Ford partners with Toyota to share technology, create new hybrid system for trucks and SUVs

Ford Toyota

Ford of course knows a lot about trucks, and Toyota has a couple decades of hybrid knowledge in its back pocket. So, if you were looking to make a hybrid truck, wouldn’t you want to bring these corporate titans together? Shockingly that’s actually coming to pass, with the two companies announcing a “memorandum of understanding” today that will see them acting as “equal partners” to create a new rear-wheel drive hybrid platform intended for light trucks and SUVs — but sadly not sports cars. That platform is expected to be completed by sometime next year, but the two will also be sharing data to advance infotainment and in-car technology systems, meaning someday your Entune might talk to your Sync and the whole telematics world could be a better place.

Continue reading Ford partners with Toyota to share technology, create new hybrid system for trucks and SUVs

Ford partners with Toyota to share technology, create new hybrid system for trucks and SUVs originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 22 Aug 2011 10:57:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Plug-in Prius pulling into American driveways in February or March of 2012

Plug-in Prius

Good new PHV fans, the plug-in Prius you’ve been promised should start pulling into American driveways in February or March of 2012 — at least according to a startup date chart at Donlen. The fleet management firm claims initial orders will be taken on November 10th of this year, with the vehicle scheduled to into production in January. An Autoblog tipster also claims to have some rather vague details about trim and color options, as well as its estimated MSRP, which should be below $30,000. Now we’ve just got to figure out how many extension cords it’ll take to reach from our apartment window to the street below.

Plug-in Prius pulling into American driveways in February or March of 2012 originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 09 Aug 2011 15:47:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Brains-On: Wired.com Rides the Thought-Controlled Prius Bike

Toyota’s answered a question no one ever thought to ask: What if the Prius were a bike?

The answer suggests it wouldn’t be as boring to ride as it is to drive. For one thing, the bike uses neurotransmitters to change gears. It looks a whole lot cooler than the car, too.

Now, the first question is “Toyota? Bikes? What?” The Japanese automaker is encouraging inventors and dreamers to tinker with its tech through the Prius Projects campaign. It did something similar with the Toyota For Good campaign that generated ideas for everything from better bike helmets to self-guiding ladders.

Toyota doesn’t know the first thing about building bikes, so it called in the guys at Parlee Bicycles, which makes featherlight frames, and Deeplocal, which made the Nike Chalkbot. Together they built the PXP (Prius X Parlee).

I got to take it for a spin. Nothing big, mind you, but enough to get a sense of how the PXP rides. I’m not a racer, just a guy who commutes on a single-speed Bianchi, so this isn’t a Bicycle-type review. But I didn’t need to throw a leg over the PXP to know it’s light years ahead of my ride.

First, the frame. It’s gorgeous. The matte white bike has the look and feel of a slick aero-road bike without looking like its from the next century. Still, it didn’t look like anything else on the streets of Pittsburgh that day.

The PXP, like the car that inspired it, was designed for optimal aero-efficiency. The designers spent a lot of time in a wind tunnel at MIT to get its shape just right. The bike, with a lightweight interlocking carbon fiber frame, comes in around 16 pounds with all the electronics installed, and it provides a super-comfy ride.

That is where this bike starts to really separate itself from the Schwinn in your garage. The bike is unlike anything else I have ridden. It’s a mash-up, part time-trial bike, part road racer and part touring ride. It’s a hybrid, which makes sense, given the Prius connection.

Going for a spin requires a little more than hopping on and pedaling away. Since this bike is guided by your brain a little more thought goes into the process, literally.

The team set me up with a neurotransmitter helmet connected to an iPhone 4 mounted on the stem. The neurotransmitters are embedded in the helmet. Sync your brain bucket to your phone and you can switch gears simply by thinking about it.

Shifting couldn’t be easier. Think, “shift up” and it does in a blink of an eye. It’s faster and smoother than anything else I’ve ridden. It can be tricky, because you’ve got to keep your head clear — the neurotransmitters work off your brain activity, so if your mind is bombarded with grocery lists or thoughts chasing down that guy who blew by you, shifting could be tricky. This is where the bodhisattva training pays off.

If shifting with your brain isn’t your thing, don’t worry. The iPhone will choose gears according to your desired cadence and heart rate. You also can do the shifting yourself simply by touching the screen.

This isn’t the best bike for any one thing, but it does a lot of things really well. It’s not the fastest bike around, and you aren’t going to see it in the peloton. But the ride is smooth and balanced. The bike is easy to toss through corners. It feels solid without being heavy. I could definitely see myself blowing through traffic in the drops. Make a few changes to the geometry and my pannier would be bolted to the back of this thing for my commute.

