First look: BT-50 noses into view

A more conformist nose treatment suggests we’re in for a sharper-looking BT-50.

this all mazda wants to show us of the new bt-50 … for now.

this all mazda wants to show us of the new bt-50 … for now.

‘SOMETHING huge is on the horizon … 

So goes the wording accompanying a official image out of Mazda of the next-generation BT-50, a shadowy teaser released ahead of the all-new ute’s global reveal at 1pm NZST next Wednesday.

What can we make of the side profile shot? Quite a lot, really. The 2020 model is, of course, now spun from the upcoming Isuzu D-MAX, which has already been fully revealed. On the strength of this single image, it’s clear the next BT-50 not only divorces completely – and thankfully so – from the duck-billed styling of the outgoing vehicle, but it also separates quite distinctly from the new donor.

So when can we see it? Good question that. Actually, it should be ‘them’.

If not for Covid-19, the D-Max would have been first off the rank, the makers’ deal giving Isuzu a sales head start of several months.

The local distributor’s plan was to have a new D-Max at the national Feildays in Hamilton that should have opened next week. All off now, of course.

The giant rural extravaganza has become a digital event for next month and, in any event, the impact of coronavirus on global carmaking has also delayed the utes, which source from Thailand. So, now there’s talk of the D-Max coming in September and then BT-50 … some time after. But before Christmas. 

The teaser image seems to indicates the new BT-50 will emerge first in volume-selling dual-cab four-wheel-drive ute form, with single-cab and extra-cab versions likely to follow.

Fair to assume the ‘something big’ promotional line doesn’t just reference the newcomer’s size, which in doublecab format comes to a length of 5265mm, 1870mm wide and 1790mm height.

The new Isuzu D-Max, which is reportedly delayed, is the basis for the new BT-50. The old one, below, was twinned with the Ford Ranger … under the skin, at least.

The new Isuzu D-Max, which is reportedly delayed, is the basis for the new BT-50. The old one, below, was twinned with the Ford Ranger … under the skin, at least.

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Mazda NZ would clearly benefit from achieving a step up in volume as well. It’s been feeling pretty much nothing but pain from the outgoing model, which launched in 2011. Such a cruel blow, given it was a sister ship – under the skin at least – to the Ford Ranger which has been a huge success, the country’s best-selling ute. Not so the BT-50.

The partnership with Isuzu means a new start under the bonnet, with Mazda expected to pick up the D-Max’s 3.0-litre turbodiesel that, in generating 140kW and 450Nm, generates seven kiloWatts less power and 20Nm less torque than the Ford-supplied 3.2-litre five-cylinder turbodiesel in the current model.

Six-speed manual and automatics will be on offer. The four-wheel-drive system will include a two-speed transfer case and a rear locking diff. It also formats in rear-drive.

The Isuzu and Mazda are expected to share include a 3500kg braked towing capacity and 800mm water fording ability. D-Max’s approximate 1890kg kerb weight and a maximum 1024kg payload would also conceivably carry over.

Autonomous emergency braking is set to feature among driver-assist systems and it achieves an infotainment system with 9.0-inch colour touch-screen and Apple CarPlay and Android Auto connectivity. How much effort Mazda has put into revising the D-Max fascia, pictured, will become clear next week.

The high level trim will deliver leather seat trim, dual-zone climate control, keyless entry/start and a digital speedo.

a big touchscreen is a feature of the new D-Max fascia. Ditto for the mazda?

a big touchscreen is a feature of the new D-Max fascia. Ditto for the mazda?

High-speed spin cycle

Coupes, sedans, station wagons and sports cars … even a pick-up truck and a bus, plus multiple concepts and a fair few race cars. The power of smooth and high-revving Mazda rotaries has spread far.

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NO consideration of the 100-year history of Mazda would be complete without celebrating this Hiroshima brand’s convention-defying development and success with the rotary engine.

From the launch of the 1967 Mazda Cosmo to the end of RX-8 production in 2012, Mazda produced just shy of two million rotary production cars.

Yet, arguably it was the rotary engine’s success in competition that made it and the Mazda brand famous and helped to sell those production models.

From Mazda’s very first efforts in international motorsport with the Cosmo in 1968, the rotary engine’s lightweight, small size, power and fast revving nature have made it perfect for competition. In the early 1970s the Mazda RX-3 was raced in championships around the globe, while the first-generation RX-7 took this to a new level winning championships on four continents.

the Cosmo was Mazda’s first production rotary car, produced in 1967 and based on this 1963 concept revealed at the 1963 Tokyo motor show. Seven years on, Mazda wheeled out the somewhat more adventurous RX500, seen below at its unveiling and now a mu…

the Cosmo was Mazda’s first production rotary car, produced in 1967 and based on this 1963 concept revealed at the 1963 Tokyo motor show. Seven years on, Mazda wheeled out the somewhat more adventurous RX500, seen below at its unveiling and now a museum piece, taken to the Mazda’dedicated 2014 Goodwood Festival of Speed.

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Most famously, in 1991 the Mazda 787B of Johnny Herbert, Volker Weidler and Bertrand Gachot won the Le Mans 24 Hours – making Mazda the first Japanese brand to do so. 

However, it wasn’t just four decades of production cars and motorsport success that made the rotary famous.

Mazda’s hallmark engine also appeared in a host of concept cars, so in Mazda’s centenary year we take a look at some of the most radical and advanced rotary powered and inspired concept cars, starting with the prototype rotary sports car driven to the 1963 Tokyo Motor Show by the father of Mazda’s rotary engine, Kenichi Yamamoto. 

Strictly a test prototype rather than a pure concept car, it led to the production of 60 Cosmo test mules in 1965, followed by the first production Cosmo sports cars in 1967. Subtly different from later production Cosmos, the 1963 802 prototypes were the first chapter Mazda’s rotary success story.

Similarly, the Bertone-designed Mazda RX-87 concept of 1967 was almost identical to the beautiful 1969 R130 Luce Coupe production car it previewed and likewise the 1967 RX-85 concept became the 1968 Mazda R100 coupe. 

1967 brought the RX-87 design study

1967 brought the RX-87 design study

Revealed at the 1970 Tokyo Motor Show, the next rotary concept car was unlike anything seen before, a pure futuristic design it was a showcase for safety technology and looked like a car from a different planet to the Cosmo, Luce and R100 rotary production cars on sale at the time.

The Mazda RX-500 was a wedge shaped mid-engined, rear wheel drive sports car with forward opening butterfly swing doors. Promoted as a road safety test bed, it had multicoloured rear strip lights at the rear that indicated whether the car was speeding up, cruising or slowing down by changing colour. 

The 10A 184kW rotary engine was accessed by gullwing opening engine covers. Painted orange with no headlights for its show debut it was later repainted silver, today the RX-500 concept still draws attention at the Hiroshima City Transport Museum. It also starred on the Cartier Style De Luxe lawn at the 2014 Goodwood Festival of Speed.

Even more radical than the RX-500, the 1983 Mazda Le Mans Prototype was penned by maverick designer Luigi Colani, who was famous for his radical ‘biodynamic’ forms.

the Colani car never went beyond conceptual stage, but was fast. very fast.

the Colani car never went beyond conceptual stage, but was fast. very fast.

While it never went beyond conceptual stage, the 1983 Le Mans Prototype was an extreme wing car that was conceived to be powered by an over 600kW four-rotor engine and could have been capable of 380kmh if it had become a reality. 

The one-off theme continued with the 1985 Mazda MX-03, which unlike the Colani Le Mans Prototype, was a fully working concept. Powered by a triple rotor 232kW engine, this low-slung coupe was pure futuristic exuberance, with a cabin that featured an aircraft style yoke rather than a wheel, plus digital displays and a head-up display, its technology tally also including four-wheel steering and all-wheel drive, while the long low body delivered an aerodynamic Cd figure of just 0.25. 

Completely different from the MX-03, the MX-04 concept was a front-engine rear-wheel drive sports car chassis that had removable fibreglass panels, but not just one, but two different sets, allowing the car to switch from a glass dome roofed coupe to a beach buggy style open sided roadster. Powered by a rotary engine this barmy shape-shifting sports car was shown at the 1987 Tokyo Motor Show and while it was never a serious contender for production, by then Mazda was already developing the MX-5, and just two-years later, the most famous non-rotary Mazda sports car arrived. 

No prizes for guessing what the RX-01 concept was a pointer to.

No prizes for guessing what the RX-01 concept was a pointer to.

By the 1990s, Mazda’s rotary engine had scored its biggest achievement with victory in the Le Mans 24 Hours, but revealed at the 1995 Tokyo Motor Show, the Mazda RX-01 previewed the next-generation of rotary road cars. A fully drivable concept It featured what would go on to be the Renesis engine that powered the last production rotary to date – the RX-8. With a 2+2 seat layout, some of the RX-01’s styling cues also hinted to the RX-8, which was revealed in 2003. 

Highlighting the flexibility of Mazda’s rotary engine technology, between 2005 and 2007 Mazda produced duel-fuel hydrogen/petrol powered rotary prototype testbed Mazda RX-8s and Mazda5s, which were leased to companies in Japan and Norway.

Highlighting the suitability of rotary engines for use with hydrogen, the RX-8 RE Hydrogen was the fifth Mazda rotary to be powered by hydrogen after earlier HR-X, HR-X2, MX-5 and 626 rotary powered concepts and prototypes. Further highlighting Mazda’s environmental development, the 2007 Mazda5 RE Hydrogen was a plug-in hybrid, while the 2013 Mazda2 EV prototype featured a tiny 330cc 22kW single-rotor range-extender engine. Today, Mazda is committed to the development of a rotary range-extender version of the forthcoming Mazda MX-30. 

Mazda recognised the potentials of the rotary engine with hydrogen, so built a wide variety of development cars, based on current production fare, plus some adventurous concepts, such as 1991’s HR-X concept.

Mazda recognised the potentials of the rotary engine with hydrogen, so built a wide variety of development cars, based on current production fare, plus some adventurous concepts, such as 1991’s HR-X concept.

