Posts Tagged ‘ Toyota 86 ’

Why Have One When You Can Have Both?

What’s rear-wheel drive, got a 2.0-litre naturally aspirated Subaru ‘Boxer’ motor in it, and has the motoring media worldwide yapping? Nup. The other one, the Subaru BRZ, but close.

A straight-up comparo was the plan for the day with the sister cars going head to head. Toyota 86 Vs. Subaru BRZ. One red, one silver, both autos (I know, I know). Would there be a clear winner? Would there be any differences at all? Would I bin a car off a mountain again?

The good stuff is that the BRZ is identical to the 86 in all the good ways: sharp response from the steering and chassis and sweet overall balance (if a little prone to some initial understeer).

Oddly enough, and I’m not really sure why, the BRZ does seem a little less polished than the 86. More engine noise in the cabin, more road noise, and possibly a little less civilised compared to the 86, which feels more GT cruiser than road-racer.

Exterior differences are mostly made up of different headlights, front bumper, side vent trims and the badges – that’s about it. Inside, same wheel but with stars in the middle of it, slightly different gauge-backing design, some silver trim touches instead of the 86’s black faux-carbon inserts, and no sat-nav.

The BRZ we drove was silver and looks pretty good, I think better than the 86, but then I snapped a white 86 and that does look terribly neat.

I’m sure the Kia/Bob Jane-style black and shadow-chrome rims have something to do with it.

Colours aside, there really isn’t a lot to differentiate the two cars and that’s not a bad thing as both offer buyers the basis to a solid smile machine regardless of manufacturer badging.

I still want to see if a manual transmission will prove a more engaging drive as automatic transmissions in cars like these are just pointless and provoke punchy reactions.

Stay tuned.

Dave

The Ridiculous, The Cool And The Timeless

A bit around again these last few days:

Caught the same Lamborghini Aventador LP 700-4 I’ve previously snapped out and about in the city. Stationary this time and gees it looks amazing.

Matt black, black wheels, super squat – very stealth indeed. More crazy was that it was parked next to a Lamborghini Gallardo LP560-4 Bicolore and a Lamborghini Gallardo Spyder.

The catch? All had paddles on the steering column instead of a man’s gearbox (yeah I said it).

There was this very sleek dark grey and black Ferrari 458 Italia sitting there looking all menacing and whatnot.

Now look, I make no excuses, I’m not a huge fan of the 458 (I’m a Ferrari F430 Scuderia fan), but this is the second Italia that I’ve seen in this colour and it looks way better than in red or yellow.

Extra cool, along with the black wheels and silver brake calipers, was the I’ve-never-seen-that-before carbonfibre Ferrari badge on the quarter panel with the silver prancing horse – money.

A couple of odd ones for the books were the Toyota 86 key hub (you can make up your own minds what you think) and…

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

…the tree-hugging peace and love-wanting Hankook tyres fitted to the Hyundai i30.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

As for timeless, anytime, and I mean ANYTIME, you stumble across a car that exudes as much grace and presence as a Nissan R34 GTR just top and take a picture.

I say this because one day – and the way things are looking it might not even be that far off – these and their kind will be only a distant memory. Lest we forget.

Keep an eye out for more pics coming in, possibly something that looks an awful lot like a Toyota I recently drove…

Dave

Toyota 86 – The wait is finally over…or is it?

I’m told tomorrow is the day.

“You’ll be picking up the 86 and bringing it back here.”

I can’t help but be excited, I mean, this is the car. The car that everyone’s talking, writing and speculating about – the Toyota 86.

 

The day arrives and late in the afternoon we head out to Toyota to pick up the latest (and some say greatest) new sports car in recent times.

Engine in the front driving the rear wheels in a two-door coupe from a brand that has previously spawned the 2000GT, Supra, and of course the AE86 Corolla. Why wouldn’t I be excited? Well, while most media outlets have praised the car to the nth degree, others, namely evo mag, were left underwhelmed and disappointed.

The problem is that because the car has been built from the ground up with traditional sports car balance in mind, the 147kW/205Nm naturally aspirated 2.0-litre four-cylinder boxer motor becomes the car’s obvious Achilles’ heel letting down the rest of the package.

 
Little torque below 3000rpm, not much meat in the mid-range and then a brief moment of sharp, punchy throttle response between 6000rpm and the 7450rpm rev limiter.

This sort of engine requires manipulation of gears to get the best out of it and that’s unfortunately something that proved difficult to do with the six-speed flappy-paddle auto that I managed to get a steer of.

The car is definitely well balanced though and remains flat whether you’re on or off the throttle or changing direction – you can certainly feel that all the low centre of gravity talk has been legit.

Once the bum is out it’s very controllable and easy to hold with the 1222kg never feeling like it’s going to swing back around and bite you (click here to see what I mean).

Unfortunately, yet again, this process is hampered by the lack of having three pedals meaning you have to react a little to the car instead of instructing it to do what you want when you want.

The roads I drove through were all twisty mountain stuff with a few patchy wet sections before the rain came down harder giving a most definitely wet surface.

This is when the car surprised, and not for the good. In those conditions with the 215/45R17 Michelins fitted front and rear, it pretty much plough-understeered, diagonally headed for the nearest guardrail until enough speed was washed off to allow the engine to spin up the rear wheels and then the car switched to snap oversteer. I know this sounds terrible and it felt it.

But I’m not quite ready to dismiss the car just yet and if you can get the back wheels to break traction before the front starts to push it does feel pretty sorted.

It’s quite a nice place to be in too with comfy seats and a reasonable air of purpose, if not quality, inside the cabin. Simple black and silver mean nothing is too over-styled or tacky. I found the search for a really good seating position a little fiddly, wanting the steering wheel to have a little more reach adjustment.

The pipe fitted from the intake to the cabin does indeed allow for more engine induction noise to penetrate the cabin but whether this is a good or bad thing will be up to different drivers. I’d rather have a nicer sounding car with loud induction and exhaust notes – like the Pig for example :D.

I by no means hate the 86, but equally, I’m not in love with it.

I don’t think I can really judge a car intended to be a proper fun sports car without having driven it with a proper manual gearbox. We’ll see how I go with that quest.

Stay tuned.

Dave