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Home » Car of the year? Has to be the Toyota ZR Hybrid Corolla

Car of the year? Has to be the Toyota ZR Hybrid Corolla

January 2, 2019 by Alastair Sloane

The new Toyota Corolla didn’t make the cut in mainstream 2018 car of the year awards in New Zealand, mainly because it arrived late in the year and didn’t meet judging deadlines.

But I spent enough time behind the wheel of both the 2.0-litre petrol and 1.8-litre petrol-electric Corollas to choose the ZR Hybrid Corolla as my 2018 Car of the Year (COTY). But more on the ZR Hybrid itself down the page.

Corolla ZR3

Petrol or hybrid, the twelfth-generation five-door hatchback is the best value-for-money Corolla Toyota has produced – its impressive bundle of safety equipment alone puts it in a category far beyond its role as a volume seller.

It looks sharper than ever, with design cues taken from the crossover CH-R and Lexus style book. The bodyshell is stronger, with improved rigidity, a strength noted by crash testers the Australian New Car Assessment Programme (ANCAP).

Corolla ZR2

Its modular family chassis is what Toyota CEO Akio Toyoda asked his engineers to produce: one with a lower centre of gravity that gives the new generation of front-drive Toyotas – including the bigger Camry – some sporty bite.

ANCAP liked everything about the Corolla’s structural integrity. It gave it 96 per cent for adult protection, part of a five-star safety finding that made its way into the inaugural AA/Driven COTY awards, where the new Corolla won New Zealand’s safest car category for 2018. The gong applies to both petrol and hybrid models.

The ZR Hybrid Corolla is the best example so far of hybrid automotive fusion at a real-world price: a chassis that delivers an impressive ride/handling mix along with a petrol-electric powertrain that delivers real-world fuel savings.

  • There are two Corolla hybrids: the GX at $32,990 and the better equipped ZR at $38,490. Greener petrol-electric technology doesn’t come any cheaper. Both hybrid Corollas are powered by the Prius powerplant, a 72kW/142Nm 1.8-litre Atkinson-cycle four-cylinder petrol engine paired with two electric motor-generators putting out 53kW/163Nm. The CVT (Continuously Variable Transmission) gearbox has three driving modes: Eco, Power and EV. Eco is what 70-year-old buggers like me often use; Power provides a more urgent throttle response; EV is battery power alone, enough for journeys between traffic lights.
  • Such an extensive safety package doesn’t come any cheaper either. Corolla offers three grades of autonomous emergency braking, which can detect, mitigate or avoid crashes with vehicles, pedestrians, cyclists. Other gizmos include speed assistance systems, which can read road signs. These are the building blocks for automation, all in a car that, as well as being a popular private model, makes up the bulk of the lease and rental fleet in New Zealand.
  • Inside, the Hybrid ZR has an eight-inch multi-media display above the centre console. There you will find the car’s nerve centre. Stuck in traffic and want to send a text by voice command? Tell Apple’s Siri or Google Assistant to send it for you.
  • In terms of the ride/handling mix, it is impressive, the best Corolla yet. Turn-in is sharp, the rear end dutifully following the direction the front wheels take. Okay, the platform might not have the edgy responses of a $60,000 performance hatchback, but it’s pretty damn good, its stabiliser bars at each end helping keeping Corolla flatter than ever before through corners. Joining the stabilisers, or anti-sway bars, are MacPherson struts up front and an independent wishbone set-up at the rear.
  • Over a couple of weeks of motoring I averaged 4.7 litres/100km – that’s 60 miles to the gallon from a 43-litre (9.4 gallon) fuel tank, or CO2 exhaust emissions of 97 grams/km. In theory, 900km of motoring between fill-ups from the 91-octane bowser. The previous Corolla Hybrid had to drink more expensive 95-octane.

Corolla ZR display

Downsides? Just a couple. The ZR Hybrid Corolla’s back seat is short on knee room and the boot is short on space. Toyota’s dealers admit as much but in the same breath say: how often do you see four people in a Corolla? There’s no spare tyre either, just an aerosol-based repair kit.

This car does lots of things well, while its electrics save on fuel.  Electrification, either as a primary or supplementary form of propulsion, is the future. Every carmaker is at it. They are reminded every day that the world’s second biggest oil company, America’s ExxonMobil, spends $NZ150 million a month just looking for oil.

Filed Under: Car reviews, Highlights, Industry news, Latest news Tagged With: Toyota Corolla

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The Good Oil

French carmaker Renault has won the 2025 European Car of the Year award with the all-electric R5 supermini (pictured). It’s the brand’s second win in a row, following the new Scenic’s gong in 2024. The R5 led the vote count from start to finish from the 60 jurors in 23 countries. It received 353 points, beating the Kia EV3 (291 points) and the Citroen C3/e in third place with 215 points. It’s Renault’s eighth win in the 62-year history of the Coty award. The R5 goes on sale in the UK this month. There are two main drivetrains: a 90kW motor/40kWh battery model with a 300km range, and a 112kW/52kWh example with a 400km range. The R5 starts in price at £22.995, or $NZ50,000.

EU carmakers seek trade deal with Trump

BMW and Mercedes-Benz are among carmakers urging the European Union to get a favourable trade deal with US President Donald Trump. The European Automobile Manufacturers’ Association (ACEA) wants to keep open trade with both the US and China. It fears Trump, who promises heavy tariffs on Chinese imports to the US, will look unfavourably on countries that continue to trade freely with Beijing. Ola Kallenius, president of the group and chairman of the management board of MB, said in a letter to EU leaders:  “Overall, it is essential to recognise that trade with China and the US is most vital for the prosperity of the European economy.The EU should seek a grand bargain with the US and attempt to avoid a potential trade conflict.”

Diesel fuels EV concept for US military

A  go-anywhere EV concept for the US military uses an onboard 12kW diesel generator to top up the batteries on the move.  The all-wheel-drive has 800-volt technology and a 200kWh battery pack to power three electric motors, two in the rear and one up front. Claimed output is 745kW/15,590Nm, or 1000hp and 11,500 ft-lb of torque.  The four-seater was developed by the defence division of General Motors and is based on the platform of the Hummer SUV. It rides on Fox performance shock absorbers and 37-inch tyres and comes with “exceptional” approach and departure angles for off-road mobility. Maximum range using the generator to keep things ticking over is said to be around 500km.

We are the World

The outside temperature in Midland, Texas, was 40.5C when staff at the local office of the US National Weather Service set out to show the cabin of a closed car can literally get baking hot in summer. They mixed up a batch of chocolate chip cookies and laid them on the car’s dashboard – the surface of which showed a temperature of 87.7C. A little over four hours later the cookies were ready to eat. “Even though ours weren’t golden brown, we can confirm that they are done and delicious,” the staff wrote on Facebook.

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Electric G-Wagen takes you for spin

https://youtu.be/NwHbJ7HN1sU

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