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However, other 21st century rotary concepts focused very much on the performance elements of the rotary engine: revealed at the 2008 Detroit Motor Show, the stunning Mazda Furai was built on the chassis of a Courage C65 LMP2 race car and its 331kW triple-rotor engine was powered by ethanol fuel. A fully working race car-based concept, it was developed by Mazda North America and was tested at several US and European tracks. Named Furai meaning ‘sound of wind’, this racy concept was the fifth and last of the ‘Nagare’ line of concept cars from Mazda. 

The fourth car in this lineage also featured a rotary: unveiled in 2007, the Mazda Taiki concept was a dramatically aerodynamically optimised coupe with a tapered teardrop shaped body that scooped inside the covered rear wheels. Inspired by flowing robes its sleek body had a drag coefficient of just 0.25 and it was arguably the most radical looking of the ‘Nagare’ concept cars. With butterfly doors and a darkened glasshouse it was a pure concept fantasy but was conceived to be powered by the same Renesis engine as the RX-8. 

The Furai (above) and Taiki (below) concepts were the last and most alluring of the Nagare line if concepts.

The Furai (above) and Taiki (below) concepts were the last and most alluring of the Nagare line if concepts.

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Mazda’s Le Mans heritage with the rotary engine came to the fore again in 2014 with the reveal of the Mazda LM55 Vision Gran Turismo virtual concept car. A digitally rendered concept for the Gran Turismo computer game, this low-slung Le Mans style prototype was named after the race number worn by the winning 787B at Le Mans in 1991. Bringing the performance and sound of the rotary engine to a whole new generation virtually in the gaming world, the LM55 Vision came to life as a full-size show car at the 2015 Goodwood Festival of Speed where it proudly sat atop Mazda’s Kodo design inspired central feature sculpture alongside the Mazda 787B.

However, it was later in 2015 at the Tokyo Motor Show that Mazda revealed what is arguably the most beautiful concept car conceived for a rotary engine: the RX-Vision.

Mazda’s vision of the perfect front-engine, rear-wheel drive sports car and the ultimate expression of Kodo design, the RX-Vision’s stunning proportions and delicate surfacing saw it named the ‘Most Beautiful Concept Car of the Year’ at the 31st Festival Automobile International, while it also made an appearance at the exclusive Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Esta in 2016. Under the long bonnet of the RX-Vision, Mazda’s designers envisaged that this sports car would be powered by a next-generation of rotary engine called Skyactiv-R. 

anyone can drive the RX-Vision GT3 … providing they have a gaming console.

anyone can drive the RX-Vision GT3 … providing they have a gaming console.

Taking this imagination, a step further and bringing the RX-Vision to life in the virtual world, Mazda’s designers created the RX-Vision GT3. Just as the LM55 came to life in the virtual world in 2014, the RX-Vision GT3 was added to Gran Turismo Sport on May 22. With its wider front and rear track width and expanded wheel arches, the lower and more purposeful GT3 version features the wings and rear diffuser you’d expect of a virtual racer. And rotary fans in the digital world get to enjoy the next-generation four-rotor 420kW Skyactiv-R engine. 

Today, 57 years after the first Cosmo prototype previewed Mazda’s debut rotary sports car, the rotary engine lives on in the hearts and minds of Mazda’s engineers as the technology is explored for its part in Mazda’s multi-solution approach to ever more efficient cars, including range-extender applications. Additionally, concept cars like the RX-Vision influence the look and styling of Mazda’s current range, while the RX-Vision GT3 brings the rotary to life in the virtual world. 

 

Taycan: Faster than a 911, cheaper too

Pricing and spec of the first pure-electric Porsche you can buy has been released.

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WHAT catch to a Porsche everyone will swoon over that outperforms the classic 911 and costs $20,000 less?

None at all assuming you’re also committed to the way of the future and are happy to drive a car relying purely on electricity.

Porsche has today released New Zealand market pricing and specifications for the Taycan, the brand’s first pure-electric car, ahead of fuller availability, expected to occur from the fourth quarter, though a small fleet of demonstrators are now touring Porsche centres (their word for ‘dealership).

The Taycan 4S, pricing from $203,900, the Taycan Turbo starting at $289,900 and the Taycan Turbo S kicking off from $366,900 means the entry edition represents handily below the cheapest 911, a $223,200 wallet hit, and will outgun it by 0.2 seconds in the 0-100kmh sprint, which the 4S achieves in a claimed 4 seconds flat. 

The Taycan 4S is powered by a 79.2kWh Performance Battery producing an output of 320kW/640Nm, and offering up-to 390kW on overboost. It provides a claimed 365 kilometres of range and is capable of a top speed of 250kmh. 

The 93.4kWh Performance Plus battery can also be optioned on the 4S (pricing yet to be announced), offering an additional 40kW and 10Nm in normal driving conditions, but stretching to a maximum of 420kW on overboost. Claimed driving range is 414km.

The middle-of-the-range Porsche Taycan Turbo achieves a 0-100 time of just 3.2 seconds from 460kW, and up-to 500kW on overboost, A range of 420km when the battery is fully charged is claimed, also a top speed of 260kmh.

The flagship Taycan Turbo S can generate up to 560 kW of overboost power in combination with Launch Control. Zero to 100 falls to 2.8s and has a range of 405 km when the battery is fully charged.

The Taycan is the first electric vehicle to utilise an 800 volt system, with every other electric vehicle having a 400 volt system. Not only does this allow the driver greater access to the performance available from the battery, but Porsche claims this will also help to improve recharging times.

All NZ-delivered Taycans come with a Mode 3 charging cable for use at AC public charging stations, while a 150kW on-board DC charger is standard for 400 volt charging stations.

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New Zealand models gain a range of standard equipment in addition to worldwide standard specifications. 

Surround view, comfort access, lane change assist, lane keeping assist, adaptive cruise control, front seat ventilation, steering wheel heating, rear side airbags, electrically folding exterior mirrors, digital radio and privacy glazing are standard.

Additional equipment for the Taycan 4S includes 20-inch ‘Sport Aero’ wheels, metallic paint, front seat heating, 14-way electric comfort seats, Auto-dimming mirrors as well as the BOSE Surround Sound system.

Taycan Turbo and Taycan Turbo S gain driving dynamic and comfort features like Porsche Dynamic Chassis Control (PDCC) Sport, four-zone Advanced Climate Control and ambient lighting.

 

Express delivery from France

Mitsubishi’s new van is en route from Europe … because it’s a Renault Trafic. But not in every sense.

Mitsubishi Express will arrive in a standard wheelbase format, whereas donor Renault Trafic (below) also avails in a long wheelbase format.

Mitsubishi Express will arrive in a standard wheelbase format, whereas donor Renault Trafic (below) also avails in a long wheelbase format.

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CONJECTURE the Mitsubishi Express van soon on sale here is a Renault Trafic clone in all but name and badging doesn’t bear out.

 The first van Mitsubishi has had since the 1980s’ era L300 was retired seven years ago runs identical engines to those in the French original, and also sources from the same factory in France.

 However, the lines head in different directions in terms of variant count and Renault also offers a lengthened wheelbase alternate to the standard format it and Mitsubishi offer.

 This all unfolds from dissection of information sent out yesterday by the Japanese marque’s distributor.

 The story is incomplete because Mitsubishi Motors New Zealand has yet to release the most crucial single element about the two models it intends to put into showrooms in July: Their price.

 Those stickers won’t be announced for at least another fortnight, the brand’s marketing and communications manager says.

 Reece Congdon says the vehicles have yet to arrive and there’s reluctance to absolutely sign off on the RRPs under consideration until they do.

 “I think it will be before the end of the month … it could be a matter of two weeks or so. There have been some hold-ups due to Covid-19 and we’re just awaiting their arrival.”

 Express will launch in a 3098mm wheelbase form, the first with a 1.6 turbodiesel with a manual transmission and the other with a 2.0-litre turbodiesel and wet dual clutch transmission, also a six-speed.

 Engine outputs are rated as per Renault’s application, so 103kW and 340Nm from the 1.6 and 125kW and 380Nm out of the bigger capacity engine. Optimal economies of 6.2 and 7.3 litres per 100km are suggested and emissions run between 164 and 191 grams per kilometre. The 1.6 is Euro 5 and the 2.0-litre meets Euro 6 d standard.

 Trafic offers in this standard wheelbase form - designated ‘SWB’ – with those drivetrains. But it also has ‘LWB’ editions, with a 3498mm wheelbase, also with those powertrains.

 Mitsubishi has developed an Express in the longer wheelbase format, and it has gone on sale in Australia, with the 2.0-litre drivetrain (that only came to Trafic in NZ in March). But this model has not been chosen for New Zealand. 

Why? “That was an opportunity decision,” explains Congdon. “The volume of van sales in NZ are SWB models so we decided to launch with a SWB range for the time being. Obviously we will review that over time and assess if there is any market demand for a LWB Express.”

Express went on sale across the water last week; there it costs $1070 less than the equivalent Trafic. Even though there are spec and sales offer differences that likely account for this, that placement perhaps gives some idea of what MMNZ will aim to achieve.

The Trafic line-up here starts with 1.6-litres in $41,990 SWB and $43,990 LWB Trader trim. There is also a more fulsomely furnished 1.6 LWB for $50,990.  Above this are 2.0-litre ‘Auto’ variants in the same specification level costs $53,990 and $55,990 

When wheelbase commonality is considered, the models are sister ships in styling, engineering and drivetrains – not to mention performances, economy and load-carrying abilities, the payloads being 1150kg (1.6) and 1116kg.

Yet they don’t wholly replicate for driver features. Express has digital radio, Bluetooth phone (and the same fancy dash-mounted cell phone holder as Trafic) and audio streaming, but absent is Trafic’s 7.0-inch touchscreen, needed run Apple CarPlay and Android Auto and its latest sat nav application.

The automatics in either guise add a rear-view camera with in-mirror display, rain sensing wipers, front fog lights, self-dimming interior mirror and auto headlights, but the Renault steering wheel is a bit fancier, being leather-wrapped.

The safety story is aligned and any embarrassment MMNZ felt back in the day about selling the L300 with poor occupant protection features – the issue that ultimately forced it out of the market – can be put to bed now.

With six airbags, roll over mitigation, stability and traction control, anti-lock braking system and electronic brakeforce distribution (EBD) Express and Trafic are ticking boxes postively.

