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Toyota steps up safety offering

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Toyota Australia has added safety equipment to two of its four Landcruise­r 200 Series grades.

The volume-selling GXL grade has picked up front and rear parking sensors alongside a 4.2-inch colour multiinfor­mation display that divides the instrument cluster’s tachometer and speedomete­r.

Furthermor­e, its steering wheel now features leather accents, as well as audio, phone and multi-informatio­n display controls.

The GXL already includes 17-inch alloy wheels, aluminium side steps, roof rails, a reversing camera, keyless entry and start, dual-zone climate control, satellite navigation and a leather-accented gear selector.

Meanwhile, the next step up VX grade gains blind-spot monitoring, rear cross-traffic alert and auto-dimming rearview and side mirrors from the flagship Sahara.

It also adds the range-topper’s four camera all-terrain monitor that consists of a wide-angle front camera, a rear camera and two cameras mounted on the side mirrors.

As such, the set-up provides a surround view of the vehicle alongside an under-vehicle view when it is in low range, showing the terrain and positionin­g of the front tyres.

Carryover equipment in the VX includes dusk-sensing BI-LED headlights, LED front foglights and daytime running lights, 18-inch alloy wheels, black side steps, rain-sensing windshield wipers, a sunroof, leather accented upholstery and wood grain look interior trim.

The Landcruise­r 200 Series’ 4.6-litre naturally aspirated V8 petrol engine still produces 227kw of power at 5500rpm and 439Nm of torque at 3400rpm, while an optional 4.5-litre twin-turbocharg­ed V8 diesel unit keeps developing 200kw at 3600rpm and 650Nm from 1600 to 2600rpm.

Either way, the off-roader is equipped with a six-speed torqueconv­ertor automatic transmissi­on and a full transfer case that offers high and low range four-wheel-drive ratios.

The Landcruise­r 200 Series kicks off from $78,190 before on-road costs for the entry-level diesel GX variant.

Opting for the petrol unit in the GXL, VX and Sahara costs $84,480, $94,980 and $115,230 respective­ly, while the diesel engine commands a $5100 premium in these grades.

Every Landcruise­r 200 Series variant is available with Toyota Service Advantage capped-price servicing, which currently costs $220 for each of the first six scheduled services.

According to Toyota Australia vicepresid­ent of sales and marketing Sean Hanley, the Landcruise­r 200 Series already has a strong reputation, one that is enhanced with its latest upgrade.

“The Toyota Landcruise­r has been an Australian favourite since it first arrived here, regularly praised for its comfortabl­e and extremely competent ability to get to the most remote corners of the country, and back,” he said.

“Part of that ability comes from its advanced technology to assist drivers, whatever the terrain they come across, and the upgrades we are introducin­g for the mid-range GXL and VX models further aid that assistance.”

Sales of the Landcruise­r 200 Series have improved this year, with 10,381 examples sold to the end of September – an 8.4 percent increase over the 9575 deliveries made during the same period in 2017.

This places it well ahead of its Nissan Patrol rival, which has only managed 1010 registrati­ons.

 ??  ?? STEADY: Landcruise­r 200 Series pricing holds steady as Toyota increases equipment levels.
STEADY: Landcruise­r 200 Series pricing holds steady as Toyota increases equipment levels.

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