Toyota i-ROAD
By Jeremy Koizeneiwski / Autoblog Canada
Toyota i-ROAD leans its way into the city
According to Toyoa, the "i-Road
takes the company closer to its goal of creating the ultimate range of
eco cars." As you're surely aware, that range of eco cars includes the
enormously successful Prius family, but this new machine is nothing like the hybrid hatchback. And
it's not even a car – Toyota calls the i-ROAD a Personal Mobility
Vehicle.
Toyota's i-ROAD Concept, which debuts at this week's Geneva Motor Show,
is adorned with just three wheels, meaning it's just as much a
motorcycle as it is a car, and the driver and passenger sit in tandem
style instead of side-by-side. This arrangement allows for a very thin
850mm width, which is about the same as a large motorcycle. Because the
cockpit is enclosed, the occupants don't need helmets, nor are they open
to the elements outside.
Also like a traditional two-wheeler, the i-ROAD tilts through the turns
and when driving on uneven surfaces. Toyota says its computer-controlled
Active Lean technology automatically balances the vehicle with no input
from the driver.
Despite the automaker's expertise in hybrid drivetrains, the i-ROAD is a
pure electric vehicle, and Toyota says it "believes in the feasibility
of EVs to serve as a main mode of transport for short urban journeys."
There's a two-kilowatt motor in each front wheel, meaning the i-ROAD
offers up just over five horsepower, which isn't a lot but should be
enough to get moving up to city traffic speeds (no performance specs are
available).
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