Yet they could be better. Growing insistence from safety organisations for vans to follow passenger models in taking autonomous emergency braking has yet to influence Renault, so Mitsubishi misses out as well in opportunity to join a club that locally started with Volkswagen Transporter and now includes the Ford Transit and Toyota HiAce. Blind spot detection and driver fatigue monitoring are also absent.

More differences? Aside from having a different grille and bonnet design, the Express has halogen headlights instead of the newer LED units Renault introduced with a 2020 update.

The Express’ standard features include a three-seat interior and driver’s seat with armrest, height and lumbar adjustment, fabric seat trim, rubber flooring and urethane steering wheel, left and right sliding doors, 180-degree rear barn doors, cruise control with speed limiter, manual air conditioning control, power mirrors, remote central locking and keyless entry.

The models have unpainted bumpers, 16-inch steel wheels rear park sensors and a rear step bumper. A step-through interior (from cabin to cargo bay) is also set as the standard layout.

Standard driver deliveries across both Express and Trafic include cruise control with speed limiter, stop and start (with manual off switch), and hill start assist. Also standard are reversing sensor and a ‘dead angle’ (wide view) vision with a mirror in the passenger sun visor.

Space and load capacities - a generous 5.2 cubic metres and up to 1150kg payload – are mirrored.

In Australia the models have different warranty structures (advantage Mitsubishi over there) and servicing conditions (advantage Renault). Whether that will also be the case here has yet to be explained. 

MMNZ is certainly keen to see a replacement for L300, which sold 38,806 units from 1980 to 2015, and is also noting that the Express stands as the first product it has offered that comes from another Alliance member brand.

Congdon says the Express’s appeal will be “function and flexibility.”

“Dual sliding doors and a number of accessories ensure easy configuration of the Express van for different business requirements. We believe these practical features – along with a strong value proposition – will attract transport operators and delivery drivers back to Mitsubishi.”

And why not keep the L300 badge?Good question, Congdon says. " It was agreed the van would share the same name across both markets in Oceania. Obviously the Express badge has a long history in Australia so we settled on that.”

  

Richer outfitted Fortuner coming

Engine upgrades, improved towing capacity and more equipment for Toyota’s ‘other’ medium SUV.

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THE diesel ‘alternate’ to the petrol-wed Highlander is about to be upgraded for New Zealander followers 

Revisions to the Fortuner, available here since 2015, largely follow those just announced for the HiLux.

The changes are obvious when spotted – though sighting a Fortuner has tended to be a challenge. With 54 registered in its year of launch, in 2015, 534 in 2106 – its full year – when 87 were rentals, 440 (25 rental) in 2017, 465 (one rental) in 2018 and 816 (of which 542 were rental) last year, plus 20 this year to date, it’s been a quiet achiever for Toyota New Zealand.

No matter. The Palmerston North-based distributor is sticking by its competitor to the Mitsubishi Pajero Sport, Ford Everest and soon-to-go Holden Trailblazer and Isuzu MU-X.

Moreover, it is likely renew marketing focus on Fortuner because the model is just about to enter the market in an updated form that delivers a more sophisticated look, improved performance and better tech.

The detail will sound familiar, because unsurprisingly it’s pretty much the same stuff that will come to the 2021 HiLux, revealed last week.

TNZ could have, in fact, chosen to discuss Fortuner concurrently with the HiLux presentation, but chose to keep them separate to keep the information flow tidier. So Fortuner’s story was held over to this week.

So, what’s in store? The current two model grades, GXL and Limited, seem set to continue to be offered and the mid-life update will mirror most of the changes made to the HiLux, including its upgraded 2.8-litre four-cylinder turbo-diesel.

Pricing and full spec are unlikely to come with this week’s announcement; in all probability, TNZ will follow normal process and hold these details until much closer to launch, which will surely tie to when HiLux appears.

On that matter, TNZ suggests “late year.” Surely we won’t be far behind Australia, which is taking both ute and wagon in August? Presently Fortuner GXL is a $55,490 ask and Limited sites $3000 above that.

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Anyway, the images and some detail is already out, thanks to our neighbour.

Access to their press material suggests that as well as the sophisticated new exterior design, characterised by its sleek multi-LED headlight clusters, equipment levels have increased with the fitment of Apple CarPlay and Android Auto (wired, not wireless) as part of a significant improvement to the infotainment system, which also takes a new touch screen, enlarged to eight inches (so, up one inch).

This is as much as Toyota wants to say about the interior, but suggestion is that it will get a fancier cabin fit-out than the updated HiLux ute.

The engine upgrade is significant. Matched as standard to an automatic transmission, the tweaked engine pumps out significantly more power and torque – up from 130kW/450Nm to 150kW/500Nm – thanks to “new and uprated components”.

Fuel consumption has also been reduced courtesy of improved cooling, says Toyota, which claims a 17 percent efficiency increase in the urban/city cycle, which will see combined consumption reduce from the current 8.6L/100km.

The boost in power also sees the Toyota Fortuner’s towing capacity increase from 2800kg to 3100kg, and is likely to be accompanied by a fix for the diesel particulate filter problem .

The sales pitch? Well, it used to be that TNZ marketed Fortuner as a a "medium rugged" SUV, pitching it as a less expensive alternative to the Land Cruiser Prado (also "medium rugged") or a more hard-core wagon than the passenger-car-based Highlander crossover, which it described as "medium soft". There’s no logical reason to divest from that strategy, not least given that Highlander from next year will drop its V6 in favour of a smaller capacity four-cylinder petrol with hybrid assist.

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Prius no hit but still a stayer

Latest sales returns remind Kiwi love for hybrids is cemented .. except when it comes to the car that introduced the world to this tech. The Prius’s battery charge is all but depleted.

No question about the rav4 hybrid … Toyota’s most popular model in may, when the market was down overall, is still subject to a waiting list.

No question about the rav4 hybrid … Toyota’s most popular model in may, when the market was down overall, is still subject to a waiting list.

IS time just about up for the Toyota Prius?

Actually, it’s a not a new question. This poser has been relevant since at least 2015.

That’s really the first year when it became obvious that the hatchback that 25 years ago introduced motorists to the bright new world of electrified motoring was not doing at all well, at least in New Zealand-new form.

Which might seem crazy because, of course, as much as Prius appreciation has been falling away, our hybrid penetration has been ramping up, and quite considerably. And when it comes to favourite battery-assisted products, they’re all from the same brand: Toyota.

So, really, as much as the Prius has been on losing streak, the fact is that Toyota New Zealand has been winning. Really, then, the original hybrid car from Japan’s No.1 looks to be a victim of its own success. It has simply spawned development  of so many other Toyota hybrids at its own expense..

New Zealand new vehicle registration figures for May show that just two Prius and 10 of the smaller Prius Cs were sold during the month, way down on sales achieved by other Toyota hybrids – 413 RAV4s, 127 Corollas, 85 C-HRs, and 20 Camrys.

And year-to-date hybrid registration figures make just as depressing reading for the model. They show just 96 Prius and Prius C have been sold so far in 2020. Compare that to 1239 RAV4s, 431 Corollas, 246 C-HRs and 152 Camrys. Not only that, but various ‘H’ versions offered by Toyota’s luxury cousin Lexus have achieve a combined total of 187 registrations so far this year.

current prius has struggled since launch in 2016 and its predecessor was a falling star, too.

current prius has struggled since launch in 2016 and its predecessor was a falling star, too.

How does that compare to back in 2015 and prior? Well, it was a slightly different structure then, when Prius was a bigger family, including the V people carrier then. By chance, MotoringNZ owner Richard Bosselman happened to have written  ‘a what chance for Prius?’ story back in 2016, in which the data was presented.

According to the NZTA information cache from that period, in 2015 the C achieved 367 sales – whereas Prius hatch took just 30 (and the V 11). The preceding year was stronger for the hatch, with 121 units (against 287 C and 3 V), 549 in 2013 (no count for C, 55 for V) and 473 in 2012, a period when only the hatch was available. The was all collated because Toyota at that time was about to launch not only the fourth generation (aka ‘4G’) hatch we have now but also a car that seemed to do all Prius could, but in more acceptable form: Corolla hybrid. And, yet, five years on, the Corolla and Prius co-exist still. Who’d have picked that scenario?

Given all latest statistics continue to add up to a sad time for the iconic Prius, which earlier in its career was so new-age that it was the green vehicle of choice for everyone from Hollywood movie stars to politicians., the question obviously still seems reasonable. But TNZ is steadfastly true.

The hatch’s story began back in the early 1990s when Toyota Motor Corporation decided to attempt to develop a car that would have up to twice the fuel economy of its big-selling Corolla. The project culminated in the the brand’s first petrol-electric hybrid, a prototype Prius unveiled at the 1995 Tokyo Motor Show – the name, appropriately, a Latin word for “first” or “to go before”.

The model sure was a first.  With its Hybrid Synergy Drive system and battery pack that combined forces with a conventional petrol engine to achieve vastly improved fuel economy, it opened the way for electrified motoring well before fully electric motoring could begin to become economically possible.

The first-generation Prius, a four-door sedan, was launched in Japan in 1997. Toyota New Zealand introduced the second-generation model, a slightly geeky-looking five-door hatch, in 2003. Since then close to 6000 of them have been sold new here, their owners appreciating the superior fuel economy and reduced exhaust emissions that come from combining the self-charging electric motor and petrol engine.

arrival of Corolla in hybrid format could have been the end of Prius … but it wasn’t.

arrival of Corolla in hybrid format could have been the end of Prius … but it wasn’t.

But now it seems the Prius’ job is done, leaving it up to more conventional-looking Toyota models to further the career of the hybrid passenger vehicle.

Those models – RAV4, Corolla, C-HR and Camry – are doing very well, too. Last month the hybrids accounted for 77.4 percent of all RAV4 sales, 68.6 percent of Corolla, 70.2 percent of C-HR and a remarkable 90.2 percent of all Camry sales.

The overall Toyota performance led the way in a stellar month for hybrids,  which saw them jump from around 4.3 percent of all new vehicle registrations in the opening four months of the year, to 13.3 percent in May. Compare that with the penetration achieved by electric vehicles – the models that mains-replenish – which was 0.94 percent for plug-in hybrids and 1.07 percent for full electrics.

