The Citizen (Gauteng)

New direction for Toyota

YARIS GRMN: THROUGH GAZOO RACING, GOOD OLD DAYS OF FUN-TO-DRIVE CARS COMING BACK

- Ntsako Mthethwa

New performanc­e offerings will be available on multiple model ranges.

Toyota. It is no lie that the Japanese brand is more readily associated with reliabilit­y and durability than performanc­e. Well, back in the day, Toyota had fun road cars, such as the Group N Conquest RSI, their championsh­ip-winning rally car and even the Corolla RSI sedan.

Sadly, they did not enjoy good sales like the GTIs of this world and were discontinu­ed. But Toyota have launched a refocus on cars that are exciting to drive and establishe­d a platform for Toyota to participat­e in motorsport – to the benefit of all Toyota cars.

I had the opportunit­y to spend time driving the limited-edition Toyota Yaris GRMN – “Gazoo Racing tuned by the Meister of the Nürburgrin­g”.

There are a couple of things wrong with this Yaris.

The worse thing is that Toyota built only 400 units globally and only three are in South Africa for marketing purposes.

Secondly, I do not know about the pricing. I had number 391/400 on test. I will not go into too much detail about how the car looks but it is inspired and influenced by the Yaris WRC.

It features lightweigh­t 17-inch BBS alloy wheels, larger brakes, central oval tailpipe and a bespoke exterior that displays Toyota Gazoo Racing’s white, black and red competitio­n colours.

Designed to reflect the Yaris GRMN’s special appeal, there is an engine start button and a leather-wrapped steering wheel,

sourced from the Toyota GT86 coupe, alongside an aluminium sports pedal set, aluminium trim detailing and a high grade combimeter with TFT display.

In terms of power plant, the Yaris features a nippy 2ZR-FE 1.8-litre, four-cylinder, 16V supercharg­ed engine tuned to produce 156kW at 6 800rpm and 250Nm at 5 000 rpm and weighs in at only 1 135kg.

Eager to find out how the pocket rocket performs, I headed to Gerotek for a full performanc­e test with data.

Before I speak numbers, straight-line speed is not what this car is all about.

The car is about having fun. It gets around corners quickly and it stays tight and composed, thanks to the stiffened chassis, shorter springs with Sachs performanc­e shocks and a Torsen limited-slip differenti­al up front.

It seems natural to compare the new Polo GTI and the Yaris GRMN here, since they are direct competitor­s that I happened to test at the same world-class facility.

The Yaris GRMN managed to sprint from 0-100 km in 6.91 seconds which is slightly slower than the GTI’s time of 6.72 seconds.

The Yaris hit the quarter mile in 15.05 seconds at a speed of 153km/h and a top speed of 223.78km/h, versus the Polo’s 14.96 seconds at 164km/h, with a 236.09km/h top whack.

But here is the thing, the Yaris GRMN has more power, it is lighter and gets off the line with virtually no wheel spin.

The Polo GTI has less power and is heavier but has more torque and it struggled to find grip when launched.

So you definitely understand why I say the Yaris GRMN is all about fun and attacking corners.

I could live with the Yaris on a day-to-day basis. It has comfortabl­e seats designed specifical­ly for the car by Toyota Boshoku, providing best-in-class body holding and support.

It also has all the bells and whistles of any road car but you tend to feel every bump on the road because of the stiffened chassis.

The Yaris GRMN is one of those cars that are hard to drive economical­ly.

It returned a fuel consumptio­n of 12.2l/100km which is high for such a small car. This may be due to the supercharg­er and the fuel system that has been upgraded, using components from a V6 engine.

For the record, the Gazoo Racing (GR) brand is set to be rolled out to local Toyota dealership­s as a proper performanc­e offering.

There are four different levels:

GR-Line: cosmetic package

GR-Sport: suspension package GR: power package

GRMN: high-power package The brand will cater to the needs of a wide target audience. It will also be expanded to multiple model ranges.

As our Road Test Editor Mark Jones would say, this was the first real taste of where Gazoo Racing is going in terms of road cars and it simply means that the good old days of potent, fun to drive Toyotas are very much on the way back.

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