
The drivetrain uses a 500kJ capacitor that is supplied by Nisshinbo. The racecar uses a carbon fiber chassis and will debut on May 5 in the six hours of Spa-Francorchamps for the second round of the FIA World Endurance Championships. The drivers that will pilot the hybrid racecar in competition include Alex Wurz, Nicolas Lapierre and Kazuki Nakajima. Toyota will enter a second TS030 Hybrid car in the event and the driver lineup for that vehicle has yet to be confirmed. Driver Alex Wurz said, “It was cool to drive the TS030 HYBRID car for the first time. Just leaving the garage on the electric power is very futuristic, then when you let the clutch go and the internal combustion engine kicks in it is like an old friend has returned! When we put on the slick tyre I could feel the car generates a very good amount of grip so I think we have a good base and I think we can turn this into a really fast car.” Regulations in the racing series that are in place prohibit the cars from capturing more than 500kJ between braking zones and then restrict the use of that power to only two wheels. In testing the hybrid racecar was able to run several hundred kilometers without issues.
Reach for cleaner emissions by getting behind the wheel of this 2010 Toyota Prius. On special right now at Jimmy Vasser Toyota! Learn more about this vehicle.
Jan. 18 (Bloomberg) — Toyota Motor Corp. scored a quick victory in 2011 as U.S. deliveries of its Prius v wagon in 10 weeks topped sales of General Motors Co.’s Chevrolet Volt plug- in hybrid that was available all year.
Toyota sold 8,399 of the hybrid wagon, which didn’t arrive at U.S. dealerships until the last week of October, said Carly Schaffner, a spokeswoman for the company. GM delivered 7,671 rechargeable Volts in 2011 and 7,997 in the model’s first 13 months on the market. The Japanese automaker hadn’t distinguished Prius v sales from those of the original one.
“Prius v is off to a great start,” Jim Lentz, president of Toyota’s U.S. sales unit, said in an e-mail statement yesterday, without elaborating. The hybrid wagon starts at $26,400, Toyota said on its website. The Volt starts at $39,145 and is eligible for as much as $7,500 in federal tax credits.
Toyota, the largest gasoline-electric auto seller, wants to deliver 220,000 vehicles bearing the Prius name this year to U.S. customers, a 60 percent increase from 2011. That’s to be fueled by a four-car “family” consisting of the original hatchback, the v, the Prius c subcompact arriving in March, and a plug-in Prius that goes about 15 miles on battery power.
GM missed its goal of selling 10,000 Volts last year. A slow production increase kept dealers for the Detroit-based company in short supply until December, and a federal investigation of three fires that occurred after Volt crash tests lowered demand for the car, according to Bandon, Oregon- based CNW Marketing Research Inc.
Source: businessweek.com