While other hybrid product such as the Kia Niro and Hyundai Ioniq, have contributed to all of this, by far the biggest contribution has been from the Toyotas. 

But obviously the Prius, the model that started it all for hybrids, hasn’t figured much at all in this success. So what does this mean for the future of the car? Will it be retired?

Internationally, one opinion among the international media is that the Prius name is too iconic to be completely retired, so it may be saved by TMC for use on a future battery electric vehicle.

TNZ chief operating officer Neeraj Lala says he hasn’t heard any official word relating to the future of Prius.  That doesn’t worry him; he’s happy to see the model continue to remain on sale in New Zealand for those who want it – and he reminds that it is very popular as a taxi.

“More to the point is that Prius is the Toyota model that introduced hybrid motoring to New Zealand, and in that regard it has been a success,” he says.

“Look where Toyota is now. We have hybrid versions of almost all our passenger vehicles, and we will soon be adding to that – hybrid versions of the new Yaris and Yaris Cross, the Highlander larger SUV, and in around 18 months we’ll also get a hybrid version of the Hilux ute.”

CH-R in hybrid form would seem to provision a better kind of Prius … that it is also tracking strongly suggests the market recognises this.

CH-R in hybrid form would seem to provision a better kind of Prius … that it is also tracking strongly suggests the market recognises this.

 

Loan scheme gives new life to ghosts

Recipients of Highlanders loaned by Toyota as a small business assistance won’t need to run them in. That’s been well and truly taken care of.

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 LOANING cars to struggling businesses potentially helps the country’s biggest brand ease a headache Covid-19 might hardly improve.

Toyota New Zealand’s intent to provision 100 Highlander sports utility vehicles to small businesses nationwide for a year’s free usage comes with a caveat it has been happy to discuss. To a point.

Though current models, small print with the Small Business Driver package clearly relates the 3.5-litre V6 seven-seaters in mid-level GXL trim are not as might be imagined: Brand-new examples of this $58,490 car.

What’s on offer is stock first registered in 2018 and likely to have 30,000km to 45,000km on the clock, apparently accrued from toting tourists. 

Plucked from the in-house Signature Class used vehicle processing programme, the Highlanders are from what is perceived within the broader industry to be a massive count of vehicles laid up in what could be called TNZ’s ‘ghost fleet’.

Which is? A raft of mainly ex-rentals the market leader has acquired through buy-back agreements far less common now and then parked up for months … perhaps years.

This the result of TNZ having been unable to push them through used car channels en mass, for fear of causing a glut that might collapse used car prices. 

Instead, they sit inactive in what has been derisively called, by rival brands, a ‘rental swamp’. Holding yards and warehouses. Some there for so long that – according to talk - registrations have retired, batteries depleted and tyres squared.

Industry lore relates enough vehicles are in a limbo to likely be costing the brand many thousands of dollars annually in upkeep and storage fees. Can that be true? 

TNZ has been asked on numerous occasions, including during compilation of today’s story, to offer clarification. Every request has been met the same way. With silence.

As much as chief executive officer Neeraj Lala was happy to share his enthusiasm about the loan scheme – which is, beyond doubt, a very generous opportunity – he declined to deal with a host of follow-up questions relating to the cars’ provenance and the state and size of the stockpile. 

The finer details of what’s on offer currently were passed on by a potential applicant who, while a little surprised by the cars’ suggested histories, was not particularly perturbed.

“A free car is a very generous offer, no argument. As it turns out, I don’t qualify because another of the stipulations is that you have to be a recipient of the Government’s wage subsidy, but it’s a good concept.”

An industry involver spoken to subsequently also thought the idea was interesting.

“It’s a rental swamp and the swamp needs draining ... this is what has to be done.

“They’re probably not making anything on it. But it at least gets some vehicles back on the roads and free of storage fees that, while quite cheap on a per day per car basis, soon adds up to a chunk of change when you’re talking big counts for long term.” 

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‘Buy-back’ was said to be a core ingredient of when Toyota basically sought to corner the national fleet business, which some years accounts for up to 80 percent of new car sales. 

Since 2018 TNZ has sought to swing its focus back to private buyers with its Drive Happy programme that aims for fair pricing and says it has detuned the intensity and scale of its fleet push.

Even so, it still agrees to discount to large-scale purchasers and, as a glance around any airport carpark (at least pre-Covid) would confirm that, while other brands have come back into hirer circles, there are still a lot of Corollas, Highlanders and RAV4s behind those rental placards.

And 2018 appears to have been the last big year, with industry statistics showing 1660 Highlanders having gone into rental, whereas just 179 followed last year. The majority were GXL variants. 

Now, of course, there’s coronavirus, which has certainly dented the car trade and is doing those brands supplying rental providers no favours.

Distributors have been pressured to take back stock – often in as-new condition - now standing idle and waive delivery of incoming product.

That’s a big ask: June has historically been a big month for rental car fleet replenishment to cope with the tide of winter tourists. TNZ indicated recently it is challenged by this; it doesn’t want to upset core corporate clients, but neither can it afford to assume responsibility for pre-agreed consignments.

With the Highlanders, it’s not quite a matter of first in, first served: Only small businesses with fewer than 20 employees are eligible and applicants are vetted by a selection panel.

The scheme has been created in conjunction with MediaWorks, and includes a share of $1 million of advertising with the media company for successful applicants. 

Those interested in applying have until 11.59pm on June 9 to apply. 

Perhaps, at the end of the exercise, users might receive tasty opportunity to purchase the vehicles outright.

Of course, they have to weigh up the deal against the fuel costs. The V6’s taste for petrol is a core reason why the next-generation Highlander, coming next year, will only be offered as a four-cylinder hybrid.

 

 

Revised Focus now down to three choices

Second time a charm – that’s Ford NZ’s hope for the Focus, having radically revised and slimmed the line up.

New ST-Line X replaces the ST-Line … and costs $6000 more.

New ST-Line X replaces the ST-Line … and costs $6000 more.

TWO trim levels, an engine and a body shape have been axed while two remaining mainstream models have been enhanced yet also rendered more expensive.

That’s the sum total of a sweeping change just announced for the Ford Focus as it represents in New Zealand, the brand acknowledging that it has revised a line-up launched just two years ago – and literally lifted a year ago, when adding the Active – to better attune to what has so far been disturbingly indifferent customer taste.

“These are the cars that are most popular with customers – we’re taking out the complexity,” is how Ford communications spokesman Tom Clancy describes the rationale driving the new lineup, which hits in August.

From now on, there will be just three Focus models, all hatchbacks with eight-speed automatic transmissions, one in the elevated Active format that arrived last October and delivers a crossover look but in a lightweight manner – so, front rather than four-wheel-drive.

The new Active, at $37,990, will cost $1000 more than its predecessor. The ST-Line, which had been the same price as Active was, is now outfitted more richly, to an ‘X’ specification. But the price has gone up accordingly, by a whopping $6000.

Above them is the new ST performance model that is a $59,990 proposition. Introduced just weeks ago, it has remarkably also been improved by the latest round of revisions.

So what’s gone? That’ll be the Trend and Titanium hatches, which ran with the 134kW and 240Nm three-cylinder 1.5 petrol that continues on in Active and ST Line X, and the Trend wagon, which ran with a 110kW/370Nm 2.0-turbodiesel.

Focus Active, which joined the local family last year, now becomes the entry choice.

Focus Active, which joined the local family last year, now becomes the entry choice.

Ford NZ aspiration to wean off reliance on the Ranger utility – by far and away its biggest monthly seller for the past three years - has been pinned on its passenger, crossover and sports utility models but that strategy has yet to realise positively.

The Focus has at times hardly figured in sales results – ironically a particularly poor period was the end of last year, when it won a newspaper group’s competition.

Clancy says there is high confidence, nonetheless, that the car will deliver better performance now that it is presented in what Ford NZ describes as “three clearly defined choices.”

Local managing director Simon Rutherford, has expressed particular confidence in the ST-Line X, saying it even better represents the Focus’s driver-oriented feel than its predecessor. 

The update delivers a technology spruce-up, with introduction of FordPass Connect, an embedded modem which Ford says brings even greater accessibility, convenience and capability, so long as an owner’s cellphone is compatible. Features include ability to remotely lock and unlock the vehicle plus ability to check fuel level, tyre pressures, oil life and check recent service history, owners’ manual. It also enables contact with a ‘Ford Guide’, who can assist – by phone or email – with any queries about connected services and hooks into services including access to roadside assistance.

The Focus ST-Line X and the Focus ST will be upgraded to the 12.3-inch fully-configurable digital instrument cluster allowing the driver to personalise and prioritise display of information including driver assistance technology and sat-nav notifications.   

All models have Ford’s SYNC 3 system, which includes Apple CarPlay/Android Auto smartphone compatibility, with wireless smartphone charging.

The mainstream editions take LED headlights and have different Daytime Running Lights to present a distinct identity.

What is being called the ‘2020.75’ range also adopts revised rear suspension, the benefits coming in sharper handling and more comfortable, quieter ride.

And the ST doesn’t miss out. The 2020.75 model picks up a 10-speaker B&O audio system and 12.3-inch full TFT/LCD colour instrument cluster screen.

Just-arrived Focus ST also achieves a specification enhancement.

Just-arrived Focus ST also achieves a specification enhancement.

 

 

Future TT has promise, current has done its dash

The TT as we’ve known it is now a memory – the one that might be next is an exciting thought for Audi NZ.

Still hankering for a TT? Sorry, this one has done its dash in NZ.

Still hankering for a TT? Sorry, this one has done its dash in NZ.

LAST chance to see has already gone – but, assuredly, if the TT returns in the form it is predicted to adopt, as an electric car, the local distributor will be interested.

This today as Audi New Zealand has confirmed it has bypassed opportunity to resume selling the TT, preferring instead to focus on the new-generation RSQ3 models set to release imminently in Sportback and continued hatchback formats. 

General manager Dean Sheed says it was a tough call to determine to keep the car that when released originally in 1998, was a global styling bombshell.

But fact is that TT volume was down to a trickle when the car was withdrawn from global production last year, a victim of Volkswagen Group having been defeated in its bid to get all its products homologated in time to meet a rigorous World new Worldwide Harmonised Light Vehicle Test Procedure emissions deadline.

