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Old 10-01-12, 03:17 AM
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GS69
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For years, Toyota Motor Corp. has put hybrids at the center of its powertrain technology strategy, all but oblivious to the rapid fuel economy advancements rivals have made in the humble gasoline engine.

Meanwhile, Ford, Honda, Mazda, Hyundai, Volkswagen and others have turned to gasoline direct fuel injection and turbochargers. For them, those technologies were a quick, cost-effective route to better mpg. Turbochargers, for example, allowed them to maintain power output while making engines smaller, for a significant weight savings and higher fuel economy.

Now, in a major overhaul of its lineup, Toyota is playing catchup. It will introduce a new direct-injection engine next year and follow with a downsized turbocharged powerplant -- its 1st -- in 2014. It is also committing to continuously variable transmissions across its range of small- to medium-sized cars.

Toyota is hardly forsaking gasoline-electric hybrids. It plans to introduce 14 new hybrids by 2015. But hybrids, led by the Prius, still represent only 10 percent of Toyota's global sales.

Toyota's latest environmental technology game plan, unveiled in Tokyo, shows it will start doubling down on the standard powertrains that are the backbone of its offerings. And Toyota expects big gains in fuel economy for its nonhybrid vehicles.

"By 2015, through improvement in the engine and powertrain alone, we aim to achieve a fuel-efficiency improvement of 10 percent to 20 percent on the models adopting the improvements," Takeshi Uchiyamada, Toyota's outgoing product development chief, said.

The rollout won't happen overnight. Engineers are still debating how widely technologies such as direct injection and turbocharging should be applied.

Insiders say President Akio Toyoda, who wanted to make his company's cars zippier to drive without sacrificing fuel economy, urged his staff to embrace nonhybrid technologies.

Moreover, Toyota plans to combine direct injection with its hybrid system to deliver a new generation of hybrids that are all the more miserly with fuel.

Key elements of Toyota's plan:

• A 2.5-liter direct-injection, Atkinson cycle engine, to be deployed 1st in hybrids in 2013.

• A 2.0-liter downsized turbo-charged engine in 2014.

• A shift to CVTs in small- to mid-sized vehicles.

• More 6- and 8-speed automatic transmissions for larger cars.
Today, the company doesn't offer any turbocharged vehicles. It experimented briefly with turbos in the 1980s but chiefly as a way to boost output from already powerful engines -- not as a way of getting more oomph from smaller, more efficient ones. And direct injection is limited to a handful of large-displacement V-6 and V-8 luxury sedans, such as the Lexus LS.

Compare that with rivals' lineups. Ford Motor Co., for instance, makes extensive use of turbocharging, from engines with displacements as small as 1.0 liter to engines in its big pickups. Honda Motor Co. and Mazda Motor Corp. are overhauling their engine lineups to make fuel injection their base technology.
From 2013

Starting next year, Toyota will answer by piggybacking its D-4S direct-injection technology onto its AR family of 4-cylinder gasoline engines. Toyota's AR engines are used in such models as the Toyota Camry, RAV4, Highlander and Venza and the Lexus RX. The injectors are supplied by Denso Corp.

A direct-injection, 2.5-liter AR 4-banger initially will go into the hybrid version of the Toyota Crown, a Japan-market sedan. Future deployments could go in the Camry or other AR cars.

"This is the beginning of gasoline direct injection for the 4-cylinder engines," said Takashi Shimura, general manager for engine development. "Smaller engines will be following this engine. As a trend, this is right. It will be standard."

Shimura said direct injection will start in bigger engines and trickle down to smaller ones. He didn't give a timeline.

In 2014, Toyota will introduce a downsized 2.0-liter, 4-cylinder turbocharged AR engine based on the 2.5-liter powerplant. Toyota declined to identify the model or the turbocharger supplier.

Pairing direct injection with Toyota's hybrid technology can boost the system's overall fuel efficiency by 10 percent, said Satoshi Ogiso, chief engineer for the Prius family of hybrids.

