Shutdown jolts Juke release

The first shipment of Nissan’s crucial crossover is incoming. The next? Erm, about that ….

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JUST an initial, modest shipment of the new Juke will achieve New Zealand landfall in time for its intended launch date and there’s no clarity when more will follow.

This sobering message about the model crucial to Nissan’s pitch to shake up the compact crossover sector comes in the wake of news that would likely strengthen its market acceptance – a brilliant crash test rating.

In condition normal, the five-star accreditation just announced by the Australasian New Car Assessment Programme would potentially offer opportunity for a powerful pre-launch marketing spin. 

Yet these are far from normal times. 

Production of the car having been brought to a screeching halt by the coronavirus pandemic and seems unlikely to resume for at least another month.

That creates a curly dilemma for Nissan New Zealand, managing director John Manley says.

He will certainly have cars here in time to avail the original plan of releasing in June – but exactly when reinforcements for this first wave follow is anyone’s guess.

So do they progress with the launch and, if so, how should that be accomplished: Loudly or low-key, given it’ll involve just a few hundred cars?  That’s being debated right now.

Getting the car from its production source to NZ is quite a journey. Rather than coming from Japan, Juke is again only built in Sunderland, in north east England.

Like all other UK car plants, this massive operation has been idle since March. Sunderland’s management signalling this week an intention to re-start some production is no particular panacea. It’s set to be a small-scale trial involving just 50 of the 6000-strong workforce and none of the tens of thousands in its supply chain. 

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Of course, the way the market is heading, having opportunity to slow the Juke rush might become handy. April new car registrations being 93 percent down on the same month of 2019 fuels industry prediction of at least a 40 percent in new car registrations for the remainder of the year looks increasingly certain.

On the other hand, it’s a crucial product and the sector it aims at was showing the most growth potential before the coronavirus crisis hit.

Competitors include the Mitsubishi ASX, Mazda CX-3, Hyundai Kona and Venue, Honda HR-V and the Kia Seltos, which achieved as the top-selling model in April … albeit on the strength of a piddling 95 sales.

“it’s a tricky situation for us,” Manley conceded in respect to Juke supply.

“We just don’t yet know what is going to happen and it might be some time before there’s clarity. Okay, these are exceptional circumstances for everyone, but even so. Not easy.”

The Juke has been on sale in the UK and Europe since last year. That’s where the crash test was undertaken for Melbourne-based ANCAP, the only organisation whose protocols are recognised and funded by New Zealand. The NZ Automobile Association also sponsors ANCAP.

A five-star score is the maximum grade yet because the car has already launched in other regions, its crash testing was carried out according to 2019 standards – rather than a more stringent criteria introduced in Europe and Australia this year.

Even so, the regime required examples being subjected to a full-width front collision at 50kmh, a dynamic offset frontal collision at 64kmh, a side impact at 50kmh, a side pole impact at 32kmh, and a whiplash assessment for front and rear occupants.

The outcome was accredited on strength of it scoring highly across four disciplines, including adult occupant protection (94 percent), child occupant protection (87 percent), vulnerable road user protection (81 percent) and safety assist tests (71 percent).

However, while Juke’s active lane keep assist and autonomous emergency braking systems won praise, ANCAP also suggested those features were not adequate in all scenarios, stating: “the system is not capable of intervening in the more critical emergency lane keeping scenarios”. 

The first-generation Juke – sold from 2012 onwards – also scored a five-star rating when tested in 2011.

The new model is a complete redesign and has grown in length, width and height. It offers more rear seat space and boot space, with the latter increasing from 354 litres to 422 litres. Despite the more generous dimensions it's also 23kg lighter, now weighing in at 1212kg. 

The edgy styling continues, the new model retaining its bulbous headlights and sweeping curves but now receiving LED daytime running lights and the latest version of Nissan's V-motion grille. 

The independent front and twist-beam rear suspension has been recalibrated for enhanced stability and sportier performance, says Nissan.

The NZ specification, model line-up and pricing has yet to be disclosed.

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In Europe the car has a 1.0-litre three-cylinder turbo-petrol engine producing 86kW of power and 180Nm of torque (rising to 200Nm in an overboost mode  that lasts up to 25 seconds), for 0-100kmh in 10.4 seconds at best.

European buyers can choose between a six-speed manual transmission or a new seven-speed automatic, the latter replacing the predecessor's CVT, and there are front and four-wheel-drive variants.

Europe’s flagship is the Premiere Edition, which runs 19-inch alloys and has two-tone paint, leather and Alcantara seating and a Bose Personal Plus stereo system.

The flagship also demonstrates new Nissan Intelligent Mobility technologies, such as the ProPILOT semi-autonomous self-driving system, which Nissan says will help the JUKE steer, accelerate and brake itself. 

The safety provision includes autonomous emergency braking with pedestrian detection, blind-spot monitoring, dynamic lane keeping, a 360-degree camera package, rear cross traffic alert, high-beam assist and six airbags.

Other leading-edge tech includes a NissanConnect smartphone app that allows users to access a range of functions, including the ability to push journey plans to the vehicle remotely, and in-car internet, allowing users to utilise the vehicle as a Wi-Fi hotspot. It can also be paired with Google Assistant to access a range of information and allow some functions to be controlled by voice.

 

$60k for battery-pure Mini

The Mini that plugs into play will be here in August.

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ANOTHER small electric model is set to slot under $60,000 when it lands in August - if by just $100.

Still, Mini’s first fully electric car, the Cooper SE, is set to intrude into a price space occupied by two more utilitarian plug-reliant products, the Nissan Leaf and the Hyundai Ioniq.

As much as they both of which hammer the wee BMW-Brit bauble for range (the official cited max is 233kms) and in size, both arguably falls well behind for visual chutzpah, premium-ness and social standing.

How they will stack up for specification? Yet unknown. Even though there’s just going to be the single variant, that today’s announcement enforces that this is the start point for pricing is good reminder that it will, as always, cop a decent options list.

Even so, the local starter spec looks good. Mini is kicking off its campaign with a First Edition whose fittings include some fancy gear: adaptive LED headlights, bespoke interior trim, heads-up display and a Harmon Kardon audio. Intriguingly, Australia also takes the same thing for $A59,900 – which comes out to just under $NZ64k on today’s exchange rate. So, a Kiwi win, by the look of it.

Of course, you can tick boxes for all that in combustion-engined Minis and still save, as almost all are cheaper; not just all the variants in the same three-door styling but also the substantially larger Countryman and Clubman.

That just reminds that there’s still a degree of expensiveness in buying into a mains-reliant drivetrain consisting a 32.6kWh lithium-ion battery and a 135kW/270Nm electric motor. 

Even so, there’s lots of optimism, with Brett Waudby, general manager of MINI New Zealand and Australia, reckoning the car “heralds a new chapter for the brand - a charge into the future of electromobility without compromising the marque’s core values of creativity, vibrancy and smart urbanity.

“It is wonderful to see such a positive response we are getting to the car. Our dealers are extremely excited to add this model to our customer offering, which is sure to be an absolute thrill to drive.”

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Hilux future: NZ specials, hybrid … but no racer V6

An update is due for Toyota NZ’s top-selling vehicle five years into its model life.

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BESPOKE versions of Hilux tailored in New Zealand are likely to be offered.

Production of special, perhaps even one-off, editions will be undertaken by Toyota New Zealand at its Signature Series facility at Thames, which started out as an assembly plant but now operates as a refurbishment centre for used import and ex-fleet and rental NZ-new product. 

The Palmerston North-centred national new vehicle sales leader says any such models would be to special order and specified above the current SR5 Cruiser.

What has inspired the programme is positive customer reaction to a flamboyant design study the distributor commissioned, chief operating officer Neeraj Lala says. 

Based on a 4WD double cab Hilux SR5 and unveiled at the 2017 Mystery Creek Fieldays, the Gladiator (below) carried around $65,000 worth of modifications and accessories. It remained in TNZ’s fleet for two years before being auctioned in December, 2019, the new owner being a Taupo man who bid $81,000 and also traded a Landcruiser in on it.

Says Lala: “We figure there’s an opportunity to do more of this. It’s taking Hilux back to its roots, because there’s long been a tradition of individuals doing big improvements their Toyota utes.”

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Further information about the special edition programme is to be aired when TNZ also breaks silence on what is coming with a big mid-life facelift for the current generation Hilux. 

What’s set to arrive is far more extensive than the 2018 update that improved TNZ’s strongest-selling product in 2019, with around 7000 registrations. 

Toyota Japan plans an international announcement on May 21.

The upgrade is expected to include substantial cosmetic changes plus a re-powering of the 2.8-litre four-cylinder turbodiesel, which currently develops 130kW of power and 450Nm of torque in automatic form and 130kW/420Nm in manual, and revisions to improve the diesel particulate filter.

It is also expected to receive mild revisions to the interior that will include an upgraded infotainment system that includes Apple Car Play and Android Auto.

Lala says he can offer no comment until May 21, explaining “we are bound by an embargo. 

What has particularly excited media are renderings that have been bounced around the internet for weeks that appear to expose the facelift design.

Purportedly sourced from an independent global Toyota exporter, Milele Motors, and based on leaked internal documents, the images suggest the upgrade delivers new LED headlamp design, a larger front grille inspired by US truck styling and revisions to the Hilux’s rear, plus new 18-inch alloy wheels at the high end and 17s for the outright workhorses.

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Beyond those images, there has been further intense speculation that Toyota is also entertaining with this update a new GR – for Gazoo Racing – variant featuring a twin-turbo V6 diesel making perhaps 200kW/650Nm if not more.

One national provider has become particularly fixated, with speculation repeated as recently as yesterday, apparently based on musing published by an Australian online outlet. 

Fake news?

“New Zealand is not going to get a V6 twin-turbocharged diesel-powered Hilux ute,” says Lala.

The NZ outlet’s stories have resulted in TNZ’s call centre being hit by inquiry from customers asking what other information was available. Lala wishes the writer would simply pick up the phone and talk to him.

One big drivetrain revision that is set to involve with the current ute, but won’t be included in the facelift, is adoption of hybrid technology.

“We’re committed to focussing on lowering exhaust emissions throughout our vehicle fleet, and that includes the Hilux ute,” says Lala. 

“So far Toyota Motor Corporation has produced 15 million hybrids, so we know how to build them.

“In New Zealand we are already selling hybrids that can tow – the RAV4 SUV – so it’s no big step to acknowledge that a hybrid will feature in the current model lineup some time in the next 12 to 18 months.”