Withdrawing certain models was the only option; cars lacking WLTP compliance could not be sold anyway (in Europe at least) and the maker would have faced hefty fines as well.

That issue has now been resolved for the TT, which has been reissued in a smartened format, headed again by a sharp-looking RS flagship, that in all likelihood will present as the final run for the car in a fossil-fuelled format.

And then? Well, it’s really not shock-horror news any more that there’s supposedly a new TT on the drawing board set to be energised in a totally different, future-ready way.

five cylinder fun can still be had … in the new RSQ3

five cylinder fun can still be had … in the new RSQ3

Audi – and the wider car world of course – is going all-in on electric. And future E-tron models won’t restrict to the sports utility range we presently see. 

Talk about the successor to the TT we have now being re-energised into a fully electric sports weapon for its fourth-generation dates back to May of 2019, when then Audi boss Bram Schot announced that “in a few years, we will replace the TT with a new emotive model in the same price range … with an electric car.”

Just recently, a new report claims the car will ride on the Volkswagen Group’s MEB platform that debuted last year with the ID.3. The final shape is still under wraps and there’s even been talk that it could re-emerge in an SUV-ish format rather than as it is now.

Sheed was cautious when asked if he knew anything about the e-TT, saying: “I haven’t seen the model you refer to, although it’s been talked about in the media.

“You know our customers and we love performance cars (Audi Sport) and electric powertrains, so naturally I would entertain the concept when it was available – the decision will be the same as today, a hot SUV or a hot sportscar, market size and consumer preference.”

The ‘if’ and ‘when’ of an electric TT will doubtless clarify once Audi gives out some signs about how much longer the current car, with its evocative five-cylinder petrol engine, will live. Potentially it’s not for much longer given this generation shape hit the street in 2014.

Audi’S e-tron family plan is cemented - and an all-electric sports car would seem logical.

Audi’S e-tron family plan is cemented - and an all-electric sports car would seem logical.

It’s also prudent to bear in mind that Audi’s grand plan is to sell one million electrified cars each year by the middle of the next decade, which is quite a lot of electrified cars to sell by 2025.

Of course, that ideal was explained prior to coronavirus, so perhaps the delays and financial walloping the illness has inflicted on the global car trade, and national economies, might slow things down a bit. Yet, at the end of the day, the future will inevitably continue to head away from oil because … well, it’s a finite fuel, remember.

In the here and now, you’d have to think the conventionally powered model would be hardly set to leave the scene quietly.

With 294kW and 480Nm, that 2.5-litre five-cylinder turbocharged engine is a forceful involver; a true celebration of the five-pot fury whose family line runs right back to those original Ur Quattro rally scene changers. The new RS is claimed to accomplish 0-100kmh in 3.7 seconds, which makes it half a second faster in that sprint than the (much more expensive) Porsche 718 Cayman GT4.

Potentially, then, knowing that the ‘final fling’ editions aren’t officially coming here might bolster the residual values of previous RS, which held a recommended retail of $149,500. That car became unavailable around mid-2019.

 

 

Hilux unmasked - new look, more kit, extra grunt

Here it is, the updated Hilux. Would you trade a Supra for it?

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 THEY’RE calling it the most technically-advanced ute ever offered by Toyota – so is that enough for the reinvigorated Hilux, unveiled internationally today, to at last wrest market leadership from its core rival, Ford Ranger?

Toyota New Zealand chief operating officer Neeraj Lala is understandably bullish about the updated variant, whose exact launch timing this year still has yet to be revealed, though Australia has signalled it will start receiving stock in August.

His enthusiasm is such that he has vowed to ditch his current company car, a GR Supra, for an example of the latest truck, which is incoming in four specification levels – Workmate, SR, SR5 and the range topping SR5 Cruiser, the latter available in both 2WD and 4WD and automatic only.


“I believe the performance of this truck is so good, I’ll be swapping out my GR Supra so we can tow our go kart trailer to my son’s weekend races. I can’t wait to see customers return to Hilux with this significant improvement,” says Lala.

Introducing two years after the ute’s last big refresh, the new line will also contain a special launch edition inspired by the recent success of the Hilux Gladiator. Lala says this edition, which he spoke to MotoringNZ about last month, will be “custom-built … for New Zealand customers and conditions.”

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What isn’t mentioned in launch material is the variant some in the national media insisted was coming – though Lala always said it was not: A Gazoo Racing version, supposed with a twin turbo diesel.

So, what’s in store? Well, it’s a restyling exercise, with a bolder, tougher-looking exterior ‘on most variants’. And that  2.8-litre turbo diesel engine offers more power, achieves better cooling, resolves the diesel particulate filter issues and has better fuel efficiency than its predecessor. Ride comfort, towing and equipment levels also improve.

Maximum power has been increased by 20kW to 150kW – so, a 15.3 percent lift -  while peak torque on automatic models has been ramped up to 500Nm, which represents an 11.1 percent/50Nm improvement.

Fuel consumption also improves by up to 11.1 percent while tuned accelerator response delivers greater driver control. The six-speed automatic remains.

Suspension upgrades run to revised shock-absorber tuning, new bushings and improved leaf-spring design. Toyota claims a more comfortable ride, particularly over rough roads and with low loads while maintaining the model’s legendary off-road capabilities.

In 4x4 models with downhill-assist control, an additional traction control feature when using 2WD mode reroutes torque to assist grip in muddy or grassy conditions on worksites.

Towing capacity for automatic 4x4 variants has been upgraded to a maximum of 3500kg to match manual versions. On 4x2 variants, all diesel automatics are now rated at 2800kg, an increase of up to 300kg.

Revised exterior styling is intended to deliver a ‘tough, robust on-road presence’ that is intended to be more in keeping with the global Toyota ute/truck family. Particularly obvious is that large trapezoidal grille that dominates the front design and incorporates more pronounced horizontal elements that deliver a wider, more planted look.

Grille surrounds differ by grade while newly designed headlights are smaller for a "meaner" look and light clusters include LEDs on high grades.

Inside, all models have been upgraded to an 8-inch display screen with enhanced voice recognition and the latest smartphone integration functions, including the adoption at last of Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. Higher grades are also equipped with satellite navigation and digital radio.

A 4.2-inch multi-information display in the instrument binnacle incorporates a digital speed readout, among other new functions. Overseas reports speak of front and rear parking sensors, keyless entry and start, automatic air-conditioning and a nine-speaker JBL stereo system with an 800W eight-channel amplifier, plus accessories such as roller bed covers, a locking tailgate and a 12-volt power supply for the cargo bed.

Full NZ pricing and specifications are expected to be announced closer to launch.


 

Next Santa Fe – a bit of old, a lot of new

The new Santa Fe has finally been revealed and will be here in late 2020.

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NEW body, new interior, new tech and heavily revised underpinnings - the next generation of Hyundai’s crucial big sports utility is certainly a significant departure from the current edition’s design direction.

And, yet, strictly speaking, the ‘gen four’ coming in the final quarter of this year is essentially a revision, the maker admitting it still uses core elements of the current-generation seven-seater. Not that this shouldn’t keep it from winning plenty of attention.

 “We modernised the new Santa Fe with premium features and appealing aesthetics that are sure to add value,” said SangYup Lee, the senior vice president who also heads the brand’s Global Design Centre and is been elevated to becoming the brand’s design spokesman in wake of the recent sudden departure of Luc Donckerwolke as design chief. 

“The bold lines that extend from one side to the other and from front to back give Santa Fe a rugged yet refined look that SUV customers want. Besides, we’ve added numerous features and functions to create a truly family-focused SUV that is a pleasure to drive.”

The new Santa Fe’s front section is defined by the wide grille that extends across the entire width of the vehicle. The brand suggests the ‘clamped shape’ of the lower air intake harmoniously extends the horizontal line to accentuate the vehicle’s wide and well-balanced stance.

The grille – or grilles, as there are two designs, the more intricate pictured here being reserved for the new flagship - also integrates the headlamps, a signature style found on many Hyundai cars. LED Daytime Running Lights (DRLs) start at the top of the grille and cut through it to create T-shapes at each corner when lit.

Each side section of the New Santa Fe is characterised by a seamless line that connects the DRL to the taillights, this to lend the car ‘a sensuously sporty look’. The increased width on wheel arches accentuate the SUV’s rugged and powerful character, which is also emphasised by 20-inch wheels.

The new Santa Fe’s redesigned taillights are connected across the rear hatch by a slim illuminated bar that complements the horizontal design theme on the front and sides of the vehicle. The theme is once again expressed by the wide rear reflector and skid plate, creating a unique three-layer look. 

Hyundai says the redesigned interior now provides more space, comfort, and convenience compared to the previous model and also takes the car to ‘a new level of luxury’ with every component finished in premium soft-touch materials. The centre console sits high, giving the driver and front passenger the feeling of sitting in an armchair, according to information released today.

The buttons are all centred for intuitive and ergonomic use. In the middle of the redesigned centre console sits gear shift buttons along with other functions that are used often. Hyundai says a ‘shift-by-wire system’ allowed the designers to put buttons instead of the conventional shift knob.

For the first time, the new Santa Fe comes with a Terrain Mode selector: a control knob located in the centre console to conveniently switch between different drive modes, optimising performance and ‘HTRAC’ all-wheel-drive settings for a variety of driving situations. This feature includes unique modes for sand, snow and mud, as well as eco, sport, comfort and smart modes, the last of which automatically recognises the driving style and selects a mode so the driver does not have to.

The new centre console’s layout freed up space for more storage in the redesigned lower dashboard. The console also accommodates a new 10.25-inch AVN (audio, video, navigation) touchscreen display with pre-loaded maps, satellite-based voice guided navigation, rear camera display, and complete in-car entertainment and connectivity features.

As for the mechanical package? tjhat’s still be be explained, but it could be that Hyundai also moves to adopt a hybrid set-up that is going into the Kia Sorento, a sister ship despite any corporate claims to the contrary.

The latter is taking a 1.6-litre petrol with battery assist – in ultimate form this being a 44.2kW electric motor and a 1.49kWh lithium ion polymer battery, for a total output of 169kW and 350Nm.