But it is still unclear whether the next-generation Prius, due around 2014, will get direct injection.
Cost issues

The problem is balancing the added cost of fuel injection against the goal of making the Prius as affordable as possible. Cost sensitivity is compounded because the Prius, with its extra battery, electric motor and inverter, is already pricey to build. Direct injection would add an extra ¥10,000 ($128) to the car's cost, engineers say.

"It may be possible, but it still has to undergo a lot of discussion," Ogiso said. "That's because the Prius engine already has very good fuel efficiency without direct injection."

Yoshihiko Matsuda, field general manager in charge of engine engineering, says direct injection could be applied in hybrids with engine displacements of 2.0, 2.5 or 3.0 liters. But he said using it in a 1.6-liter hybrid would be "borderline" -- delivering only incremental benefit for the added cost.

The current Prius has a 1.8-liter engine.

Toyota will use a newly refined version of the Denso-made D-4S injector. It was 1st used this year in the Lexus GS and the Scion FR-S sporty car manufactured by Subaru-builder Fuji Heavy Industries Ltd.

It improves mileage about 1% over Toyota's earlier D-4S injector, which debuted in 2006. It gets better results by using a slit-shaped, instead of a multihole, injector opening. That creates a richer fuel mixture inside the cylinder.

Toyota's embrace of more widely used technologies comes as it concedes it misread market demand for other alternative drivetrain technologies, including electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids.

In announcing plans for Toyota's own EV, Uchiyamada said the company would sell only about 100 of the cars in the United States and Japan on a limited basis, starting this December.

2 years ago, he predicted Toyota would be selling thousands of the EV, which is based on the Scion iQ minicar and called the eQ.

"But 2 years later, we found other conditions prevailing in the market, and we'll undertake a limited introduction," he said, in a tacit nod to the tepid sales of other makers' electric cars.

Uchiyamada added that sales of the Prius Plug-in, which began in Japan in January, were lower than expected. He said that car needs better marketing.

But Toyota is bullish on hybrids.

Toyota plans to launch 21 new or redesigned hybrid vehicles by the end of 2015. Toyota didn't name the models. But 14 will be either all-new nameplates or hybrid versions of vehicles that don't currently come with an electric-gasoline option.

You can reach Hans Greimel at hgreimel@crain.com. -- Follow Hans on Twitter
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Old 10-01-12, 05:16 AM
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i already posted a thread about their future engines, and this guy managed to write 2 page essay based on few facts :-).

D4S in AR is meant for IS300h, GS300h Hybrid engine, not Camry or Rav4. There is plenty of other mistakes, like "Toyota briefly experimented with turbo's"... uhm.
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Old 10-01-12, 06:10 AM
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Another thing he got wrong is that he makes it seem like Toyota is copying the idea of direct injection from the Europeans when it was Toyota which FIRST started using direct injection widely in the GR-FSE engine series in 2006.
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Old 10-01-12, 06:56 AM
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Why would they go to CVT!? I hate those frappin' things. I drove a '12 altima for 2 weeks recently while my car was in the shop...it drove...weird. Thats the only way I can describe it. First and last CVT I will ever drive.

They do need to re-vamp their engine lineup. They were ahead of their time when these engines came out, but now they are falling behind.
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Old 10-01-12, 07:09 AM
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You should try the GS450h first before knocking all CVTs. They not all built the same.
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Old 10-01-12, 07:55 AM
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Originally Posted by natnut
Another thing he got wrong is that he makes it seem like Toyota is copying the idea of direct injection from the Europeans when it was Toyota which FIRST started using direct injection widely in the GR-FSE engine series in 2006.
well, correct is that Toyota started using DI in their lean burn engines in 1999 :-)
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Old 10-01-12, 08:50 AM
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Originally Posted by ArmyofOne
Why would they go to CVT!? I hate those frappin' things. I drove a '12 altima for 2 weeks recently while my car was in the shop...it drove...weird. Thats the only way I can describe it. First and last CVT I will ever drive.