 

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GS ‘top fan’ sad to see it go

The Lexus GS medium sedan is low key but will be missed.

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 DETERMINATION by Lexus to axe the GS sedan is bittersweet for the brand’s top man here.

Neeraj Lala has no trouble understanding the logic behind the move – the national SUV obsessions has rendered luxury sedans of all sizes increasingly irrelevant. 

Here Toyota’s premier marque has primarily become a sports utility operation, with the extra spin of a brand-unique hybrid push with its controversial ‘self-charging’ tag line.

Even though the sales progress of the four-strong GS line is modest in New Zealand, it has a fanbase.

Lala’s in that support group. He reckons his own drive car, the range-topping F-designated V8 that, at $169,900 costs $60k more than the entry variant, that sees far more red than Green, won’t be easy to relinquish. Mind you, he has the best sub-variant, the limited-count F10 anniversary model. 

“It’s a great car, hands down the best one I’ve had as a work car,” says the Toyota and Lexus New Zealand chief operating officer.

“I’m really enjoying having it. They did a great job with it.

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“It’s a real shame to see ‘fun’ sedans like this being under threat. But demand for those cars unfortunately doesn’t allow them to continue on.”

The decision to axe GS was expected. “Switching it off has been on our plan for at least two years, it’s not a surprise.

“It is fairly well documented that the demand for those sedans is no longer there. SUVs and crossovers now deliver the same handling levels but also offer greater practicality and flexibility.

“It is a car we would love to keep but the brand is moving on. We have some exciting Lexus models coming next year and, honestly, I just see customers gravitating more toward those models that offer more flexible, dynamic solutions than a traditional rear-drive car.”

GS production for NZ ends in August. The LS flagship and smaller ES sedan will remain in the family, the latter now including an F-Sport

For New Zealand, the ‘F’ will be the final blast of a model line that has been part of Lexus for 27 years and spans four generations. 

An announced special edition of a current shape that came out in 2012 will not come to New Zealand, Lala says.

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He believes the swansong ‘Eternal Touring’ special edition that will be last out of the factory will likely only avail in Japan and the United States.

The Eternal Touring adds a number of sporty design touches including the F Sport spindle grille, a rear spoiler, orange brake callipers, red-and-black leather interior trim, F Sport seats and carbon trim on the passenger-side dash.

With the removal of the GS F, Lexus NZ is left with only two models sporting the ferocious 351kW 5.0-litre aspirated V8 – the RC F and LC500 coupes. 

However, more performance models seem set to be on the way. In February, the brand released a statement about its racing ambitions in Europe, and included in the news was the announcement it will be testing a new twin-turbo V8 that will be implemented in a production model.

No word has been given on what models are set to receive the new force-fed bent eight, however the most likely candidate is the LC coupe, which is being used as the test car for Lexus’ racing programme. 

No current F grade exists for the flagship coupe, however a more potent version of the V8 could see it become a reality.

Given the current V8 outputs 351kW/540Nm in the LC500, the twin-turbo mill would likely have to push in excess of 400kW to earn the F badge, overseas’ media have conjected.  

The first generation of GS went on sale globally in 1993, with the second-gen version following in 1997.

In 2005 the Toyota Crown-based third generation arrived, replaced by the current model in 2012.

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Giulia GTA a big ask for NZ

For its 110th year, Alfa Romeo hasn’t bothered with a cake. But Kiwis seeking a slice of the hotshot it has cooked up might be chancing it.

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KIWI Alfisti keen to secure their favourite brand’s most powerful and most expensive car face an uphill battle.

Created to celebrate Alfa’s 110th anniversary and set to roll off the line from mid-2021, the new flagship Giulia reintroduces the famous GTA badge, first seen on an Alfa Romeo in the 1960s, in two formats – a standard GTA and a more track-honed GTAm.

So, will it come?

While national distributor Ateco declined opportunity to provide direct comment, a spokesperson says it doesn’t seem likely. There’s not only the small matter of anticipated high demand for a small global run – just 500 units – but also that all seem set to be in left-hand-drive.

That doesn’t completely rule out opportunity, of course. And extreme effort might be worthwhile, given this Giulia is unlike any other.

As impressive as it is in its own right, the Quadrifoglio on which the GTA is based is half the car – literally terms of price, with overseas’ reports suggesting the ‘m’ has a sticker roughly double that attached to the $139,990 NZ flagship variant. 

Hard to see how something so small will cost, on home turf, around $20k more than the 8C Competizione supercar, which went out of production in 2010?

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Well, performance is in a higher league. The new model uses the same 2.9-litre Ferrari-derived V6 engine as the Quadrifoglio but power has been upped from 375kW to 397kW for a 0-100kmh time of just 3.6 seconds.

An Akrapovic titanium exhaust is also fitted, which is much noisier than on the Quadrifoglio. Along with the extra power, the GTA weighs less and features aerodynamic additions to further improve performance, most obviously on the stripped out version.

If that’s not enough to attract attention, then it will be availed in a series of bespoke liveries inspired by the brand's motorsport heritage.

The firm's Centro Stile design arm has taken inspiration from the original Alfa GTAs that ran hard in the European Touring Car Championship. Liveries include a yellow and red paint scheme that harks back to the 1971 title-winning car.

You can also choose from GTA Red, Trophy White and Montreal Green paint colours, chosen to represent the Italian flag. There’s a dedicated online configurator to view the various possible combinations at https://gta.alfaromeo.com.

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 Even though this Giulia looks quite a lot like any other, it isn’t really. There’s a much wider use of carbon fibre than in the standard car. The driveshafts, front wheel arches, a bonnet, front bumper and roof are made out of the lightweight material.

Both cars get a sharper front bumper with a chin spoiler and naked carbon-fibre inserts, plus black centre-locking alloy wheels and black rear wheel arch extensions. The rear bumper is all-new, the huge functional diffuser is hard to miss. Likewise that enormous carbon-fibre boot lid spoiler. The cars have a 50mm wider track (the distance from one wheel across the axle to the other) and thorough suspension changes.

The GTAm also gets a stripped-out interior, so just two carbon-fibre seats, six-point racing seat belts and a roll cage, no door panels or proper door handles. It has as Alcantara suede-like fabric as the GTA, but weighs around 100kg less. 

Buyers will get a tailored race suit, shoes and gloves from Alpinestars and a Bell race helmet, plus a car cover, all included in the cost of the car. The 500 customers also get to attend a driving course at the Alfa Romeo Driving Academy.

 

Ute outlook Pt 1: Mazda's new love ... Max

Our national obsession for utilities, especially family-minded dual-cabs, knows no bounds. The market is booming at the moment, and filled with plenty of strong options. Yet surely you’re also keen to know something about what’s coming up next, when and from whom? So, here’s the first instalment of a three-part analysis.

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2020 D-Max

ONE of the big motoring stories over the next few months is going to be all about utes – what’s going to be new, and who is going to be building them.

It’s called platform sharing, folks.  And the art of sharing development costs. In recent times it’s seen the likes the Mazda BT-50 built on the same platform as the Ford Ranger, the Mercedes-Benz X-Class built on the same underpinnings as the Nissan Navara, and the Holden Colorado sharing the platform of the Isuzu D-Max.

Now the deckchairs have been re-arranged and the platform sharing has started all over again. But while the process itself is remaining the same,  the outcomes are a lot different.

So which new ute is being developed with which other new ute – or even utes? In this series of articles, we provide the breakdowns, starting with a pair of newly-weds.

Back in the day when Ford owned 35 percent of Mazda,  the Australian division of the blue oval company was largely responsible for development of what remains New Zealand’s biggest-selling vehicle, the Ranger.

And, thanks to the ownership scenario at the time, Mazda conceived its BT-50 version off the Ranger. Although it featured such differences as unique body styling and different suspension settings, the two utes shared the same chassis and same powertrain and were even built in the same factory in Thailand.

While the process saved a lot of money in development costs, in New Zealand  this platform sharing scenario proved to be something of a double-edged sword for Mazda.

That was because of Mazda’s 24 Kiwi dealerships, 18 of them were also Ford dealerships – and for sales staff it was easier to sell the hugely popular and masculine-looking Ranger than the BT-50, despite the fact Mazda NZ went to great lengths to differentiate between the two, particularly as regards pricing.

 End result: Ranger has a 20 per cent share of New Zealand’s ute market, while the almost identical BT-50 owns 5 per cent.

2020 D-Mx

2020 D-Mx

Ford doesn’t own any stake in Mazda any more – it sold its shareholding in 2010 – and the current BT-50 is the only remaining remnant of that ownership scenario.  And now that’s about to change, thanks to a supply agreement Mazda brokered four years ago with Isuzu.

At the time, the two brands said the agreement would allow Mazda to “maintain own-brand market coverage.” In other words, get out from under the shadow of Ford.

And Isuzu? Back in 2016 it said the agreement would allow it to “enhance its product competitiveness”. In other words, rid itself of lingering claims that its D-Max ute has for all intents and purposes always been a Holden Colorado.

Actually, it’s always been the other way around.

At one stage General Motors owned 49 per cent of Isuzu,  which gave the Detroit giant access to Isuzu light trucks.  That explains why the Holden Rodeo sold in Australasia from 2002 to 2008 was in fact the original Isuzu D-Max.

But when GM began to sell down its shareholding in Isuzu, the two brands began to go their own ways. GM lost the right to the Rodeo name and changed the name of the Holden ute to Colorado, then Isuzu distribution operations were established in Australia in 2008 and New Zealand in 2010, which allowed the brand to begin to sell the D-Max.

It’s been like that ever since, with the D-Max and the Colorado essentially sharing the same platform but being increasingly their own vehicles – different engines and powertrains, different bodyshell designs (well, from the A pillar forward anyway), and built in different Thai assembly plants.

But now that’s all about to change. Instead of a BT-50 being a Ranger and a D-Max being a Colorado, the new BT-50 will be a new D-Max.

First to arrive will be the D-Max, which has already been launched in its home Thailand and was scheduled to be unveiled in New Zealand just after mid-year – in fact dealers were scheduled to be in Thailand in late April to watch the first kiwi models roll off the assembly line.

 But thanks to Covid-19 the assembly plant was shut down, and the trip had to be cancelled. Isuzu Utes NZ Ltd marketing manager Kathyrn Hayward said the company is now working with the factory to confirm a new arrival date for the D-Max.