The new powertrain is presented under a new mantle, ‘Smartstream’, that also applies to the purely fossil fuel-reliant engines also confugring, these being a 206kW/421Nm 2.5-litre petrol and a refined version of the outgoing cars’ 2.2 turbodiesel, making 148kW and 440Nm. These marry to an eight-speed wet double-clutch automatic.

 

 

 

BMW 4-Series: The uber-grille age begins

Not the face, right? Actually, yeah – right in the face.

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SHOCKED? You shouldn’t be – BMW has been preparing the market for the radical new nose design that debuts on the new Four Series for some time now (last year’s Concept 4 show car being a particularly strong enforcement of intent).

Even so, there’s bound to be a lot of fresh comment in reaction to the new ‘uber’ approach that is sure to spread across the entire family and presents as a differentiation from the rapid re-scaling project that, having already delivered wider grilles, is now seemingly into a new phase of making them much taller.

This, plus headlights in a particularly slanted design, will certainly ensure the Four will stand out all the more from its Three Series sedan and wagon stablemates, potentially to the point of leaving impression that it’s something more than what it’s always been: The coupe in that family. 

Officially unveiled today, about 36 hours after images leaked on-line, the new model is set to reach New Zealand in October, with 30i and M440i variants initially incoming, but assuredly followed in time by an M4 of course. Pricing and local specs will be announced closer to launch.

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In respect to the look – since, you know, it’s going to fixate everyone for a while - it’s only fair to point out that the styling exercise goes beyond the nose. The whole car is 13 centimetres longer than the old coupe, with a wheelbase 4cm longer, and eclipses the Three sedan’s length by 5.5cm. It's also a touch wider than before. Regardless, it’s also more aerodynamic, dropping from 0.29 Cd to 0.25.

In respect to those engine, the car has the single-turbo 2.0-litre four-cylinder and 3.0-litre six from the Three. Tht meansa the 420i delivering 135kW/ 300Nm and the M440i packing 285kW/ 500Nm. The latter’s engine also makes use of a 48-volt starter/generator hybrid assist system. It produces around 8kW as needed, and allows for the start-stop system to activate when decelerating. 

Like the Three Series, the Four also drops the manual transmission altogether, so everything has an eight-speed automatic transmission.

The M440i xDrive is a clutch-operated all-wheel-drive system that can send all power to the rear wheels only when conditions permit. 

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The M440i also takes other performance goodies such as the M Sport electronically controlled limited-slip differential, M Sport suspension and variable steering assist, and upgraded brakes with four-piston front calipers. It can also be fitted with the adaptive M Sport Suspension that can be adjusted for sporty stiffness or softer comfort. Exterior accents in Cerium Grey form a further identifying feature of BMW M440i xDrive while an M Carbon exterior package can also be optioned to add a motorsport-inspired aesthetic.

Design change is less extreme on the inside, with few extreme curves or angles. Standard equipment features an 8.8-inch infotainment screen and a 5.1-inch screen nestled between physical gauges in the instrument panel, but a 10.25-inch instrument display is optional, as is a 12.3-inch infotainment screen.

A sunroof and wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto come standard, too, along with a host of safety features including blind-spot monitoring, automatic emergency braking with pedestrian recognition, automatic high-beam headlights and lane-departure warning. Adaptive cruise control, lane-keep assist and parking cameras and sensors are optional.Full-LED headlights with high beam assistant are fitted as standard, while adaptive LED headlights with BMW Laserlight are available as an option.

BMW NZ is also promising local cars will have Remote Software Upgrade, which enables improved vehicle functions, the ability to update the vehicle software and additional digital services to be imported over the air.

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RAV4 hybrid rising as market drops

New vehicle sales in May were down, but the leading player still had something to cheer about.

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THE new vehicle market was down by around a third last month, but a big surge of interest in the RAV4 during that period has buoyed its distributor.

Toyota New Zealand says the crossover achieving 538 registrations to place as the top-selling car in May, when 8313 new vehicle registrations were accrued in total, also reveals a scenario that might outwardly might seem surreal given the market condition.

At a time when new vehicle sales are dropping, this car is in hot demand – so much so that anyone ordering one now won’t see it until perhaps July or August. 

Actually, it’s just the battery-assisted edition that’s on the ‘most wanted’ list. TNZ always knew the hybrid would be popular – it surged ahead at launch simply because every dealer wanted one as a demonstrator – but is impressed nonetheless that the private market is driving the car’s progress now.

And there’s another twist. The RAV4s that have been built for the rental market, which now wants out of new vehicle with international tourism now kaput, cannot be diverted to meet that demand, as hire companies only ordered the petrol pure variants.

In discussing the May count, TNZ chief operating officer Neeraj Lala says he has around 800 RAV4 hybrid pre-orders still unfulfilled. Most of those cars should be delivered in June, the remainder probably in July. 

All up, TNZ’s passenger volume in May is down around eight percent year-on-year, not so bad all things considered. What factors into this is that it was delivering cars ordered before lockdown.

As for what happens from now on? “Our new car inquiry rate is low,” he concedes. “But we have this incredible back order of deliveries, so for the next couple of months we will still look quite good. So, in that sense, it’s quite good. And the (ongoing) demand for hybrid RAV4 is simply phenomenal, a little bit unprecedented.” 

The Motor Industry Association, which speaks for distributors, has also signalled a degree of satisfaction with the May result, which though well off the same month last year, when 12,5259 cars and light commercials were sold, nonetheless represents a relatively decent post lockdown result, given the circumstances.

“The month of May re-opened for business albeit in a constrained manner,” noted chief executive David Crawford.

“It was a challenging month operating under alert level two and an economically depressed environment.”

Year-to-date the entire new vehicle market is down by 19,622 units, a 32 percent drop on the count for the same period of 2019.

Registrations of 5401 passenger and SUVs for last month were 29.2 percent (2223 units) below 2019 volumes while a commercial vehicle tally of 2912 units represents a 37.2 percent decrease.

After RAV4 the Ford Ranger installed as the second-strongest seller for May, though with 498 units, with another Toyota, the Hilux, nabbing third place, just 58 units behind. Lala was also stoked with that result.

Toyota was the overall market leader with 19 percent market share with 1611 units, followed by Holden, with nine percent (760 units) then Ford (eight percent, 702 units).

The MIA has joined those calling for the Government to bring the country to Level One Covid-19 restrictions “sooner rather than later.”

 Commented Crawford: “The MIA shares the views of many that with no new Covid-19 cases for the last 11 days and no known community spread for at least two months, we should be looking to move to alert level 1.

“The country is better prepared now to manage the odd case of Covid-19 should it arise. Our health system has improved significantly in terms of testing capability, contact tracing and hospital intensive care capacity.

“It is time to get our economy moving forward while maintaining our health gains.”

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Mach 1 not completely out of NZ’s reach

Ford NZ is among those getting revved up for a Mach 1 Mustang.

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“IF we can get it for New Zealand we will definitely have to think about it – I mean, it’s such a legend, right?”

This from Ford New Zealand’s communications manager today in response to the latest and ultimate iteration of its popular Mustang muscle car, the Mach 1.

The parent brand has shared teaser images- but no video, unfortunately - of a kingpin mode which revives the legendary nameplate first used in 1969 and ushers in specific performance and handling upgrades designed, the brand boasts, to make it “the most track-ready 5.0-litre Mustang ever.”

Can Kiwis access this beast? One way or the other, yes: Because if it doesn’t achieve as a factory car for local release, buyers could always ship in a US-spec car as a private import.

Ford New Zealand, of course, would like nothing better than to represent the car in the showroom – there’s obvious potential to further spark up Mustang sales that, until Covid-19, were rolling along at 40 to 50 units a month, with V8 versions snaring the bulk of sales.

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For Mach 1 to be ‘official’ requires it to be produced in right hand drive.

Is that possible? According to our neighbour, the answer is no. Ford Australia seems adamant variant is a US-based initiative, telling a news outlet there “the Mach 1 news is specific to the US.”

Ford NZ’s Tom Clancy, though, is more optimistic, in that he says there is no specific news from Detroit about who gets the car, when and how. Until all that it spelled out, it’s impossible to say one way or the other.

“It hasn’t been confirmed for right-hand-drive markets as yet,” he acknowledged. But that’s not to say it might not be. “It hasn’t been confirmed either way. 

“If it is, we will certainly look at it. We’re definitely excited. I mean, who wouldn’t be? There are a lot of enthusiastic Mustang customers in New Zealand so if it is conformed for right hand drive, we’d certainly want to know about it. 

“It would be very good for New Zealand. As soon as we  have news we will share it, but I don’t have any timing for when that might be.”

The highest-performance right-hand-drive Mustangs available at present are Roush and Shelby GT editions, which are in both case after-market enhancements performed locally on regular NZ-new 339kW V8 GTs. 

The ultimate Roush version is the supercharged V8, generally making around 510kW, whereas the top Shelby, the Super Snake, promises around 600kW. Ford Australia has concocted – but purely for home market consumption - a Mustang R-Spec, also supercharged, has 522kW and 830Nm.

Mach 1 will be naturally-aspirated and while Ford US has yet to announce outputs, it has promised it’ll be up to performance fans’ expectations. It also has dropped hints that the model is, in any event, about much more than a bad-ass engine.

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The focus on transmission, brake, suspension and handling enhancements has been considerable as well. Ford has also treated it to track-rated Michelin Pilot Sport Cup 2 rubber.

Visually, the Mach 1 is distinguished by styling cues that reference past editions. The front has a dual-headlight design with a second set of lights set inside the centre grille – a signature of the famous 1969 original.

The model is also expected to achieve a new front bumper and air inlet design, will take quad-exit exhaust pipes and a unique spoiler. The 19-inch black alloy wheels are in a spindle design to evoke historic association and it is sure to take ‘Mach 1’ decals and a two-tone paint colour scheme. BTW, the last time the Mach 1 designation was seen on a Mustang was in 2004. 

As much as Ford is rekindling its performance past, it is also taking Mustang into the future with another ‘Mach’, the Mach-E fully electric car. Which is also expected to hit New Zealand at some point.

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Clever bricks recreate Mt Panorama

Honda has laid claim to a Holden versus Ford battleground.