There aren’t any plans to mass produce the PXP, so you won’t see it parked outside the local coffee shop anytime soon. But it’s an impressive ride, and the technology really does work. It’s too good not to see it in a bike shop.

Photos: Jason Kambitsis/Wired.com


Toyota’s Prius Bike With Thought-Controlled Gear Shifters

Pxp

The Prius PXP’s sleek lines hide a futuristic secret

Remember Firefox? No, not the bloated open-source web browser, but Craig Thomas’ sleek Soviet fighter plane which had thought-controlled weapons systems. Wouldn’t it be cool if somebody, somehow, did that to a bike?

It turns out that somebody has. Toyota, in cahoots with Saatchi & Saatchi, Parlee Cycles and the boffins at Deeplocal, has come up with the PXP, or Prius Bike. The “Prius” part might be mere branding, but the bike itself is pretty damn awesome, right down to the thought-controlled gears. Yes, you read that right. Thought-controlled gears.

The frame and most other parts are fashioned from carbon fiber, shaped to be aerodynamic and integrate almost every component: cables are routed internally, brakes are built into the forks and the stem is indistinguishable from the headset. This not only makes for a bike that barely distracts the air as it slices through it — it also results in a bike that is so gorgeously minimal that it makes many fixed-gear machines look fussy. There’s even a hole ready to be filled with your smartphone, for the usual kind of cyclo-computer shenanigans.

IMG 1875

Using electrodes to read brain activity, the helmet lets you shift gears with your mind

But we’ve seen this stuff a hundred times before. The real meat is in the gears. Human/digital interface specialist Deeplocal has built a helmet that lets you shift gears just by thinking about it. Just like Clint Eastwood was able to blast enemies out of the sky by thought alone in the Firefox movie, the PXP’s rider can flip up and down through the electronically shifted derailleurs with his mind.

Ten minutes of training is enough to tune your brain to the EEG in the helmet and allow seamless shifting. The thought-control system is built from off-the-shelf hardware and custom software, so it could actually be put into production pretty soon. And fear not. There are levers for manually shifting should you need to do so.

Thought-controlled shifting is clearly mind-boggling sci-fi tech, and could probably be very helpful for pro riders. But for us bike-riding proles, maybe it’s a little too much. After all, one of the biggest advantages of a bike is its simplicity. With a basic toolkit and a connection to Google, you can fix anything.

Are these fancy electronic advances going to ruin home-maintenance the same way that electronic engine management spoiled things for the home car mechanic?

The Toyota Prius Projects: Concept Bike Week 10 [Prolly via Fast Company]

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Toyota’s new crash-avoidance technology takes control of the wheel

Crash-avoidance technology in cars is hardly anything new, of course, but Toyota’s gone a bit further than most with its latest effort. While complete details are still a bit light (including any word of an actual rollout to vehicles), the new system is said to use a combination of both front and rear cameras, and millimeter wave radar technology to detect pedestrians or obstacles that could lead to a crash. The real kicker, however, is that when the car does detect a possible collision, it actually takes control of the wheel to avoid it instead of just stopping the vehicle. What’s more, that’s just one new safety measure that Toyota recently showed off to reporters in Tokyo — it’s also working on things like a pop-up hood that could provide some additional protection in the event of a crash, and a steering wheel that can measure the driver’s heartbeat and avoid a crash if they suffer a heart attack.

Toyota’s new crash-avoidance technology takes control of the wheel originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 22 Jul 2011 10:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toyota Turns Kids Into Backseat Drivers

Sitting in the backseat of a car while your parents are taking you somewhere can be a bore for a young, energetic child. As a parent, having a jittery son constantly pestering you with questions like “are we there yet?” definitely tests tests your nerves. Toy Toyota, Toyota’s new division that aims at creating innovative projects directed towards families, has worked with Party, a new creative super-group set up by some of Japan’s leading creative artists to develop an interesting iPhone app that allows children to join in on the driving experience.