“We will provide more information when we can,” she added.

A feature of the new ute is that it will be powered by a beefed-up version of the excellent 3.0-litre four cylinder turbo diesel that is under the bonnet of the current model. Power has gone up to 140 kilowatts and torque has risen to 450 Newton metres. It’s also going to have improved safety specification and more infotainment.

During last year’s Tokyo Motor Show, Isuzu told the attending media that the new D-Max was developed solely by Isuzu as the original equipment manufacturer, with the finished product then provided to Mazda.

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A shared disclosure agreement with Isuzu means Mazda New Zealand is unable to disclose any specifics about how the brand has BT-50-ised the ute. That will become clear when the vehicle is launched here later this year.

 But Mazda NZ product and sales planning manager Tim Nalden did confirm that the current BT-50 is enjoying such a “halo” period at the moment – it’s achieving its highest monthly segment share levels since its first year on the market in 2011 – that it is leading the company to consider selling both models side-by-side for a period of time.

It’s going to be interesting how both these new models perform on the New Zealand ute market.

Last year the BT-50 was the sixth biggest selling ute here with 2325 sales, and the D-Max one place behind with 1802 sales. But in 2020/2021 a combination of the fact they are brand-new, and the imminent disappearance from the market of the volume-selling Holden Colorado,  could see a rise in registrations of both of these models.

Covid-19: National need could pep battered rental scene

The rental car scene has been massively disrupted but the coronavirus crisis won’t kill it, Toyota New Zealand contends.

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 GREEN shoot opportunities, probability of continued national need and sheer resilience will keep some rental car operations going.

This proposal is from the chief operating officer of Toyota New Zealand, historically the largest provider of NZ-new vehicles and caught now in an unfolding sector crisis.

With fleet providers desperate to relinquish stock and new vehicle distributors into treading a fine line in wanting to help as best they can while also having to protect their own operations, it’s a tough time.

Yet Neeraj Lala believes all is not lost.

Speaking after a week in which providers’ and the industry have taken turns to express sometimes controversial views, he accepts it’s not at easy time.

Yet he has faith in the entrepreneurial spirit and dogged determination now being demonstrated by many players, not least lower-tier independents.

In wake of the Rental Vehicle Association proposing that tourism accounts for up to 80 percent of work, Lala proposes New Zealander hirers also present valuable support that will reprise and even grow.

So, insofar as the idea of a wholesale rental car industry collapse goes? He doesn’t buy it.

“I don’t expect it to collapse, per se. There is a significant portion of the rental market that is business and corporate and they still rely on regional travel.

“As we transition down through the (Covid-19 alert) levels, then regional travel will open back up. I don’t think air travel will be as significant.

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“Yes, tourism and international travel is going to play a big part in terms of the new size of the fleets that some of the rental companies might have to carry.”

Yet the operators TNZ has been conversing with “are definitely not thinking that because tourism is over they are going to die.”

That’s not just the big-name brands but also some lower tier operations previously reliant on tourism alone. There are plenty of them; 40 in Queenstown alone, Lala says.

But these small set-ups have often been established by highly-entrepreneurial individuals. They’re inventive and imaginative and some are looking at reconfiguring their fleets into freight and delivery roles. He salutes that spirit. 

“An unintended consequence of what we are facing is that new industries and new companies are going to emerge.

“Freight and deliveries are going to be in higher demand than we realise. I heard just last week that there is one company already looking at re-utilising its fleet to enable one to two-hour deliveries of food.”

This didn’t surprise. “You have to remember that these people are very entrepreneurial. They are not just going to be happy to close the doors and die. They will be looking to diversify their fleet – especially if they cannot sell it – and turning it into something.

“I think it is going to be exciting..” 

Lala’s positivity is at odds with the RVA, which pulls no punches in determining the $700 million a year trade involving anything from 30,000 to 50,000 vehicles is serious trouble, with some notable names unlikely to survive.

As much as TNZ has been attempting to reduce its exposure to the rental market over the past two years, many of those favour Toyota vehicles.

The Palmerston North-headquartered operation provisioned around 7000 vehicles into that sector last year and had thousands more set to go out in coming months to meet the traditionally peak winter period.

Fortuitously some of a consignment locked in last October wasn’t built –Japan’s Covid-19 response caused a slowdown in production, so those yet to go down the line cancelled – yet about 30 percent of the consignment, still hundreds of vehicles worth several million dollars, is either already here or on the way.

Resolving what to do with them is under way, and some - particularly models subject to waiting list with private buyers - might yet divert, yet this matter will be as delicate to manage as the other issue of the moment: Being asked to buy back more vehicles than it can cope with. In respect to the latter Lala warns: “The industry’s, and the country’s problem, in regard to rental cars cannot simply become Toyota New Zealand’s problem.”

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On top of this, coronavirus impacted when TNZ was already working to manage returning to the market an undisclosed, but thought to be significant, stockpile of ex-fleet and rental stock it had corralled when times were good. 

The challenge of reinstating to the market just those vehicles – some of which, insiders say, were mothballed for so long some were out of registration and requiring tyres and batteries - in a way that did not flood the used market was, in isolation, big enough.

The scenario that might yet emerge would be far bigger. The prospect of rental fleets, particularly the tier one operators with effectively brand-new cars, fire sailing their stock in bulk is not palatable.

As much as sudden and unrestricted availability of an avalanche of effectively ‘as-new’ vehicles, likely at highly-discounted prices, might seem good for any consumer in position to snatch a great deal, it could cause massive disruption within the new car sector.

The potential for this was seemed to be hinted by RVA chief executive Pim Borrens’ when he complained to national media that distributors were using ‘force majeure’ clauses to renege on buy-back agreements.

Lala says that’s not exactly fair. In respect to how TNZ operates, there’s no legal obligation. Rather, TNZ cites as being amenable to being first in line for taking vehicles as and when they become available.

But TNZ has been pulling back on this. The pre-coronavirus stockpile, Lala said, reflected that “in the past five years we have probably taken back more than we have needed. That’s one of the reasons why we have turned the volume back these past two years.”

The glut reflected that some models popular as rentals were sometimes less so as private vehicles. The Highlander sports utility being a good example.

Lala can understand why rental companies are trying to ‘de-fleet’ and he says TNZ is doing the best it can to help achieve that. 

Yet “the difference between what the rental companies want us to take back, and what we can take back is substantial.

“I cannot call it an obligation because it is not an obligation. The rental companies who feel I should be buying back all of their cars … the expectation that Toyota will fund the whole thing and rescue the whole industry is … well, that’s just not realistic or feasible.

“We want to respect the relationships we have – some go back three decades - and are trying to do that by taking as many cars as we can.” Yet if operators were simply going to divest in large scale “it is just going to drop the residual values that we have calculated going in.”

“I cannot afford to have 30-40 months’ stock of Corolla. Normally I would have normally taken 50 percent of that (first tier rental) volume and pumped it into tier two, three or four.” That wasn’t going to happen now so TNZ had to mitigate its risk. 

As much as Toyota remains a big rental involver, and potentially the most dominant by volume, it no longer by any means owned the scene, and plenty of distributors were involved once again. However, he agreed, even if TNZ dropped out completely, it would still retain overall new car market leadership.

David Crawford, chief executive of the Motor Industry Association which speaks for new car distributors, has expressed disappointment the RVA spoke out last week.

“The Rental Vehicle Association is, of course, trying to represent its member’s view and plight in a way that helps that sector, but this is only one side of a commercial arrangement.”

Borren did not reply to requests for comment.

 

 

 

 

‘Closed for business’: New car industry appeals for help

April’s new vehicle sales count provides dramatic proof the Covid-19 pandemic has the new vehicle industry reeling.

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COVID-19 has swung a near-knockout blow to New Zealand’s new vehicle industry, with April recording a more than 90 percent fall in vehicle sales.

In stark contrast to April last year when a record 10,640 new vehicles were registered, the national Coronavirus lockdown is the reason behind just 1039 vehicles being registered last month, with the top-selling model, Kia’s Seltos, registering 95 of those.

Now, the organisation representing the country’s new vehicle industry says it needs help – and it is demanding the Government fast-track introduction of a series of policies to achieve this.

“The Government can play a decisive role in lessening the economic pain we are feeling,” says Motor Industry Association chief executive David Crawford.

The organisation wants deferral of introduction of any feebate scheme, replaced instead with incentives for the purchase of fuel-efficient vehicles.  Feebates  are a combination of fees imposed on larger gas-guzzling vehicles and rebates offered to purchasers of smaller and fuel-efficient vehicles.

“Prior to the pandemic, the MIA supported in principle the adoption of a feebate scheme. However, given the degree of fiscal impact the pandemic is causing, we believe this policy needs immediate review,” says Crawford.

The MIA also wants the Government to accelerate the uptake of plug-in vehicles  across the Government fleet.

“To date, uptake of plug-in vehicles by government agencies has been less than modest at best. The MIA calls on the Government to increase departmental budgets to permit departments to increase their uptake of BEVs and PHEVs,” says Crawford.

Financial incentives should also be introduced to remove from the national fleet vehicles older than 20 years, and/or where their exhaust emission standards are the equivalent of Euro 3 or less, Crawford says. He adds that this vehicle scrappage would be in line with the country’s new road safety strategy and the Government’s climate change objectives.

 “We all know we have an old fleet, with numerous polluting and unsafe cars roaming our roads,” he says.

Crawford describes April’s new vehicle scene as “closed for business” other than for the supply of essential vehicle and three business days at the end of the month for contact-less sales.

That distributors were able to sell as many as they did was testament to their determination to partially re-open for business while maintaining strict health and safety process,” he says.

Overall, new vehicle registration were down 90.3 per cent in April – sales of passenger vehicles and SUVs dropped 89.6 per cent, and commercial vehicle sales were down 91.4 per cent.

So dramatic was the fall in registrations, that some highly unusual sales results were recorded by the MIA.

Market leader for the very first time was Korean brand Kia, which achieved a 16 per cent share with 169 sales, including 95 Seltos small SUVs, 24 Rio hatchbacks, and 22 Sportage compact SUVs.

The Seltos was also easily the top-selling passenger vehicle, with the Suzuki Swift hatch and the pint-sized Suzuki Jimny SUV in second and third places. 

And in the commercial sector it was the Toyota Hilux ute that was top model with 59 sales, followed by the Holden Colorado that is on runout prior to the Australian brand exiting the New Zealand market at year’s end.  And Ford Ranger – which has dominated the light commercial market for several years – was in third place with a mere 29 sales. 