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BUILDING a Lego race car … well, who hasn’t done that?

Creating a famous race circuit with those plastic bricks is a different story.

As a promo for its Lego Masters television programme, Australia’s Channel Nine has team with our neighbour’s Honda distributor and a professional assembler to create the Mt Panorama circuit at Bathurst, New South Wales, out of the interlocking materials, but with a twist to suit the backer.

Mount Hondarama is a neat follow-up to last year’s commission involving the car brand and Ryan ‘The Brickman’ McNaught, a life-sized Civic Type R hot hatch, as just on a year ago former Formula One champion Jenson Button set a benchmark lap time for a front-wheel drive production car around the famous Bathurst layout.

Obviously Mt Hondarama isn’t to the same life-sized scale as the real thing, but its still pretty substantial, being 3.3 metres long and 1.8 metres wide, weighing approximately 210kg and involving a team of eight builders, who used more than 150,000 bricks and were working for more than 650 hours.

So, a big job, but still rather less of a challenge than the Civic Type R, which used more than 320,000 bricks and took more 1300 hours.

Adding to the special flavour is the use of extremely rare LEGO remote control cars.

“The biggest challenge for us this year is the fact that we’ve got lots of moving pieces. Moving parts are very challenging to do with LEGO, let alone having cars actually racing around a LEGO model,” said ‘The Brickman’, who is credentialed as a ‘LEGO Certified Professional’.

“Our mantra is to grab people’s attention with something obvious and then hold their attention with lots of special details and fun things. One of the great things about LEGO bricks is that you can bring dreams to life and that’s exactly what we’ve been able to do with all of Honda’s products.”

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Robert Thorp, Honda Australia’s general manager of product, customer and communications, views the work as being “a Honda dreamscape, a graphic representation to reflect Honda’s values and the joy of creating.”

Mount Hondarama includes many of Honda’s most recognised products transformed into LEGO, including its latest cars, motorcycles and power equipment, along with some iconic cars from years gone by. There is also a Honda dealership and service centre, a F1 car to represent Honda’s global motorsport activities, as well as the truly unique HondaJet, which is the fastest, highest-flying, quietest and most fuel-efficient jet in its class. But no sign of bogans along Skyline.

 

 

Nissan plans bring pain and joy

Plant closures, more platform-sharing with Mitsubishi and Renault and the potential of a new Z-car … it’s been a big week for Nissan.

Navara’s ambitions are presently headed by the just-released N-Trek.

Navara’s ambitions are presently headed by the just-released N-Trek.

COMING in the wake of Nissan identifying readiness for a new product onslaught that could include a new-generation ‘Z’ sports car is determination to slim down spending, in part by closing a plant that has supplied New Zealand.

A factory in Barcelona, Spain, that has been a supply point for the Navara utility appears to be the biggest victim of the maker’s determination to cut global production by 20 percent. 

Nissan’s overnight signal that it intends to close the factory by December has triggered worker protests and a response from Spain’s government, which is asking for a reconsideration on grounds that it will cause considerable unemployment and hit the national economy hard. In addition to the 3000 factory positions, 20,000 more jobs in the brand’s supply chain in Spain are also at risk.

The full extent of impact on our market remains unclear. Current Navara also sources out of Thailand, is nearing production life and odds of it being developed off the next-generation Mitsubishi Triton seem to have strengthened with another announcement this week confirming that platform-sharing between the Japanese firms and their other partner, Renault, will intensify.

This to the point, some onlookers say, that an effort to slash model investment costs by up to 40 percent will inevitably mean some crucial forthcoming models such as next-generation utes and SUVs will become badge engineering exercises.

The three makers have acknowledged implications of their “leader-follower” vehicle strategy discussed this week will be significant.

A core ideal of a new co-operation business model is that it green lights the current “standardisation strategy” evolving from the platform sharing that occurs now to common adoption of upper bodies: So, effectively, no more styling divergence to create individual identities but instead lookalikes differentiated at best by modest design revisions and, at worst, by badges alone.

The potential for this seems high given the alliance has also said that, going forward, responsibility for product development and regional priorities will go to a single brand.

Mitsubishi has been saying for some years that it has been in the box seat for being the home base for a future ute, as current Triton presents as a far more cost-effective vehicle to build and sell than the Navara.

Any cloning is unlikely to stop with the ute. It’s highly certain the next-generation Mitsubishi Outlander, Nissan X-Trail and Renault Koleos mid-size SUVs will come off a new Nissan-developed platform. Mitsubishi already has a rebadged version of the Renault Trafic van.

Closing the plant in Spain (and another in Indonesia) is in response to Nissan sinking into the red for the first time in 11 years as the coronavirus pandemic squashed global demand and disrupted production.

In announcing the closures, the maker has also reiterated that its biggest plant, the Sunderland facility in the United Kingdom that supplies the new Juke that releases here soon, is not going to be touched. In fact, Sunderland’s status will be elevated as the centre of all future production for Europe.

Nonetheless, with global vehicle production having dropped 62 percent in April from a year earlier to 150,388 vehicles and global vehicle sales slipping nearly 42 percent last month, Nissan is having to move fast and decisively.

It also determined today to reduce the number of its models and focusing on certain geographic areas, such as Japan, China and the United States, to enhance its efficiency and profitability, rather than chasing sales size.

Nissan has spent much of the past year seeking to recover from the November 2018 arrest of its former chairman, Carlos Ghosn, over financial misconduct allegations, including under-reporting future compensation and misusing Nissan money.

The company’s management appeared to be in disarray after the sudden departure of Ghosn, who was sent by Renault to help Nissan recover from near-bankruptcy in 1999.

Ghosn’s successor, Hiroto Saikawa, also ended up resigning amid allegations about dubious income.

Amidst all this, Nissan this week also released the future model teaser video (above) that suggests it has a replacement for the 370Z sports car. 

What media have immediately tagged the ‘400Z’ is expected to be remodelled on the same platform as the 370Z and the video suggests it follows the same styling path as its predecessors. The especially eagle-eyed have identified that the headlights appear to be circular – a nod to the original 240Z, it’s conjected.

The engine will be a 3.0-litre twin-turbo V6, producing 298kW (400hp, hence the 400Z name), and 475Nm through an automatic transmission to the rear wheels. 

Other new additions include refitting of the original ‘Z’ badge to the rear quarter panel like the old models have and, in its home market, the Fairlady nameplate is to continue.

 

 

Drive to defeat Covid-19

Carmakers are thinking hard about how to turn cabins into safe spots.

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WORRIED that even big doses of disinfectant mightn’t keep coronavirus out of your vehicle?

So, it seems, are car makers. Which is why they are looking to employ other, sometimes more extreme methods.

How long, then, before the vehicle in your driveway can maintain bug-free status through using ultraviolet light, really high-tech air filtration or even just as a result of turning up the heat really high?

These are the methodologies coming to the fore. Latest to hit headlines is Ford’s hot shot approach. 

As the images today show, the “heated software enhancement” system is literally a matter of turning up the heat.

We’re talking hot. As in generally ‘beyond Sahara in summer’ hot. Fifty-six degrees Celsius is generally well above the maximum settings that your vehicle’s own system is usually designed to achieve and within a range considered risky for prolonged safe human tolerance.

However, it’s what the doctor – or at least researchers at Ford Motor Company in Detroit and Ohio State University – have ordered as being effective in terminating any viral elements that might be lingering in a vehicle’s cabin.

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The research has hit the front line, in that it has fitted the Police Interceptor Utility vehicle it builds for law enforcement use in North America with a new cabin heating feature designed to “inactivate” any virus particles.

The New York City Police Department, Los Angeles Police Department and Michigan State Police have participated in field-testing the system, which works by baking the car’s interior at 56C or higher for 15 minutes.  

The software purposely increases the engine temperature and raises the climate control and fan settings to these new maximum settings then enables a subsequent cooldown protocol at the end of the cycle. 

To ensure officers know when the system is operational, a series of pre-set flash sequences are carried out by the hazard and tail-lights with a separate sequence displayed at the end of the cycle during cooldown.

And yes, there are precautions against inadvertent use. In latest cars it only triggers by pressing cruise control buttons in a certain order, while earlier models require an external tool that connects via the OBD port.

Ford chief product development and purchasing officer Hau Thai-Tang said first responders were in dire need of protective measures given they were on the front line protecting everybody else.

“We looked at what’s in our arsenal and how we could step up to help,” he said.

“In this case, we’ve turned the vehicle’s powertrain and heat control systems into a virus neutraliser.”

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According to Ohio State University department of microbiology laboratory supervisors Jeff Jahnes and Jesse Kwiek, “exposing coronaviruses to temperatures of 56C (or 132.8 degrees Fahrenheit) for 15 minutes reduces the viral concentration by greater than 99 percent on interior surfaces”.

Ford meanwhile says that the system adds an extra level of thoroughness to the sanitisation guidelines approved by Centres for Disease Control and Prevention given that heat can “seep into crevices and hard-to-reach areas, helping reduce the impact of human error in applying chemical disinfectants”. 

Ford police brand marketing manager Stephen Tyler described Covid-19 as an “invisible enemy” and said he was proud Ford was able to provide a solution. 

So, keen to get your Fiesta, Ranger or Mustang all toasty? Sorry, it’s a no-go.

The make has made clear a system designed to be used in conjunction with proper cleaning methods is not, for reasons of safety (and, dare we say it, common sense – you could imagine the lawsuits from inappropriate use), going to transfer into civilian vehicles.

So that’s one approach. What is coming to the boil? In general, car makers are looking at employing more antimicrobial materials and easier-cleanable surfaces. They are also assessing the quality of air filtration systems. Geely, the parent company of Volvo, reckons the set-up for its new Icon electric car will achieve the N95-certification meted medical masks.

Hyundai is well advanced its bid to use ultraviolet light sterilisation technology that would be installed like a dome light in its vehicles. This could be taking a cue from the grenlite (pronounced ‘greenlight’) device shown off by a Michigan-based tech firm, GHSP, at CES this year. This sterilises a vehicle when sensors detect there are no occupants, automatically scheduling new cleansing cycles when needed — and is already in use in emergency vehicles in three US states.

