4 x 4 Australia

TECH TORQUE

- FRASER STRONACH

THE accident happened a few months earlier, not far from where we were loading firewood into the tray of a new Land Cruiser 79 single-cab. It involved a well-used LC75 farm ute, a couple of young mates, allegedly a late night at the local pub, and a wet road. It’s a tragic story all too familiar to the Australian rural landscape.

Discovered early the next morning in the middle of a paddock, the ute was on its roof. One young man was dead at the scene and another died later in hospital. Both played footy for the local small-town team and were still teenagers. It came after a big-game win.

We had driven past the paddock in question a few times in the LC79 that day, first picking up, then dropping off an old ag-bike and then on firewood duties.

The tragedy still hangs in the air. I can’t help but think there’d have been a different outcome if that ute had been fitted with Electronic Stability Control as per the new LC79. I certainly hope so, and I feel some confidence that ESC will make a difference to the safety of vehicles like the LC79 in similar circumstan­ces in the future. This is one the bureaucrat­s have most likely got right.

How much difference is hard to say, as ESC can’t overturn the laws of physics if you get things terribly wrong, but it can help keep you pointed in the right direction on a slippery road. It’s of particular benefit to part-time 4x4s (and also unladen utes) when running in 2WD on wet bitumen, and it can intervene to stop the rear – or even the front – stepping out before you even know there’s a anything amiss. Some ESC systems are more seamless and effective in operation than others but, like all technology, it’s a work in progress.

Not everyone will think ESC on something like the LC79 is a good idea, citing additional complexity and sometimes unwanted driving interferen­ce in other circumstan­ces. However, the fact the LC79 now has ESC is all to do with compliance to industry safety demands and upcoming federal government laws.

At the end of 2017, the window for mandatory fitment of ESC on light commercial vehicles will close – no compliance means no sale. In the meantime, industry Occupation­al Health and Safety (OH&S) standards increasing­ly asks for five-star ANCAP, which you can’t achieve without ESC.

Only the 79 single-cab – the industry volume seller – has a five-star ANCAP rating at this stage, as it’s gained three extra cabin airbags, new seats, beefed up chassis side rails and a relocated steering link. Presumably, the other 70 Series models – 76, 78 and 79 double-cab – will follow suit sometime in the future.

Government bureaucrac­y has played another major role in shaping this new 70, and that’s via compliance with Euro 5 exhaust emissions regulation­s. The window for Euro 5 compliance closed at the end of 2016, and this brought a diesel particulat­e filter (DPF) and piezo fuel injectors to the 70 – neither, unfortunat­ely, a move in the right direction in terms of bush serviceabi­lity.

For better or worse, Australia has hooked its wagon on the back of citycentri­c European diesel-emission standards and, while these may make sense in our cities and can be justified for something like a Hilux, cleaner 70s won’t make any impact in downtown Sydney. This is one area the bureaucrat­s probably got wrong – an exemption system would provide a better outcome.

Vehicle design being dictated by outside influences, such as government or private-enterprise bureaucrac­y, is very much the way of the world these days – as the updated 70 proves. In fact, outside influences have played a greater part in this new 70 than any internal Toyota influences. The moral of the story: if you don’t like the new 70, it’s not entirely Toyota’s doing.

However, you can take comfort in things that are undoubtedl­y better with this new 70: the taller top gear and the considerab­ly more relaxed highway running it brings; cruise control, which makes highway driving more relaxed; the first-second-third gearbox spread, thanks to a taller second, which makes the 70 better for slow work; and the off-roadtuned electronic traction control (A-TRC), which makes progress through difficult off-road terrain seamless to the point where the optional diff locks become largely redundant.

It’s a mixed bag, but there are plenty of things to like about this new 70.

 ??  ?? tech torque FRASER STRONACH
tech torque FRASER STRONACH

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