And here’s a stark illustration of the state of New Zealand’s rental industry: whereas usually monthly vehicle registrations number in the hundreds, in April there were just two – and they were both Isuzu N-Series trucks.

 Covid Countdown:  April’s 10 Best-Selling Vehicles

Kia Seltos                     95

Toyota Hilux                 59

Holden Colorado          38

Suzuki Swift                  35

Ford Ranger                  29

Suzuki Jimny                 28

Kia Rio                          24

Holden Commodore     23

Kia Sportage                 22

Toyota Hiace                21

 

  

 

Pace notes' roll of honour

Rally co-drivers are the best in the world at telling a driver where to go. It all started in 1955 on an infamous road race in Italy.

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Rally crews spend weeks on the road writing, checking and competing with detailed pace notes. The passing of Sir Stirling Moss at Easter reminds us where that began.

Along with 16 Formula 1 GP victories and countless wins at circuits throughout the world, Moss and co-driver Denis Jenkinson are also credited for the first successful application of what became known as pace notes.

Moss had made three previous attempts at the Mille Miglia - the annual 1000-mile road race around Italy - before he left the start line at 7.22am on May 1 1955 as part of the Mercedes-Benz factory team.

Aware that only one non-Italian driver had ever succeeded in the Mille Miglia, Moss and ``Jenks’’ had completed detailed preparations as a counter to the local knowledge of the Italian drivers 

A passenger was permitted in the Mille Miglia and mainly they served as a navigator or riding mechanic or sometimes in a co-driver role sharing a stint at the wheel.

A journalist, Jenkinson was also familiar with the demands of teamwork at high speed as he had been a world motorcycle sidecar champion.

Prior to the race Moss and Jenkinson made multiple reconnaissance runs around the course, carefully detailing the dangerous corners and hazards as well as the blind corners and brows that could be taken at high speed if the driver trusted the information.

In their finished form these notes were written onto an 18-foot roll of paper that was wound into a purpose-made metal holder. Jenkinson scrolled through the notes, checking progress against the large kilometre stones at the Italian roadside. You can see footage of the device and how Jenkinson worked it in today’s video.

A pace note book used by modern co-drivers wasn’t an option. The Mercedes-Benz SLR 300 was an open sports car with a small windscreen. Rain would have turned paper into pulp.

And there was no intercom either. In car capable of 170mph - with a straight-eight engine based on the Mercedes W196 Formula 1 car with open exhausts - Jenkinson delivered the instructions to Moss by a series of hand signals. 

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Modern in-car WRC footage offers an insight into the perfected pace note science from the security of a closed cockpit, with a full roll cage, harness and a sophisticated intercom system.

The Moss and Jenkinson system may have been rudimentary but it represents the first successful application of pace notes and of making a car quicker from A to B on a partially known piece of road because of the cooperative efforts between driver and navigator.

Moss and Jenkinson won the 1955 race – beating team-mate Juan Manual Fangio by 32 minutes - at a new record average speed of 99mph that remained unbeaten when the Mille Miglia was banned after 1957.

Moss actually rated the 1955 Mille Miglia win as his greatest success.

``Even now, so many years afterwards, the memory is fresh – of all the races I entered, and finished, and even those I won, I can’t find another to compare with it,’’ he wrote in the 1974 compilation My Greatest Race edited by Adrian Ball.

RIP Sir Stirling Moss. Not only a motor racing legend but part of a pioneering duo whose innovation influences every major rally today.

# We welcome Colin Smith as a contributor to MotoringNZ.com and acknowledge that this first story seems particularly appropriate. In addition to being a highly-talented motorsport and motoring writer, he’s also a respected rally co-driver.

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Man draws ute, media goes nuts

Everyone loves a good ute. Does the Tarlac meet those tastes?

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FOR the past couple of years, anyone gloating about their new car might, in reality, be talking about something taller, heavier and – despite all the mod cons – less polished.

Despite new car registrations having faltered a touch in 2019, utility vehicles continued to dominate, with the Ford Ranger and Toyota Hilux the top two selling vehicles, with 9486 and 7126 sales respectively.

Demand tapered off by the December quarter and no-one’s yet brave enough to bet on how many might be sold this year. 

But chances are the ute – and by that we really mean well-trimmed dual cabs, since they account for the bulk of interest - sector might yet recover more quickly from the Covid-19 pandemic’s impact than the general passenger car market.

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They’re so strongly entrenched. Also, if and when recovery comes, it’s going to be led by builders and farmers – two key buyers of utes.

What might also stir up interest is that this is the first if several years when traydeck turnover occurs. As in, model cycle change. Some are set to be rebirthed and most of the others are going to be refreshed.

Isuzu’s reskinned and re-engineered D-Max and its new under-skin twin, the Mazda BT-50, are coming out this year. We expect to see another radical revision for the Hilux. In 2021 comes the successor to the mega-hit T6 Ranger, retiring after a decade on the job.

A conjoined effort with Volkswagen and likely to be the last Ranger designed and engineered fully in Australia, the next one runs on a new version of the current platform and is expected to add a pair of turbocharged V6 engines added to the line-up; a 24wk@ petrol and a 187kW diesel. And hot on its heels, the Amarok – still a German product despite the Aus-shared influences.

And there’s another, also eagerly anticipated …. 

So, anyway, today’s images are of the Tarlac.

 Hyundai’s dual-cab ute has been in the works for an eon, but finally the wheels are set to be rolling. And instead of one kind, it’s becoming increasingly likely there will be two 

America is being targeted as the primary recipient for a load-lugger that will retain the name, and much of the look, of the Santa Cruz concept shown in 2015. This will come out of Hyundai’s plant in Alabama in 2021. The Santa Cruz will differ from other dual-cab utes as it will be built with a monocoque chassis.

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However, Hyundai has also confirmed it also has a traditional ladder-frame light commercial vehicle is in development. Costs of this one shared with sister company Kia. This yet-unnamed model is expected to become available in 2022-23.

So what will it look like? Well, an industrial designer in the Philippines reckons he has a pretty good idea.

Enoch Gabriel Gonzales has fired up motoring sites all over this part of the world by publishing numerous images of a virtual model whose configuration is based on the few published images of the actual vehicle when it’s been snapped when out testing.

Given the real thing has always been heavily disguised, how confident can we be that his Tarlac – named after a province located in the Central Luzon region of the Philippines – is a good representation?

It’s a good question. Gonzales does admit that the workhorse he’s envisioned has a more traditional body shape than what the spy photos suggested. But he also claims to have remained faithful to Hyundai’s current design language.

The fascia is inspired by the Santa Fe sports utility and its bigger brother, the Palisade, which is expected to come on sale here at the end of the year.

Beyond that, he has designed Tarlac to look like a natural competitor for Hilux, Ranger and Mitsubishi’s Triton.

Regardless, let’s not forget this. There’s nothing official about the Tarlac. Gonzales is clearly a very good designer, but he doesn’t work for Hyundai.

A fact that seems to have escaped all the media who have used the images and allowed their imaginations to run wild. But, granted, there are excellent renditions.

 

 

 

 

Visual fizz for Hyundai sedan

Will we, won’t we? Hyundai NZ is being especially evasive.

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NOT an outright ‘yes’ nor an actual ‘no’ … just an acknowledgement that, should the compact sedan whose sportified look has been teased be picked up for New Zealand, it’ll more likely be called an i30 than an Elantra.

Hyundai New Zealand is being especially non-committal about local potential for a compact four-door model, to place alongside the i30 hatch and liftback, that has attracted international attention through South Korea putting out a teaser video showing the car in an N-Line trim.

This follows release weeks earlier of the standard car without the camouflage covering the N-Line edition. Can they be that much different? Well, probably not ….

Anyway, in sharing the N-Line news, Hyundai NZ’s public relations manager Kimberley Waters was making every effort to steer clear of suggesting anything that might indicate the car having local potential. Or not.

“Please note Elantra is what it this model is known as in other markets. Because Hyundai New Zealand take Australian spec and they have changed the nameplate to i30 Sedan, we too will adopt that name if we bring in the i30 Sedan and/or i30 Sedan N-Line. 

So there you go. Whatever Aussie does is what we’ll also do. Should we do it.

 Moving on. 

The N-Line should not be confused with the outright N product plan, which is basically Hyundai creating an equivalent of BMW’s M Division – indeed, the man leading this, Albert Biermann, is the former head of the Munich madhouse.

The only N model here now is based off the i30. The Veloster N is also in production, but just in left-hand-drive. The next N model for New Zealand is expected to be a version of the Kona compact crossover, with a 2.0-litre turbocharged petrol four-cylinder engine producing around 200kW and 350Nm. Also likely to also introduce the dual-clutch automatic transmission, this model is expected to land in the second half of this year.

Anyway, back to Elantra/i30 sedan. It is built on the new K3 platform which Hyundai states is lighter and stiffer with enhanced driving dynamics, and shows the brand’s latest styling outside – yeah, we know, instant nominee for ‘scary grille of the year’  - with plenty of technology highlights inside.

The only export market to so far involve with the mainstream model (below) is the United States, where it runs front-wheel drive with a continuously variable automatic transmission and the 103kW 1.6-litre that ran in the previous generation.

With N-Line, you get a few sporty looks but not the hooligan edge. With the sedan, the dress-up encompasses black exterior mirrors, more aggressive two-tone five-spoke alloy wheels and a set of twin exhaust tips poking out of the right side of the bumper. Is this an indication the variant will run the 150kW/265Nm 1.6-litre turbo-petrol used elsewhere in the Hyundai and Kia stable?

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Well, it’d seem a safe bet given that, for its part, Seoul head office has offered: “the upcoming i30 Sedan N Line adds N brand specific design elements, chassis upgrades and a turbocharged engine to the recently revealed i30 Sedan”.

The car in the video seems to include a dual-clutch automatic transmission – most likely the seven-speed unit from the current i30 N Line.

The most pronounced of the chassis upgrades will likely include an enhanced (firmer) suspension set-up. Note that the N Line hatch rides 5mm lower than the standard models.

The i30 Sedan also has a multi-link rear suspension arrangement – only seen previously on the current N Line hatch. That bounds well for the driving feel.

So is it coming? Probably. Hyundai NZ doesn’t have a habit of sending out information about cars it doesn’t intend to sell.

