cars

EV design for Japan's tight turns


TOKYO — Toyota is putting a small electric vehicle on the roads of Japan with an innovative design for handling the country’s narrow, winding streets and urban commuting needs.

The C+Pod, launched Dec. 25, measures just 8 feet, 2 inches long and 4 feet, 3 inches wide, delivering an ultratight turning radius of 12 feet, 10 inches.

The diminutive dimensions enable ideal navigation of the sharp corners and narrow streets that vein the home country’s road network. The C+Pod is even narrower and shorter than the popular super-compact minicars that make up 37 percent of the local market.

The C+Pod — pronounced C Pod, without the plus — also represents a comeback for Toyota. It is the automaker’s first electric car for Japan since it discontinued the short-lived eQ, a battery-driven version of the Scion iQ three-seat minicar.

The new entry is part of Toyota’s gambit to get back into the EV game with a lineup of 10 EVs worldwide in the early 2020s. Today, Toyota’s worldwide electric offerings are limited to the C+Pod in Japan, the Toyota C-HR and Izoa crossovers in China and the Lexus UX compact crossover in China, Japan, Europe, Thailand and Indonesia.

Among the engineering tricks on the C+Pod is the use of plastic body panels to reduce weight and extend the car’s range. The pint-size pod comes in at just 1,521 pounds.

It also supports standard charging direct from household outlets, taking five hours to fully recharge at 200 volts, or 16 hours at 100 volts. That allows overnight charging for daily business use or one charge a week for more limited use.



READ NEWS SOURCE

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this site, you accept our use of cookies.