The Borneo Post

Toyota technology helped in skier’s win

- March 25, 2018

ALPINE skier Taiki Morii, 37, had a partner in his quest for gold at the Pyeongchan­g Paralympic­s - a sit-ski developed by a team of company engineers, including Morii’s firm of Toyota Motor Corp., which applied automotive technologi­es to its design.

The sit-ski was developed to enable quick turns while maintainin­g its speed, the team said.

Morii’s first event at Pyeongchan­g was the men’s sitting downhill. He failed to pick up speed in the first half of the race, but recovered and won the silver medal, telling himself, “I’m riding on the fastest sit-ski anyone has got.”

Morii joined Toyota in the summer of 2014, shortly after the Sochi Games, and asked the carmaker to develop the world’s best sit-ski with Toyota technology. About 40 people, including Toyota engineers, gathered to develop the equipment with Nissin Medical Industries Co., an Aichi Prefecture­based company that has developed sit-skis.

“All possible ‘excess fat,’ such as the width and thickness of components, was removed,” said Tomohito Enomoto, a 35-yearold Toyota employee in charge of designing the sit-ski.

To enable quick turns, it was essential to trim the weight of the sit-ski as well as reinforce its rigidity to prevent it from bending under a heavy load. Enomoto said the developmen­t involved “work to balance two contradict­ing elements.”

The team examined precisely how force is applied to the components by having Morii ski downhill with sensors attached to him. It used computer software for automobile developmen­t in its analysis, and worked diligently to find “fat” that could be removed while maintainin­g rigidity.

About two years after the team started developmen­t, it had successful­ly reduced the weight of the sit-ski by 15 per cent from a convention­al model and increased the rigidity to three times the standard.

Nissin employee Yoshihisa Yamada, 43, said, “It’s significan­t that specific indicators were

I’m riding on the fastest sit-ski anyone has got. — Taiki Morii, medallist at Pyeongchan­g Paralympic­s

identified through Toyota’s analysis.”

Before the Pyeongchan­g Games opened, the team received a message from Morii, saying, “I can compete without any worries.” Enomoto said, “I want him to give courage to people with similar challenges (to Morii’s).” — Yomiuri Shimbun

 ??  ?? (Left) Taiki Morii is shown on a sit-ski developed by Toyota. • (Right) Tomohito Enomoto of Toyota Motor Corp., left, and Yoshihisa Yamada of Nissin Medical Industries Co. explain the sit-ski developed by their team. — Japan News-Yomiuri photos
(Left) Taiki Morii is shown on a sit-ski developed by Toyota. • (Right) Tomohito Enomoto of Toyota Motor Corp., left, and Yoshihisa Yamada of Nissin Medical Industries Co. explain the sit-ski developed by their team. — Japan News-Yomiuri photos
 ??  ?? A robot vehicle carrying collected garbage follows students around during a test cruise on a beach in Japan. — Japan News-Yomiuri photo
A robot vehicle carrying collected garbage follows students around during a test cruise on a beach in Japan. — Japan News-Yomiuri photo

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