They do need to re-vamp their engine lineup. They were ahead of their time when these engines came out, but now they are falling behind.
The CVT's just take some getting used to. When my fiance got her Altima Hybrid it was weird to me at first too, but after a while I got used to it. It's just really odd coming from a car where you can feel the shifting to one that well....doesn't lol. After a while you get used to the smooth acceleration. Most of them aren't that bad at all, and the one in the new Altima should be just fine too.
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Old 10-01-12, 09:28 AM
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None of this technology -- direct injection, turbocharging, CVTs -- is new to Toyota. It may seem new to Toyotas in North America (and new to American auto reviewers), but this technology is already available in Toyotas in the Rest of the World.

Toyota drivetrains (in North America) are already quite efficient, even without DI, turbocharging and CVTs so Toyota did not have to introduce these expensive and complex technologies just to "keep up" with the Americans and the Koreans.
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Old 10-01-12, 10:24 AM
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It'll be interesting to see what sort of new powertrain they'll put in the Camry Hybrid considering the 13' Fusion Hybrid is excellent (at least on paper)
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Old 10-01-12, 12:22 PM
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Does that mean the 4Runner, Tacoma, RX, Highlander....all get DI? 10% in mpg and hp are sweet.
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Old 10-01-12, 12:27 PM
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I seem to remember Mitsubishi bringing out the GDI Charisma before anyone else in 96/97.
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Old 10-01-12, 12:33 PM
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could this mean the revival of the mr2 and celica? turbo'd IS? That would be sweet
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Old 10-01-12, 12:55 PM
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Originally Posted by Big Andy
I seem to remember Mitsubishi bringing out the GDI Charisma before anyone else in 96/97.
Mitsu was first then Toyota and Nissan all within a year or so.
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Old 10-01-12, 12:58 PM
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Originally Posted by GoHuskers
Does that mean the 4Runner, Tacoma, RX, Highlander....all get DI? 10% in mpg and hp are sweet.
no, it is poorly worded article... new IS300h and GS300h hybrid vehicles are getting D4S, just like GS450h, this is what Toyota has said. Everything else is construction based on PR from Toyota that is very clear about it.

Turbo is 2.0l, which makes a lot of sense.
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Old 10-01-12, 01:20 PM
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Originally Posted by spwolf
Mitsu was first then Toyota and Nissan all within a year or so.
From Wiki:

In 1996 gasoline direct injection reappeared in the automotive market. Mitsubishi was the first with a GDI engine in the Japanese market with its Galant/Legnum's 4G93 1.8 L inline-four.[11] It was subsequently brought to Europe in 1997 in the Carisma,[12] although Europe's then high-sulfur unleaded fuel led to emissions problems, and fuel efficiency was less than expected.[13] It also developed the first six-cylinder GDI powerplant, the 6G74 3.5 L V6, in 1997.[14] Mitsubishi applied this technology widely, producing over one million GDI engines in four families by 2001.[15] Although other companies have since developed gasoline direct injection engines, the acronym 'GDI' (with an uppercase final "I") remains a registered trademark of Mitsubishi Motors.[16]
In 1997 Nissan released the Leopard featuring the VQ30DD equipped with direct injection.[17]
In 1998, Toyota's D4 direct injection system first appeared on various Japanese market vehicles equipped with the SZ and NZ engines.[18][19][20] Toyota later introduced its D4 system to European markets with the 1AZ-FSE engine found in the 2001 Avensis.[21] and US markets in 2005 with the 3GR-FSE engine found in the Lexus GS 300. Toyota's 2GR-FSE V6 uses a more advanced direct injection system, which combines both direct and indirect injection using two fuel injectors per cylinder, a traditional port fuel injector (low pressure) and a direct fuel injector (high-pressure) in a system known as D4-S.[22]
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