I think they have it figured out and they are just stalling the introduction not because they lack technology but they still own a lot of stake in conventional solutions, they will probably peel away a line of cars soon for western markets that are EV and reduce sales of Corollas/Yaris with petrol engines but they will continue providing pickups/suvs for other markets. It is just they cannot slot a line of EV on top of all of the existing models and variants as they can still reap the reward of the investment they made for conventional cars. They would spread themselves too thin with a line of EVs on top of current portfolio
Not a single car company, no matter how big or innovative had 'EV just figured out' and could easily just mass produce them. VW is the size of Toyota and was and is nowhere near that.
The idea that Toyota, a company that has nothing but stalled on EV and fought EV regulation at every step has internally already perfected every aspect of EVs is just nonsense.
Their initial products are not competitive in price or performance (or anything really).
Some people have really gone in the deep end with Toyota and believe that Toyota can not actually make mistakes. It all some 4D galaxy brain strategy. Its impossible that they simply bet on the wrong technology, had stubborn leadership, under invested in EV (and battery production) and are now paying the price. Of course not its all brilliant strategy. They fired their CEO, despite his amazingly brilliant strategy. They also invested billions in hydrogen with virtually no results just to throw people so they don't know that Toyota has already perfected EVs. And they invested billions in their solid state batteries, that will be in mass production by 2022 (what year is it?).
There is literally 0 evidence that Toyota has 'figured out' EV. And there is a literal mountain of evidence suggesting the opposite.
Level 5 isn’t right around the corner, but “navigating an entire GPS route on city streets for 30 minutes with fewer than 5 disengagements/interventions” is present day consumer technology.
As we speak right now there are robo-cabs driving themselves on the streets of San Francisco. Of course, they’re not perfect.
Maybe self-driving is further away than we initially thought and certainly further away than Elmo promised, but anyone who who runs a car company and thinks that humans will drive themselves in 10-20 years is being willfully ignorant.
Continuous variable transmission (automatic) is nearly always intentionally made to jerk at specific ratios to emulate manual transmission - even though there is no need for it to do that, and efficiency/reliability actually suffers slightly.
It’s anachronistic and kind of hilarious. I test drove a 2023 CRV Hybrid and it includes a “Sport” drive mode that pipes fake engine noise through the speakers and simulated shift lurches when you reach “redline” - definitely good for a laugh.
But it also has the potential to confuse people. I saw a Reddit post about the same car where the OP was concerned because the car sounded like it was redlining too much before it shifted, and people had to tell him that the car has no transmission and thus no shifting. It’s all in your head, man.
I'm really glad my wife's 2015 CRV doesn't do that shit.
While accelerating lightly, it just stays at a constant ~2,500 rpm. If I'm flooring it, it's at a constant ~5,000 rpm. Once I've reached my desired speed and let go, it tends to sit at about 1,500 rpm.
Taking a CVT and making it act like it has discrete gears absolutely destroys all the advantages a CVT offers. In theory, a CVT is the best transmission, as it can always precisely hold the engine speed at either max fuel efficiency for cruising, or max horsepower for accelerating fast, and everywhere in between.
It’s interesting that they are going for the feel when most of their cars have been gutless for 20 years. But looks like they woke up and added power to the Prius, the GR line is out and the Supra although not fully Toyota is out there too. Now they just need to add fun to the affordable ones.
Toyota is a lost company. Never seen any manufacturer be less interested in doing EVs and being so goddamn awful at at (considering it's immense size and budget and technical acumen). A fake manual transmission is utterly ludicrous.
Why don't they put fake spark plugs in that need regular change?
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[ 2.9 ms ] story [ 73.6 ms ] threadThe idea that Toyota, a company that has nothing but stalled on EV and fought EV regulation at every step has internally already perfected every aspect of EVs is just nonsense.
Their initial products are not competitive in price or performance (or anything really).
Some people have really gone in the deep end with Toyota and believe that Toyota can not actually make mistakes. It all some 4D galaxy brain strategy. Its impossible that they simply bet on the wrong technology, had stubborn leadership, under invested in EV (and battery production) and are now paying the price. Of course not its all brilliant strategy. They fired their CEO, despite his amazingly brilliant strategy. They also invested billions in hydrogen with virtually no results just to throw people so they don't know that Toyota has already perfected EVs. And they invested billions in their solid state batteries, that will be in mass production by 2022 (what year is it?).
There is literally 0 evidence that Toyota has 'figured out' EV. And there is a literal mountain of evidence suggesting the opposite.
As we speak right now there are robo-cabs driving themselves on the streets of San Francisco. Of course, they’re not perfect.
Maybe self-driving is further away than we initially thought and certainly further away than Elmo promised, but anyone who who runs a car company and thinks that humans will drive themselves in 10-20 years is being willfully ignorant.
We don't all live in the suburban highway hellscape. Try going for a mountain or coastal-cliff drive. I bet you'd smile.
But it also has the potential to confuse people. I saw a Reddit post about the same car where the OP was concerned because the car sounded like it was redlining too much before it shifted, and people had to tell him that the car has no transmission and thus no shifting. It’s all in your head, man.
While accelerating lightly, it just stays at a constant ~2,500 rpm. If I'm flooring it, it's at a constant ~5,000 rpm. Once I've reached my desired speed and let go, it tends to sit at about 1,500 rpm.
Taking a CVT and making it act like it has discrete gears absolutely destroys all the advantages a CVT offers. In theory, a CVT is the best transmission, as it can always precisely hold the engine speed at either max fuel efficiency for cruising, or max horsepower for accelerating fast, and everywhere in between.
Toyota is in denial. They can’t imagine a future in which their expertise in ICE becomes obsolete and irrelevant.
Go listen to Red Barchetta - RUSH.
Manual transmission cars are still way more fun to me, unless I had to drive through Seattle or SF or something.
The rest of the people who currently drive in Seattle are a bigger nuisance.
Why don't they put fake spark plugs in that need regular change?