Even so, setting aside the ‘will they, won’t they?’ side, sedans – previous Elantra very much included - have become such slow sellers, the more relevant question might be: ‘Will you notice?’

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Vale Mustang’s real father

His sketch was chosen by Lee Iacocca. The rest is history.

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You might not know the name – you will know the car. Because EVERYONE knows the car.

Gale Halderman, the last surviving designer of the original 1965 – well, 64-and-a-half if you’re a true fan – Mustang, has passed away. He was 87.

Halderman is known as the man behind the scenes of the Mustang, having penned the original shape of a model that made its world debut at the New York Worlds Fair of 1964. A car would be produced continuously across six-generations and for more than five decades 

While it was Lee Iacocca who was known as the father of the Mustang, Halderman is its creator. The Mustang went on to sell more than 8 million units.

Appointed family spokesperson and author of Mustang by Design: Gale Halderman and the Creation of Ford’s Iconic Pony Car, Jimmy Dinsmore, said: “To have lived 87 years and to have designed something that is part of pop culture and automotive history, he had such an impact. 

“He did it in such a humble way that has touched the heart of every Mustang enthusiast out there. As great of a designer as he was, he was an even better human being.”

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Dinsmore says the most striking thing about Halderman, a 40-year Ford employee, was his humility. For many years, Halderman did not receive much attention for being the Mustang’s original designer, preferring to let others take the credit.

“When he went back to their Christmas dinners and such, he would be seated at the table with Mr. Ford,” Dinsmore added.

Born in 1933, Halderman completed a Bachelor of Arts degree from the University of Dayton and a further Industrial Design degree from the Dayton Art Institute. He went on to serve positions as the director and executive director of the Ford Design Studio, Advanced Design Studio, Interior Design Studio, and Lincoln-Mercury Design Studio.

Ultimately, the designer of the Mustang was to lose a brief battle with liver cancer. He is survived by three daughters, and his life’s collection of drawings, designs, sketches, and Mustang memorabilia, much of which can be viewed at the Halderman Barn Museum, a private venture open by appointment only on his family estate in Tipp City, Ohio. 

Halderman is a member of the Mustang Hall of Fame.

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AMG GLE 53: When mild enhances wild

 

A punchy twin-turbocharged 3.0-litre petrol engine with a 48-volt mild-hybrid system … fast AMG SUVs needn’t have to be V8 any more.

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 “AMG personality, performance and poise without compromising on everyday usability.” 

That’s how AMG’s spokesman related the positioning of the GLE 53 during the model’s international introduction in Austria in November.

Okay, so it was the GLE Coupe rather than the GLE wagon that is the focus of this story, but even so. Different look, common drivetrain: So, the comment’s still valid.

Those with understanding of Affalterbach’s numerical designations will understand that the 53 is a step below the 63 editions that express the full might of this tuner’s abilities. It all comes down to cylinder count and capacity.

While it’s true that the 53’s straight-six, 3.0-litre petrol hasn’t quite the fireworks or soundtrack of its hardcore V8 brethren that’ll arrive later in the year, driving the Coupe with this engine in the mountains of Austria was far from disappointing.

Not only is it still an aurally interesting engine, especially when you dial up the driving modes and set the AMG Performance exhaust to 'Powerful', but it also has lots of shove – smashing up some incredibly steep, and occasionally icy, mountain roads to our ultimate destination, a resort containing Europe’s highest motorcycle museum atop the Timmelsjoch High Alpine Road, was an easy and enthralling ask. (for more see: https://www.motoringnz.com/firstdrive/2020/4/4/fire-in-the-ice-with-gle-coupe).

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 The depth and spread of the torque roll out is almost akin to that from the alternate diesel, even though the latter has 180Nm in its pocket you’d think the engines were closer in muscularity.

Unpack the data and you’ll see why. The power in isolation is plentiful – 320kW at a relatively high 6100rpm – but that 520Nm impact isn’t just what outlays, between 1800-5,800rpm, from the engine alone.

The reason why it feels all the more muscular is the help it receives from the use of an auxiliary electrically driven compressor, as part of the on-board 48-volt system. That's before you take into consideration the 'EQ Boost', which is a 16kW electric motor that acts as a starter/generator. It adds up to 250Nm to proceedings, depending on a variety of factors, though Mercedes doesn't quote the system maximums. All this means it feels particularly torque-rich in the midrange, and it's very quick to get off the line - 100kmh from rest in just 5.3 seconds in respect to either model.

It’s most engaging in Powerful mode, if just because that setting really liberates its voice. Nip it in into the Sport Plus driving setting as well and you get the full vocal repertoire, including gratuitous pops and bangs on the overrun. Plus the excellent nine-speed automatic engages a throttle blip feature into its operation.

It’s not just about punishing performance. Another benefit that’ll make V8 drivers green comes with economy – you needn’t tread too lightly to find the EQ Boost set-up eking really decent fuel consumption, ultimately 9.4 litres per 100km according to the maker.

There’s no argument that the GLE feels like a large vehicle – to the point where some village drive-throughs had me wondering it was a touch too wide – but, assuredly, it feels really handy on the road; AMG doesn’t scrimp on its tyres, suspension tune and brake packages. The AMG-tweaked 4Matic Plus all-wheel-drive system, which always drives the rear wheels, and can fully vary the split front-to-rear as needs be, is also a great assistant. 

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As much as a GLE really isn't a car for throwing around a twisty back road with abandon, the AWD set-up certainly is good for your confidence. It enabled the Coupe to feel moderately agile and rear-lead – sure, that model has shorter wheelbase than the wagon, yet it’s surely a good portent all the same.

 A shout out, too, to the steering itself, which is a speed-sensitive and variable ratio electromechanical system, and also the suspension tune. Yes, it’s firm – perhaps enough to become a touch too ‘pattery’ and jittish on some coarse chip (a surface that drives all suspension experts nuts) – but my experience is that the model doesn’t really feel its weight and, more importantly, has good control if its weight transfer.

What else is important? Well, that the cars in NZ-trim seem to be pretty much as loaded as the examples Benz laid on during the international launch, with AMG Ride Control Plus air suspension factoring in as standard – though an all-out active ride enhancement remains an option - along with all the usual plush stuff. They stand out from non-AMG GLEs by adopting an active exhaust, performance brakes, Panamericana front grille and sports seats.

Standard equipment includes a Burmester sound system, 21-inch wheels, panoramic sunroof, illuminated door sills, wireless smartphone charger, heated front seats, 64-colour ambient lighting and head-up display.

MBUX technology handles multimedia duties, displayed across a 12.3-inch touchscreen, which sports satellite navigation, digital radio, Apple CarPlay/Android Auto support and voice recognition controls.

Instrumentation is also displayed on a 12.3-inch screen with added AMG-specific graphics and readouts.

Safety kit is comprehensive. The provision includes a surround-view monitor, adaptive cruise control, rear cross-traffic alert, lane-keep assist, blind-spot monitoring, lane departure warning, tyre pressure monitoring, traffic sign recognition and autonomous emergency braking.

You’ll pay $180,100, not including on-road costs, for the wagon and undoubtedly the Coupe will continue to carry a premium. The more rakish model will be landing imminently, Benz NZ assured yesterday, but a price has yet to be set.

It’s also too soon, of course, for a dollar figure in respect to the GLE 63, but Benz has already indicated that this smasher will exclusively import in the higher-grade 63 S spec.

Despite AMG progressively moving to smaller engines, the flagship GLE is still adhering to eight-cylinder values, with the crowd favourite 4.0-twin turbo V8, albeit also with an electric twist.

The plant delivers outputs of 450kW and 850Nm, and is also matched with an electric motor which can temporarily boost power by 16kW/250Nm.

And saving the best for last …. zero to 100kmh is in just 3.8 seconds.

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Goodbye HSV, hello GMSV?

 

Is HSV about to disappear? The famous performance make’s New Zealand boss is coy about rebranding talk.

 

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 CONJECTURE about Holden Special Vehicles being set to soon morph into a new set-up involving General Motors has garnered a cool response from the New Zealand operation.

 Andrew Lamb, the specialist make’s New Zealand regional manager, was approached for comment on media speculation across the Tasman that a public announcement on a new branding and direction will be revealed very soon.

Talk about a re-emergence as General Motors’ Speciality Vehicles traces back to comment aired during GM’s announcement on February 17 that Holden was heading for the grave.

References were made to GMSV that day in a media release and during a subsequent trasntasman press conference.

Yesterday Australia’s top car mag, Wheels, ran a story on its website suggesting this scenario has progressed to a deal between GM and Walkinshaw Group, the powerhouse behind HSV, which dates back to 1988.

According to the Wheels report: “GMSV is expected to be a joint venture between Walkinshaw Group and GM and its task initially will be exactly what HSV does now; take North American-built, left-hand-drive GM product and convert it to right-hand drive in Melbourne.”

It also cited that those vehicles will then be distributed through a revised, slimmed-down dealer network. Currently, HSV has 56 dealers in Australia and eight in New Zealand, all but two in the North Island. 

The speculation is that GMSV’s focus will initially be on Chevrolet pick-ups, SUVs and performance vehicles. The new mid-engined C8 Chevrolet Corvette is expected to be part of the line-up. 

As for the Camaro? HSV last week acknowledged it has ceased remanufacturing of that vehicle into right-hand drive and has no plan to restart this.

Chris Polites, HSV’s executive director of sales and marketing, is reported by the CarAdvice website as saying: “There are no plans to bring back the Camaro. Once these cars are gone, they are gone.” 

Questions for Lamb included what was the status of HSV here presently and are HSV Camaros still available here and, if so, for how much longer?

He was asked if he wished to share any thoughts about emergent conjecture about the future of HSV and the likelihood of it becoming GMSV and if he had any messages for HSV customers and potential purchasers.

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In response to this, he indicated no change to business. “We continue to sell vehicles through our specialist HSV and Chevrolet NZ dealer network and plan for this to continue for the foreseeable future.”

In respect to Camaro and its stock count and ongoing availability here, he offered: “HSV re-engineered RHD Camaro 2SS and ZL1 models are still available through HSV dealers in NZ.”

In respect to the potential for GMSV, he contended: “That is being discussed well above my pay grade and when finalised appropriate announcements will be made”

He said HSV owners and intending purchasers could be reassured that all HSV and HSV re-engineered Chevrolet vehicles in NZ “are fully backed by HSV with a three-year warranty and three-years’ roadside assist so owners can buy with confidence. 