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The “Backseat Driver” uses GPS to let kids follow their “daddy car” in their “my car,” driving along the same path as their parents are in real life. Given the ability to steer left and right, users are awarded points when making correct turns and passing through landmarks and famous sites which appear as little objects on the road. The rarer the landmark, the more points that are rewarded, which can then be converted into unique designs for the car in a “garage.” Users can then share with friends and family their customized car and travel routes via Twitter, showing off the “cool” places that their parents had taken them, including the new candy store down the road.

backseat-driver-toyota-garage

The video below is an ad launched by Toy Toyota introducing this new app, available for free download on iTunes. It is interesting that the ad uses their Prius, their iconic hybrid vehicle, closely tying into their CSR activities.

backseat-driver-toyota-view

Innovative apps like the Backseat Driver prove to be a great way of keeping the kids entertained on a long road trip. Although I’m not particularly sure if children at this age would have a Twitter account, if Toyota believes this young generation to be intact with the SNS trend, this would certainly be a huge marketing opportunity for sites such as Facebook and Twitter. Toyota seems to be heavily invested in CSR activities, evident in their announcement today to create several new in-house schools in the Tohoku region (where the 3/11 disaster struck) to train junior high school students the basics of manufacturing before actually hiring them.

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Toyota Scion iQ EV plugs-in for official 2012 launch

The Scion iQ, Toyota’s tiny EV car that could, got an official 2012 launch yesterday at the automaker’s annual dealer meeting in Vegas. The quiet, though far from specific launch announcement frees this 65 mile-per-charge roadster from its pre-production limbo. Shown off last March at the Geneva Motor Show, the Scion iQ had been put on indefinite hold while factory production in the carmaker’s disaster-stricken homeland ramped back up to speed. With all signs now set to go, the only red-light still lingering is the micro-subcompact’s undisclosed MSRP. Considering the recent bankruptcy of Norwegian Think’s EV offering, we’re glad to see Toyota looking out for its little guy.

Continue reading Toyota Scion iQ EV plugs-in for official 2012 launch

Toyota Scion iQ EV plugs-in for official 2012 launch originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 01 Jul 2011 15:05:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toyota Prius Project’s concept bike lets you shift gears with your mind

Got mind control on the mind? Check out this new concept bike from Deeplocal — a Pittsburgh-based design house that’s adding a neurological twist to the art of cycling. As part of Toyota Prius Project No. 11, the company outfitted the seat post of a Parlee PXP aero road bike with a wireless transmitter, allowing users to remotely shift gears with a smartphone. Deeplocal’s designers then added a set of neuron transmitters to a helmet and re-programmed the PXP to communicate with them — meaning, in theory, that riders could control the bike’s gears by simply thinking about it. Theory, of course, isn’t the same thing as practice, but perhaps the concept will become a reality if we think really hard about it.

Toyota Prius Project’s concept bike lets you shift gears with your mind originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 01 Jul 2011 09:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Toyota premiers smart charging G-Stations in Japan, world instantly jealous


Recharging tired EVs and plug-in hybrids in Japan just got a little more exciting thanks to Toyota‘s upcoming G-Station charger, which relies on contact-less smart-cards to identify vehicles and owners. Toyota’s Windows Azure-powered Smart Center drives the machines, which allows users to connect to the internet and use smartphone apps to find chargers, receive notifications, and check usage history. The G-Station will be coming this July in two flavors, creatively named Type A for the standard and Type B for the more advanced model. Pricing for the aforementioned units will be 280,000 yen ($3,469 USD) and 448,000 yen ($5,549 USD) respectively. Toyota is expecting to sell around 3,000 units by the end of 2012, making these stations available to its retail car dealers, shopping malls and restaurants. Soon the outside of pachinko parlors will be just as electric as the inside.

Toyota premiers smart charging G-Stations in Japan, world instantly jealous originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 23 Jun 2011 09:21:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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2012 plug-in Prius to include selectable EV mode, full battery regeneration


We already know to expect Toyota’s Entune infotainment system in the dash of the 2012 Prius, but the hybrid’s monster EV batteries will be powering much more than a touchscreen and apps. According to ConsumerSearch, next year’s plug-in vehicle will include two new features aimed at improving the car’s electric-only range for local driving, especially when your commute also includes a trip down the freeway. The first improvement comes in the form of an EV mode button, allowing you to turn off EV for highway driving, which tends to drain those batts faster than a Thunderbolt in Hotspot mode. The Prius will also offer full battery regeneration, so power-off activities like braking and driving downhill will restore the hybrid’s EV-only range — especially helpful if you live in a hilly area or tend to make frequent stops. Both new features should have a fairly significant impact on efficiency, so you’ll soon be able to drive further in the city without tapping a single drop of crude.

2012 plug-in Prius to include selectable EV mode, full battery regeneration originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 16 Jun 2011 17:02:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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