Toyota brand “aimed at creating an emotional connection with consumers”. It features a next-generation version of the Japanese auto giant’s plug-in Hybrid Synergy Drive system that is currently in service in the Prius Plug-In – a model that is under consideration for sale in Australia. Among the improvements listed are reductions in component size and weight, shorter charging times, improved overall fuel economy, better acceleration and a longer driving range. However, specific details are still to be provided on how the NS4 improves over the plug-in version of the Prius, which, like other models in the expanding family, combines a 73kW/142Nm 1.8-litre petrol engine with a 60kW/207Nm electric motor. ![]() This means Toyota’s bigger and presumably heavier NS4 should achieve even better results, providing of course that it takes the next step into production. “The NS4 was envisioned as a dedicated plug-in hybrid, separate and removed from the Prius family,” said Toyota Motor Sales USA president Jim Lentz. “This all-new concept reflects a ‘greater than’ vision of mobility – as in ‘greater than the sum of its impressive level of features’. “Beyond its advanced powertrain and next-generation safety systems, the central theme of this concept is on the human connection to the car. “In other words, technology that considers both the emotional and rational relationships person-to-car and car-to-society, all wrapped in a high-style, hardtop-like body signalling Toyota’s new direction in design.” The safety systems referred to include a next-generation pre-collision system (PCS) with lane departure, rear-end and pedestrian collision avoidance technologies based on ‘millimetre-wave radar’ and stereo cameras mounted on the front of the vehicle. A new blind-spot monitor has also been developed, along with adaptive driving beam headlights that improve visibility without the glare associated with normal high-beam illumination. An extra level of pedestrian protection is provided with a new pop-up bonnet structure, while four new glass technologies are integrated into the vehicle. The NS4 also demonstrates Toyota’s latest work in vehicle connectivity, with the headline act a Human-Machine Interface (HMI) built around a touchscreen that has the look and feel of a smartphone. ![]() Read more21st of December 2011 ![]() Detroit show: Toyota teases new plug-inPlug-in hybrid Toyota concept to join upmarket Lexus show car in Detroit9th of December 2011 ![]() Toyota’s seven-seat Prius wagon set for 2012 debutPioneering Prius set to spawn first family-friendly hybrid people-mover in Oz |
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