Lamb also confirmed the Silverado 1500 pickup released in Australia several weeks ago has now been priced for New Zealand – it’s a $123,990 ask before options - and would soon be available.

“First vehicles are already built and should be with NZ dealers later next month.”

Just a single version, a feature-laden LTZ Premium Edition, is being converted by the Melbourne operation with the RAM 1500 cited as the primary rival.

The Chevrolet is slightly larger but gives away a little on payload capacity, 845kg vs 712kg.

Under the bonnet there is a naturally aspirated 6.2-litre V8 petrol engine producing 313kW and 624Nm, driving all four wheels via a 10-speed automatic transmission and resulting in a maximum braked towing capacity of 4500kg.

Drivers have four different driving modes at their disposal depending on the journey at hand, those being Touring for everyday driving, Sport for increased throttle response, Off-road for slippery conditions and Tow/Haul for towing duties.

Features include 10-way power adjustable, heated and ventilated leather front seats with memory function, heated leather steering wheel, leather rear seats (outboard seats also heated), dual-zone climate, keyless entry and start, powered sunroof, express front and rear windows, tyre pressure monitoring, 60:40 split-folding rear seats, auto-dimming rearview mirror and dual-zone climate control.

On the safety front, lane change alert with side blind zone alert and rear cross-traffic alert, forward collision alert, low speed forward automatic braking, front pedestrian braking, Intellibeam automatic headlamp control, following distance indicator, front and rear park assist, safety alert seats, six airbags, electronic stability control, trailer sway control and hill-start assist are all fitted as standard.

 

Covid-19: How's post-Level Four life for distributors?

How’s our new car market doing – and what’s the sentiment about an environment in which coronavirus and its after-effects seem set to imprint for a long time? The big names of the industry speak.

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TODAY’s move to Level Three precautions allows for improved business opportunity; parts supply will resume, service bays will reopen and, yes, you might even be able to buy a new vehicle.

Yet everything still requires care and consideration. While less restricted than Level Four, the next step down still demands every contactless interactions. Restrictions will still apply with Levels Two – the next step, potentially coming after May 18 if all goes well – and One, though those are definitely more welcoming.

With this in mind, the distributors here – leading distributors were invited to offer thoughts, pertinent to their brands, in respect to this question:

“What are the challenges and potential opportunities as you see them that will arrive in a Level Three Covid-19 new vehicle market. Is that a level at which you can begin to restore your business and, if not, what condition would be required?”

Neeraj Lala, chief operating officer, Toyota New Zealand.

Reason for inclusion? Market leader.

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Toyota will continue to provide our customers with an exceptional customer experience under Level Three.

Twenty-four months ago, we revolutionised our business to a new model, and both fleet and private customers have enjoyed the new experience. Under Level Three, our haggle-free pricing for private and fleet customers of various fleet sizes, means the car buying experience is easier as you don’t need to negotiate a price over email or phone.

We have also been operating flexible test drives for the same period which means customers have the flexibility to collect a vehicle and enjoy the experience with their bubble without any face-to-face contact and safe distancing on collection. 

We have expanded our service to offer a home delivery with strict health and safety and social distancing options. Every vehicle collected from a Toyota Store, either for servicing or a new or used vehicle sale, will meet the strict sanitisation guidelines we have put in place to keep everyone safe. 

Our website will provide customers with an easy booking system for test drives and servicing, and live chat to assist those customers who require extra support. In terms of vehicle ownership, our servicing facilities have been organised to comply with alert level 3 standards and will continue to provide their high level of friendly service, looking after all Toyota customers.

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Reece Congden, head of marketing and corporate affairs, Mitsubishi Motors NZ.

Reason for inclusion? Top electric vehicle volume, wide product portfolio

As New Zealand moves to Level Three, the automotive industry will continue to face severe trading conditions.

While it is a return to work in part, it has yet to be fully understood how effective contactless sales will be for a high involvement product like cars.

MMNZ have been undertaking extensive work while we have been under Level Four restrictions, to ensure that our business is not only 100 percent compliant, but also that our dealer partners are ahead of the curve. 

Our investment in digital platforms and engaging customer-facing content has us well placed to start making the transition to contactless sales - even if it’s only a temporary move.

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Having said that, car sales is a ‘people business’ and our dealers are an active part of their local communities, so how Kiwis respond to being asked to purchase a car from their living room will be a point of great interest for all brands.

One of Mitsubishi’s key strengths is our high-performing dealer network. We are supremely confident that they will adapt and fight for their slice of whatever pie is available under Level Three. When you match that with the value-focused offers we currently have in the market, we believe that we’re as well placed as any brand to rebound strongly.

(One initiative from MMNZ has been to produce three awareness videos relating to sales and servicing interactions under level Three. No lockdown regs were breached by the way: The NZ operation reached out to friends in Australia, with content shot across the Tasman). 

Simon Rutherford, managing director, Ford New Zealand

Reason for inclusion? Light commercial dominance with Ranger ute 

There certainly will be challenges - for everyone. We are effectively operating in a constrained environment; our showrooms are closed, sales, service and parts operations will be contactless.

We are also operating new systems and process with strict controls and rules around sanitation, social distancing and contact tracing to keep customers and our staff as safe as possible – all this in a market that looks like it has stepped back to 2008 - 2009.

We and our dealers are pretty adaptable and satisfied that the measures and capabilities we have put in place to conduct business in a Covid-19 safe way at Level Three will protect and support our customers and employees.

We see more opportunity than challenge and we are not going to let a crisis go to waste. We see Level Three as a level at which we can only begin to restore our business. We really need to move to a Level Two and beyond quickly, as unfortunately there has already been significant impact. 

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The road to recovery in a lower market in a high cost of capital business presents a longer term challenge.

The conditions that are really required are for the broader economy and the industry to be supported with “back to work” domestic stimulus packages to get people spending and investing and so the industry can continue to contribute to GDP and be an engine room of recovery. 

Longer term, the opening up of borders and in turn strengthening tourism and hospitality will be key.

As regards to our operations in Level Three? On the vehicle sales side of the business, selling and delivering in a “contactless” and remote fashion is nothing new for us – we do this under normal business circumstances for new and used vehicles, for different customers in different segments of the market - from retail to fleet, government and rental and across our network to support nationwide deliveries. The opportunity we have had is to get better and more efficient at operating in this way. We have been operating on-line sales in Level Four. Now we can deliver those vehicle in a contactless manner. 

Our on-line and contactless capabilities are much fitter now and we will continue to pursue improved capabilities as we go forward. Although this is just one of the ways we can conduct business and support the varying needs of our customers, it will not be the only way we transact business. We will certainly be exercising that capability more than we were.

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In addition we anticipate that there will be a demand bias towards our top performing Ranger and Transit commercial vehicles as our primary industries and construction sectors lead our economic recovery and the need for moving goods remains.

Separate from our special offers we have also launched a peace of mind finance programme that offers a nil deposit plan and the first three months paid for by Ford and a further three months deferral option for customers if they want to take that up. This is designed to give our customers peace of mind as we all try and climb out of this challenge together. This in addition to the help we are offering existing customers financing through MyFordFinance.

On the service and parts side of the business, many of our dealers already offered pick-up and delivery services ahead of Level Four.  All 31 dealers within our national dealer body will be supporting the new pick-up and delivery service we are launching. We will have nationwide coverage for that. 

We have implemented robust hygiene and social distancing measures alongside contact tracing and will maintain this also when we get to level Two, when customers can enter our premises. At that point we will also have point-of-sale that will help orientate customers to social distancing and hygiene enablers we will provide.

Dean Sheed, General manager, Audi New Zealand

Reason for selection? Prestige sector giant. 

The opportunity that moving to Level Three provides is a partial move back to a full business for all our dealers nationwide. 

I say partial because it’s a move to contactless business across the operation, working within the Government/Worksafe health and safety guidelines and maintaining a major focus on keeping our staff and customers safe and supported as we transition back to normality.

Partial business also means some form of revenue to support the decimated financial results of March and April for both ourselves and our dealer partners. 

The businesses will be focussed on the physical servicing of customers’ cars and the ongoing virtual customer discussions in other areas of the business.

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The challenges are clearly the new modes of doing business under the umbrella of Level Three: Stricter controls of cleaning and sanitisation across each business, contactless servicing, contact tracing of everyone within the business and the use of personal protective equipment by our team. All within the new health and safety guidelines implemented by the dealerships.

We are allowed to deliver presold cars to customers which must be handled according to the new protocols as well which will assist in driving some vehicle sales volume under Level Three.

This volume is likely to remain small until Level Two and only with Level One will all facets of the dealerships resume some form of normality.

Restoring the businesses fully will happen over time - many months - as the demand side of the car market is restored through normal purchasing by private and business customers. The economy needs to restore itself on the demand and supply side.

If you have been thinking of buying a new vehicle, now is a great time to purchase given solid inventory and very motivated dealers nationally.

Greg Leet, General manager Volkswagen NZ.

Reason for inclusion? Dominant European marque

It certainly won’t be normal trading and I’m certain we will all be in that position. Likewise, we will all be thinking that the safety of our customers and our staff will remain paramount.

We have been doing a lot of work with the dealers in respect to their ability to comply to Level Three trading conditions regarding personal protective equipment, sanitation and contactless services. Our dealers are well up to speed with that.

What kind of level do we need to get to before we contemplate normality? I think we need to be well out of Level One. Even the two levels below Three will still have social distancing, will still have people with very heightened levels of awareness around hygiene and sanitation. So while some of those will be relaxed from a Governmental view, I think society will remain pretty in tune going forward. 

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There will be sectors of business that, I think, will be in a strong position after lockdown. There will be businesses that will be severely impacted. The tourism sectors will be under immense pressure. But I think industries like food supply and any essential services are going to be still very active.

Purely from a volume perspective, our forecast for the balance of the year would still have passenger at roughly two-and-half times our light commercial volumes.

We’re predicting anywhere between a 30 to 40 percent drop in the market. In a global sense, some markets are more severely impacted than that, and some might well be less impacted.

There are times when a car will be seen as a luxury. But we also see possibility that customers might decide to buy a new vehicle with the money they might have previously have kept aside for an overseas trip. They potentially might well want to travel, but locally, and that might involve a new car.

 

 

Covid-19: So you want to buy a car under Level Three? Here's how ...

Buying a new or used vehicle is again possible - but it’s hardly as easy as just sauntering onto a yard.