Another specialist in cleaning, Faurecia, is also looking at foggers that would spray a disinfectant such as hydrogen peroxide. Vehicle assembler Magna is evaluating “an ozone-generating system.”

Not so keen on any of these measures? You’re in a minority. When car owners were surveyed in five countries, 80 percent said they'd pay extra for technology that could sterilize a vehicle. Another survey just out has found a third of vehicle shoppers thinking about "air quality features" in a future car purchase.

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JLR finance offer set to spur rival actions?

Incentives to jolly up consumer interest in new cars could become a new norm.

Diminished interest in new vehicles seems a certainty this year, the industry believes.

Diminished interest in new vehicles seems a certainty this year, the industry believes.

DETERMINATION by Jaguar Land Rover’s distributor to offer deferred payment finance deals on new vehicles has raised interest within the industry.

Thought from onlookers is that it’s a behaviour that can be expected to increase as dealers and distributors work to recover from the drop-off in economic activity, not just the impact of lost trading during Level One lockdown but also to counter the likelihood of tougher times ahead.

 There’s some belief, too, that premium car brands in particular will set the pace with an increasing count of stimulus and relief programmes. In addition to special financing, enhanced warranties might also become a pitch.

The impact of the economic shutdown to contain the Covid-19 pandemic has been especially hard on the car industry.

At international level, assembly lines remain either closed or at least constrained by social distancing requirements and logistics spanning parts supply to vehicle delivery have been unsettled.

Customers keen to sign up for expensive metal facing longer wait times is an annoyance, but the real challenge is what Jaguar Land Rover New Zealand appears to be now preparing for – a prospect of diminished retail spending. 

 The high-end sector is obviously at highest risk if new car sales fall by between 40-50 percent for the remainder of the year, as predicted by some participants.

The $150,000-plus sector was showing clear signs of softening well before coronavirus became a factor; with some signs of decline revealing in early mid-2019.

incoming new Defender is exempted from the opportunity.

incoming new Defender is exempted from the opportunity.

In recent weeks, too, there have been examples of prestige car owners divesting their expensive wheels to free up capital – sometimes at no small pain. Talk of high-end product that even in normal times might half in value within the first year  of ownership being divested well below even that is beginning to emerge.

Processes to buoy consumer faith during Covid-19 are also involving mainstream operators.

Hyundai New Zealand set a tone in extending warranties from early April, when lockdown conditions were more onerous, a move that affected more than 2000 vehicles.

It has also instigated Hyundai Assurance, which provides customers who lose their job within the first six months of entering into the finance agreement with the option of deferred interest and principal payments for up to six months. The NZ programme appears to ape one Hyundai first set in place in the United States amid the financial crisis of 2008 and now restored as coronavirus runs rampant there.  

Industry involvers speaking on condition of anonymity in wake of the JLR NZ announcement believe other competitors will likely also be looking at unrolling new and creative of maintaining customer confidence and bolstering sales volume. 

Announcement of the move arrives at an interesting time for the British manufacturer 

It is likely no more than an unhappy coincidence that the local initiative’s announcement came in a period of reports about JLR in the United Kingdom being in talks to borrow more than one billion pounds (more than $NZ2 billion) availed by an emergency coronavirus lending programme set up by the British government.

The marques are represented in New Zealand by Motorcorp Distributors, which founded in 2006. The makes represent in eight dealerships nationally.

JLR New Zealand explains its motivation for the 48 months option arranged through Heartland Bank at a rate of 2.95 percent. is to capitalise on low interest rates and provide business continuity for its dealers.

The deal includes 12 months of deferred payment and is available on Land Rovers and Jaguars already landed in New Zealand and in stock – and thus excludes the new Defender, set to arrive in July or August.

“Our role as an importer is to provide business continuity for our retailer network, whilst passing on any finance terms we can negotiate to our customers,” says general manager Steve Kenchington.

“The 12 months deferred payment offer … allows customers to drive away in their vehicle today whilst incurring no repayments until June 2021.

 “If the customer currently has an existing finance plan with us, they can terminate it, use any additional equity in the vehicle as the required 20 percent deposit and enjoy no repayments for 12 months,” says Kenchington.

“In such unknowing times we understand the need for lateral thought and creative solutions to drive business continuity and adapt to customer needs. 

Observers suggest the scheme is not entirely dissimilar to pre-coronavirus incentives that ask for programmed payments of ‘one third’ over set periods, starting with the initial down payment.

“On that basis, it is all interest-free,” said one. “They (JLR NZ) are covering at least the cost of the interest.”

In this scenario, it was suggested, a weight of risk falls as heavily on Heartland as it might on the distributor, which had reduced some of its risk through seeking a 20 percent deposit.

However, the great imponderable as always in depreciation, which has historically been particularly savage nationally as result of the free market attitude.

“Everything is worth less now than it was before Covid, maybe at least 10 percent, perhaps more.”

So, in respect to the JLR proposal, “it will still be upside down after 12 months because the car is unlikely to be worth 80 percent of its purchase price by then.

“It’s a very strong offer.”

F-PACE has been a solid seller for JLR NZ.

F-PACE has been a solid seller for JLR NZ.

 

Tech, styling lift with Five refresh

Can a facelift for the Five Series reignite Kiwi consumer interest?

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THE BMW that meant a lot more in the past than it perhaps does in the present is facing up to the future with a refreshed look.

No argument about the Five Series’ – it’s still an important car to Munich, but the shift away from orthodox wagons and sedans to crossovers and full blown SUVs means its standing has become progressively historic. Still, that it won the inaugural New Zealand Car of the Year, in 1988, and snared the NZ Motoring Writers’ Guild title again in 2010 reminds that it has made a real imprint.

Can that allure continue? Five Series volume last year being less than a third of the count for the X5 that has progressively become more divorced from the road car suggests it is now something of a niche attraction.

Nonetheless, if street presence still counts for anything, then the updated line that BMW has just revealed ahead of expected arrival herein October surely stands a chance of winning interest?

A new-look, slimmed LED headlight cluster that eschews the hexagonal design of the outgoing model for an L-shaped motif also seen on the updated 7 Series, plus employment of a longer and wider grille deliver a sleeker look than the present product offers. Those lights are really high-end items too, being full LED beams with cornering function as standard. Even higher-tech BMW Laserlights avail as an option.

The L-shaped signature continues at the rear with a lightly restyled light cluster, while all grades will now come with trapezoidal exhaust tips. 

New colours and alloy wheel designs are on the delivery sheet, while the M Sport exterior design package promises to be beefier than before.

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Almost all four and six-cylinder models now get 48-volt mild-hybrid electrification. The system (in effect an integrated starter/generator that’s coupled to a small additional battery) produces up to 8kW to help with overtaking, off-the-line acceleration and stop-start situations.

Inside, the 10.25-inch infotainment screen has been increased to 12.3-inches across the range to go with the redesigned centre console controls, while all variants now come with a leather multifunction sports steering wheel.

BMW New Zealand has yet to divulge exactly how many of the 16 variants the portfolio will come here, however it’s fair to say that whatever signs off for Australia will land here as well, so close is the transtasman association and management structure.

In that light, then, the range will include the M550i xDrive with its 390kW/750Nm twin-turbo V8. BMW in Melbourne is also relating interest in two other full petrol engines and plug-in hybrid (PHEV).

Thought is that the petrol variants will be the entry-level 520i with its 135kW/290Nm turbo-petrol four-cylinder engine, and the mid-range 530i, with the same engine boosted to produce 185kW/350Nm, while the 530e is rated as being a good starter for the PHEV duty. That model marries the 520i’s engine with an 80kW electric motor for a combined 215kW/420Nm.

That M550i will continue in its role of impressing as a pseudo M5. It’s a four-wheel-drive model that gets an M Sport differential and adaptive suspension and is rated to see off 100kmh in just 3.8 seconds.

On the safety front, the lane departure warning system now features steering assistance to return the car to the middle of the lane, while the range of functions in the Parking Assistant suite has been expanded to include reversing assistant, which enables self-backing for distances of up to 50 metres.

Wireless Apple CarPlay continues and Android Auto is now available, while BMW’s Intelligent Personal Assistant functionality has been expanded, with the ability to install updates over the air.

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Countryman PHEV's range improved

Cleaner engines, technology and styling changes come with a refresh for the biggest Mini.

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IMPROVED range from the flagship plug-in hybrid drivetrain is promised with a mid-life update to the Mini Countryman.

The biggest model to bear the Mini badge continues with the current engines choices, though all have been reworked to improve economy and efficiency. Yet there are no alterations to outputs.

So, the entry Cooper’s 1.5-litre three-cylinder continues with 100kW and 220Nm; the Cooper S 2.0-litre four-cylinder still puts out 131kW and 280Nm and the Cooper SE ALL4 maintains total outputs of 165kW and 385Nm.

However, the unit that uses a 65kW/165Nm electric motor powered by a 9.6kWh lithium-ion battery pack now claims an electric-only range of up to 61km, against 40km previously. 

The engines all have particulate filters and the engines in the Cooper and Cooper S now have an exhaust manifold integrated into the cylinder head. A more efficient starter-generator system is standard across the range.

With the cars not coming until the end of the year, Mini isn’t yet keen to lend details on local market specification and, of course, there’s nothing yet on pricing. The hit shouldn’t be too extreme, though, given that sticker revisions in its home country have been modest.

External revisions are similar to those already meted to the three- and five-door hatchback two years ago the the Clubman in 2019.

A new grille with hexagonal comb mesh and a new bumper below differentiate the incoming line from the 2017-released originals. The rear also gets a nip and tuck with Union Jack taillights. 

The interior delivers change with redesigned dash and layout, including a “refined surface around the circular control unit” which measures 8.8-inches in diameter and hosts MINI Connected features including Navigation Plus and Amazon Alexa integration and Apple CarPlay.

Equipment on the three trim grades includes 16-inch, 17-inch and 19-inch alloys, digital instrument display, roof and side mirror caps finished in either body colour, white, black or silver depending on model, piano black exterior and interior trims, plus a new range of materials and leathers is offered, including new blue and brown seat colours. As always, there’s an extended range of personalisation options and Mini accessories, including a rear bicycle rack, roof box, luggage mat and all-weather floor mats.