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 CAR yards might from today become a front line in testing the limits of what constitutes ‘contactless’ under Covid-19 restrictions.

Today’s easing of rules of business under the coronavirus emergency allows new and used vehicle traders opportunity to resume selling, though with caveats and great care.

They might also expect to be under close official scrutiny to ensure Level Three boundaries are not crossed. Quite literally, in fact.

A core requirement carrying over from Level Four is that businesses cannot offer services that involve face-to-face contact.

 Whether that even allows yards and showrooms to operate and to what extent has caused demarcation and seems sure to become controversial. 

All this in a climate of growing desperation to resume trading.

Allowance to keep supplying new products to essential services since lockdown hit on March 26 has hardly been any panacea for the new car industry. 

Franchises are braced for April being the worst month for vehicle registrations since data-gathering began in 1975.

It’s been little better for the used car sector that has spent almost a year grappling with a slow but steady decline in used import volumes. Over-saturation and a regulation demanding electronic stability control in all ex-Japan passenger fare imported from March 1 have hurt.

Level Three gives franchise outlets a lifeline in that they can reinstate serving and parts provision, but with clear proviso customers do not have direct involvement. 

The core business of selling vehicles now also seems possible to accomplish, but not easily. Car yards are the sole avenue as Trade Me has stopped sales of non-essential items, including vehicles, and auctions are also off.

Want a test drive? Some brands are trying out virtual tours by video, where a salesperson shows you around on screen.

But plenty of punters will prefer to drive. First, prospective vehicle buyers are being asked to communicate remotely (so by phone or email). There’s no direct handing over the keys. Cars will be left at a mutually agreed place for hand over and return. When you’re out driving, sales folk might want you to patch into the Bluetooth – a good way to chat about the features and how stuff works. Vehicles will have to be extensively sanitised before and after. Arranging any eventual sales will also be by phone or internet and could become completely paperless.

What has raised concern is intention by some new and used vehicle sellers to staff and open their yards to customer visits – either to the edge of the property or actually onto premises. 

From the tenor of their website announcements, some operators seem to believe they can allow the latter so long as a visit pre-arranged, social distancing is maintained and there are hygiene provisions. 

That potentially takes them into a danger zone that the The Motor Industry Association, which represents new vehicle distributors, believes is best approached with extreme caution.

The Government’s Unite against Covide-19 website also sides with that viewpoint and offers this might become a matter than might attract further investigation. 

It reminds no physical storefronts can be open. “They can do contactless delivery or click and collect … customers wanting to look at cars (on the sales site) would have to do so through video call and not in person.”

MIA Chief executive David Crawford understands a number of distributors have indicated their franchises will open, but not showrooms.

“If somebody wants to buy a vehicle it can be done, but it’s on-line and contacting the franchise dealer. Showrooms will not be open.”

As for allowing public access to premises? “Yeah, we’ve looked into this. I’d like to be able to say the rules are crystal clear. They’re not. But they are relatively clear.” 

The only possible solution had, or created, a drive-through corridor whose dimension and markings met requirement. “If they had that and were able to maintain a contactless exchange then it’s possible.”

However, it was complex and “the margins are going to be very fine.” 

Used car dealers contacted had varying viewpoints about how much care was required and more than one suggested it really came down “to how this is interpreted.” 

In his instance, the yard would be staffed, but the gates would be locked so no-one could simply wander in. Any customer interaction would be by invitation only. “We arrange a pick-up time and leave the car outside the gate for them to take away.”

If lines are crossed, should there be sympathy? Crawford says there’s no argument the industry is under pressure.

“It doesn’t matter if you’re a franchise dealer or not, whether you’re selling new or used. It’s about cash flow. Just getting those businesses to operate and generate even a bit of cash flow is important. 

“This is a capital-intensive sector and with lots of money tied up with servicing capital and there’s no incomes …. well, you can get crippled fairly quickly.” 

At same token, new vehicle distributors were wholly supportive of the Government’s action against coronavirus and felt it was crucial to maintain the letter and intent of their advice. 

“No doubt there will be some people out there who might try to push the barriers … but the last thing any of the franchise dealers and distributors want is to bring disrepute to the sector at this time.”

 

 

 

 

Skoda product stream still flowing

The Kamiq will launch soon and the Octavia is still maintaining inbound status for this year.

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EXPECTATION of the new generation of Skoda’s international best-seller still reaching New Zealand this year remains high.

This local confidence about the Octavia comes in the wake of latest, more optimistic signals from the Skoda factory.

Having earlier indicated that the model’s international release might no longer be in June, as planned, the maker is now set to resume production next week.

While the restart is going to be gradual, there’s hope the production stream will be enough to keep local supply planning more or less intact.

Knowing all this, Skoda New Zealand general manager Rodney Gillard remains quietly hopeful he can get the car here before year end.

“We are still planning on launching this year and are working with the factory right now.”

It’ll take a couple of weeks before the factory can give absolute clarity about what this effort will deliver, insofar as the export markets are concerned. However, he says none of the talk from head office to date has raised cause for undue concern.

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“There will be a delay, but at the moment it is only theoretical, not confirmed, so I still see it being available for us prior to the end of the year.” 

He also affirms another core model, the Kamiq small crossover, remains on track for local release – cars are here and they will likely become available to customers within a matter of weeks, with that process obviously made all the easier if lockdown relegates to Level Two.

In respect to that, he says the Covid-19 crisis will very likely influence the way cars are sold from now on, even if the country finally gets back to the same level of daily normality that existed before the virus was known about. 

However, he says the car industry has always shown fantastic flexibility when it comes to dealing with challenges. 

As one for instance, he reminds that the requirement for contactless interactions that will flavour the limited resumption of business under Level Three won’t seem that foreign, in that “dealers have been selling new and used cars on TradeMe for 20-odd years.”

“So I think we will just need to modify the way we do things, but we can still get on with it.”

Kamiq is key because rhe small crossover segment was the fastest-growing category prior to the Covid-19 crisis, and are expected to keep fostering interest even if new car sales fall as predicted.

Yet Skoda here also has faith the Octavia, which has been the brand’s biggest volume model internationally and was the car that re-introduced Kiwis to Skoda in its new-generation (meaning, VW-owned) format, will also be a hit. 

Some of that confidence is based on this fourth-generation line now presenting in hybrid and plug-in hybrid editions in addition to the ongoing fully fossil-fuelled variants provisioned until now.

Additional detail about the model line was revealed this week, with the covers being taken off the wagon – Combi in Skoda-speak – that will place alongside a liftback sister model that was unveiled several months ago.

The car is based on the MQB Evo platform that’s also used by the rest of VW Group’s latest compacts.

By ‘compact’ they mean in class category. Not in physical size, clearly. Being 19mm longer than its forebear ensures this Octavia accounts for a 4689mm space in a car park. The wheelbase has remained unchanged at 2686 mm. It’s also 15mm wider, at 1829mm. 

Skoda cites it having markedly more interior space than the current model, giving a cargo volume in either liftback or wagon format of 600 litres before the rear seats are lowered.

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 The interior is also more advanced technologically, offering a choice of four infotainment systems from the latest-generation Modular Infotainment Matrix and a permanent online connection via an integrated eSIM.

The central touchscreen display measures 8.25 to 10 inches and supports gesture control for some functions. There’s also a Laura digital voice assistant and it has inductive smartphone charging and up to five USB-C ports on board. A 10.25-inch Virtual Cockpit digital instrument panel can be implemented as an alternate to an orthodox display.

The plug-in hybrid technology is just one Green alternate. It also provisions with a mild-hybrid setup and, in addition to petrol and diesel, European markets will also have opportunity for CNG engines.

With Skoda, the ultimate electric assisted option means alacrity in addition to efficiency. That version, called the Octavia iV, achieves a 150kW output from pairing a 1.4 TSI petrol engine with an electric motor and 13 kWh battery. All that, and an EV driving range of up to 60km in the WLTP cycle. If that’s not good enough, there’s also the new Octavia RS iV plug-in hybrid which offers 180kW and a similar EV driving range.

The new gen delivers big improvements is driving assistance technology. New systems include Collision Avoidance Assist, Turn Assist, Exit Warning and Local Traffic Warning, among other features.

 

Yaris Cross for hot compact sector

Toyota has revealed the Yaris Cross and suggested there’s a chance it might hit NZ before Xmas.

THAT funky looking baby Toyota crossover you had your heart set on?

Good news. It might yet be here by Xmas. With emphasis on the word ‘might’.

In tandem with Toyota’s overnight international unveiling of the Yaris Cross, Toyota New Zealand has re-stated intent to have the car on sale before the end of 2020.

However, it shouldn’t be taken as a absolute hard and fast promise, the exact quote being: “Toyota New Zealand expects to introduce this model towards the end of 2020.” So, if you’re aching to have one as a Christmas pressie … maybe also consider a Plan B.

That timeframe is months behind the original expectation, but is pretty good effort nonetheless if achieved.

This car, remember, was likely the world’s first automotive victim of coronavirus, having been pulled last minute from being revealed at the Geneva Motor Show in the first week of March. Sorry, make that the virtual Geneva show, because the actual event was also cancelled days before opening by … well, the same thing. 

At that time, too, the brand was so publicly pessimistic about the production timeframes it left impression right-hand-drive markets might not see it until 2021. Which might, of course, still be the case, given that most of the major RHD recipients are reporting just that timeframe.

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Let’s hope for TNZ’s sake it makes the boat this year. Even though the new car market is heading toward massive bust – with prediction of being at least 40 percent down on last year – after some really good years, the small crossover and sports utility sector had really been hitting its stride prior to Covid-19 lockdown. Conceivably, then, if any cars are going to be sold, the chances of them being from this category have to be fairly good, not least when it has the extra twists of a hybrid drivetrain and a high tech all-wheel-drive.

The car’s make-up has been touched upon before, but just to recap: It’s a crossover built on the same 'GA-B' compact car platform as the imminent new fourth-generation Yaris hatchback. It promises more space, increased ride height and even the option of four-wheel drive. With a twist: It’s an electric motor-driven system.

Today’s photos are of the hybrid in flagship form, on 18-inch wheels that provide a nice finishing touch to a styling that’s neatly adopts the same wheelarch shape and rising door sill detailing that have taken the RAV4 to new heights. An upright nose and vent design, sharp creasing and high-tech lighting also mark it out as a street cred champion.

In terms of size, the Yaris Cross sits on the same wheelbase as the new Yaris, but is actually 240 millimetres longer. A bigger proportion of that has been added behind the rear wheels (180mm), which should mean a larger boot. It is also 20mm wider (presumably due to the arches) and 90mm higher. And, usefully, it has 30mm more ground clearance, too.

At 390 litres, the boot volume is a touch more than the equivalent Yaris hatch. The rear seat backs split 40:20:40 and there's a variable boot floor arrangement to help make the most of the space. A powered tailgate will apparently be available.

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About that all-wheel-drive. Toyota calls it 'AWD-i', for intelligent. It certainly is. The system uses an electric motor to turn the rear wheels, supplementing the regular powertrain up front in the car. Apparently, it operates when pulling away from rest and accelerating, but otherwise only when traction at the front axle is limited.

Yaris Cross has the same powertrain choices as the hatch, meaning 1.0- and 1.5-litre three-cylinder petrol engines. TNZ has previously explained that its focus is on the latter, which is, according to the maker, more thermally efficient than a typical diesel engine. This further fuels the claim that the hybrid edition is 20 percent more efficient than the engine in the outgoing Yaris Hybrid. The brand says it also seemingly has the 'world's fastest combustion speed'. Does that translate into decent low-down torque?

Nothing has been revealed about the hybrid side’s electric motor, save that it is lighter and more compact than before, in part through it eschewing a nickel-metal hydride battery for a 27 per ent lighter lithium-ion item, which also allows more power to the motor more often. Maximum system power is quoted at 76kW. Toyota also says that the CO2 figures are 120g/km for the front-drive model and 135g/km for the AWD, on WLTP assessment.

The spec? A lot has to be finalised, but the car has been configured to offer a large wireless device charger, heated steering wheel and big head-up display. Touchscreen infotainment is likely to be present on most versions, as is a generous suite of active safety functions, under the 'Toyota Safety Sense' umbrella.

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Evoque, Disco Sport plugged but not priced

The old adventurer has a fancy new tool in its off-road kit – but whether it’ll chart a course here comes down to price.

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EVEREST-rated sleeping bag and tent, multi-tool, freeze-dried food but perhaps no need for a jerry can of fuel as you’ll be heading into the rough with a three-cylinder petrol engine with electric motor that’ll give a Toyota Prius a run for ultra-efficiency.

The announcement of plug-in hybrid versions of the Range Rover Evoque and Land Rover Discovery Sport remind this famous off-road brand is packing for new kinds of adventures these days.

This greater involvement with electric drivetrains won’t just touch into the small, more city-favoured cars. It is highly probable Land Rover is set to introduce new mild-hybrid six-cylinder diesel engines to the Range Rover and Range Rover Sport within a few months effectively spelling an end to the V8 diesel. 

However, the big push starts with the smaller cars, just-revealed in the United Kingdom.

And set to show in New Zealand when exactly? Jaguar Land Rover New Zealand says it certainly has interest in the product – but not the price the maker is setting for it.

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 Says product manager Paul Ricketts: “We are currently in pricing negotiations with the central team on these models.

“The pricing we have at the moment does not allow for the models to be competitive in New Zealand.”

Exactly what premium those P300e variants hold is anyone’s guess, as UK pricing has yet to be made public.

These editions are the first to use Land Rover's new Premium Transverse Architecture, which allows them to use plug-in technology for the first time and despite perception about this drivetrain approach being a touch ‘lite’, the maker categorically assures it’ll survive exploration outings of the Ureweras and Central Otago. 

The hybrid system combines a 149kW turbocharged three-cylinder 1.5-litre petrol engine with a 81kW electric motor fed from a 15kWh battery stack, tucked under the rear seats.

The combined power output of both cars is 230kW, with 540Nm of torque. That's good enough for the Evoque to achieve 0-100kmh in 6.1 seconds and the Land Rover in 6.6s. 

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Claimed fuel economy and emissions are an eye-opener. Just 1.4 litres per 100km with emissions of just 32g/km, while the slightly larger, heavier, Discovery Sport scores 1.6 litres per 100km and 36g/km of CO2. Both cars can travel for more than 60km on a fully-charged battery - 66km for the Evoque and 62km for the Discovery, both capable of speeds of up to 135kmh on battery power alone.

It’s a technology leap that has been tackled with typical Land Rover ingenuity. The engine is effectively an Ingenium four-cylinder with a pot lopped off the end, which makes it 37kg lighter than the donor. 

The PHEV technology marks a major change in Land Rover's four-wheel drive technology. For the first time on a four-wheel drive Land Rover model, there's no transfer box, and no propshaft going to the rear wheels. Instead, the rear of the car uses Electric Rear Axle Drive (ERAD) tech. The electric motor drives the rear wheels at speeds of up to 135kmh, after which it's decoupled to reduce transmission drag and save even more fuel.

There's also a new brake-by-wire system which maximises brake energy recuperation, and an on-board 7kW charging system for topping up the battery. Both cars can rapid-charge from 0-80 percent in 30 minutes. From a domestic socket, charging takes six hours and 42 minutes, while from a 7kW home charger box, it takes one hour and 24 minutes to reach 80 percent.

When running in hybrid mode, the vehicle's electronics use Predictive Energy Optimisation (PEO) tech, which combines inputs from the steering, throttle, and brake as well as localised GPS data and the sat-nav destination to best juggle the mixture of petrol and battery power.

The engine drives the front wheels through an updated eight-speed automatic transmission.

Nick Rogers, Jaguar Land Rover Executive Director of Product Engineering assures the models still meet traditional requirements.  

The drivetrain lends “fantastic all-wheel drive capability and the perfect blend of performance, depending on your driving style” while the cars maintain “the same awesome capability and composure with all-electric driving and stunning efficiency, both on- and off-road.”

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CX-30 optimism remains though some orders lost

The CX-30 releases into a different market environment Mazda had forecast just a few weeks ago.

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ACCEPTANCE this year’s new car market might crash and deliver just half the 2019 volume hasn’t destroyed Mazda NZ’s confidence, yet will steer sales expectation. 

In discussing hopes for the CX-30 compact crossover, which stands as the first new car to launch nationally since the Covd-19 lockdown enacted, the brand has admitted some would-be buyers have already u-turned and pulled out of deals.

The Mazda3-based five-seater priced from $41,490 to $50,990 will become available from next Tuesday, a timing that synchs in with a relaxation in national restrictions that allows resumption of car sales, though with caveat of this being contactless. So, no showroom visits and a continuation of social distancing which demands care when handing over new cars to customers.

The release is subsequent to a dismal forecast from the Motor Industry Association. The national body representing new vehicle distributors is predicting the new car and light commercial count this year could be 40 to 50 percent lower than last year’s count of 154,763 units 

The industry is also anticipating potential of hugely diminished fleet interest, mainly from the crucial rental sector, which appears to have skidded to a sudden halt as result of tourism freeze.

Nonetheless, Mazda NZ is putting on a brave face. It still sees some business sector opportunity for CX-30, moreso than comes with its other crossover contenders, notably from small to medium businesses.

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Even so, it will be mainly reliant on private buyer interest in its new model which, as essentially an elevated version of the Mazda3 hatchback becomes the fifth crossover Hiroshima offers and places above the CX-3 and below the CX-5 that has been their best-selling model for some time.

In an online presentation today, Mazda NZ’s managing director, David Hodge, and his manager of product and sales planning, Tim Nalden, signalled that as much as CX-30 is ‘right’ for the market – aiming at the compact crossover category that was showing best growth prior to the coronavirus emergency - market conditions could not be more challenging.

The Auckland-domiciled operation has passed on sharing volume expectations for the car and admits that an original launch timing stymied by the lockdown has been so disrupted by the ensuing national situation that much pre-crisis forecasting has effectively been rendered useless.

Yet that wasn’t just his brand’s dilemma; Nalden hazards the entire car business is in the same situation.

“If you asked anyone (in the industry) what the forecast will be, I doubt anyone will be able to give an accurate reading.”

The market is all but impossible to read. “I suspect you will see that change, day by day, week by week, month by month as we work through this ... at the end of the day, who knows?”

The MIA’s sobering assessment of 2020 has come from canvassing opinion from all new vehicle distributors here and has since been supported by an Infometrics forecast, issued yesterday, Hodge says.

Nalden says Mazda NZ has lost orders for Mazda product, CX-30s included, since lockdown hit. He and expected more cancellations to come. This after such strong interest in CX-30 that 50 percent of the initial shipment had been spoken for during January and February.

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“Yes, we have had some orders cancelled … and that is simply just potentially reflecting the state of the economy and anxiety around job security and also the propensity to be able to spend money.

“I would be surprised if 100 percent of all of the deposits currently on our vehicles are retained. 

“I think it’s just natural that we can’t expect everyone to stay there, nor should be expect to force people to have to follow through (on deals) if their financial position has changed.”

Hodge has reinforced that Mazda NZ will extend vehicle warranties if they expire during the period of the lockdown, and look after vehicles that have become overdue for their servicing.

As coronavirus continues to spread across the world, car makers are taking the extreme measure of plant closures, mainly in China, South Korea and Europe – though several there seem to be looking to restart soon – and in America, where makers have extended shutdown periods.

Japan’s car industry seems to have been spared the worst in that only factories outside of their home country have been hit. Domestic assembly lines, including those in Hiroshima that makes CX-30 and most other core passenger product for NZ, are still operating. The bigger question hangs over the supply of part from third-party providers. China is the primary provider of components for the world’s car makers; the epicentre of that industry is, ironically, the place where coronavirus was first identified, Wuhan. 

Nalden says supply to New Zealand remains good and the stock count here is healthy.

“We've had a month without any selling, so naturally stock is higher than usual.”

Added Hodge: “Mazda has good stocks of new vehicles that should last us at least three months. But going forward, it is obvious the vehicle supply pipeline will be disrupted.”

Longer term, Nalden anticipates the situation in respect to ‘indent’ models – the industry parlance for variants of such low volume they are secured through placing customer orders at the factory - and also for supply in the medium term could yet become less clear. 

“While our factories in Japan and Thailand are still operational, each factory is running less staff and reduced shifts (for social distancing) and consequently outputs are lower.

“Also, given each country around the world is at different stages with the pandemic, component supply is less assured than normal.”

On top of this, the shipping lines are altering schedules, as volumes have changed markedly for all automotive brands.

This report includes additional reporting by Rob Maetzig