Toyota - Avensis Euro NCAP - 5 STARS
If you are looking for an all round performer, combining versatility, comfort and performance the Avensis range could be just what you are looking for.
Choose from the elegant saloon, the versatile hatchback, or the tourer estate. There are no less than six trim levels to select from including the new top of the range T180. There is a generous provision of equipment across the range with air conditioning, CD
player and electric front windows among the features fitted as standard. The interior feels up-market and the Avensis is comfortable drive.
There is a choice of 5 responsive engines, a flexible and frugal 1.8 and a lively 2.0 litre WT-i petrol or a 2 litre and two kinds of fast and frugal 2.2 litre D-4D diesel options, including an impressive 175 bhp returning a combined 46.3 mpg, 0-62mph in 8.6 seconds and the top speed is 137mph.
With the Avensis 2.2 D-4D returning an excellent 57.6 mpg (extra urban) fuel consumption and attracting a VED Banding of D Toyota are clearly trying to push the envelope of green motoring for cars of this size and comfort.
The Avensis is one of the safest cars on the road with a top five star Euro NCAP rating and comes loaded to the hilt with safety features. Even the base model has nine airbags, including one to protect the driver's knees. Security is very good with etched windows, double locking, marked parts, deadlocks and alarm/immobiliser as standard.
Toyota has for a long time been at the forefront of green motoring so it should not come as a surprise to learn that Toyota was joint winner of the prestigious WhatCar? Green Award for 2007.
Toyota consistently tops build quality surveys. Even so, every new Toyota car is protected by a comprehensive warranty. In addition to the 3 year or 60,000 mile (whichever comes first) Mechanical Warranty, that includes full RAC recovery service for the first 12 months, there is a 3 year Paint Surface Warranty and a 12 year anti-corrosion and perforation warranty.
About the manufacturer
The Toyota name has for a long time been synonymous with pioneering developments of greener motoring, and the organisation is totally committed to reducing its environmental impact. From improving fuel efficiency and reducing exhaust emissions, to the management and reduction of the environmental impact throughout the entire lifecycle of vehicles - from development to production, use, disposal, and recycling.
Toyota's mission has always been to provide clean and safe products. Thus, the company has positioned the environment as one of its most important issues and has been working toward creating a prosperous society and a world that is comfortable to live in. With this goal in mind, Toyota has been actively developing various new technologies from the perspective of achieving energy security and diversifying energy sources, which is necessitated by the dwindling supply of petroleum resources. For example, in motive power sources for automobiles alone.
Toyota has been continually improving conventional engines and have developed and commercialised lean-burn petrol engines, direct injection petrol engines and common rail direct-injection diesel engines, etc. They have also been modifying engines so that they can use alternative fuels, such as compressed natural gas, instead of gasoline or light oil, and have been installing these engines in commercially sold vehicles. Toyota has also developed and been marketing electric vehicles that use motors for the driving source; hybrid vehicles that combine an engine and a motor, fusing the advantages of these two power sources; fuel cell hybrid vehicles (FCHV) that use fuel cells to generate electricity based on a chemical reaction between hydrogen and the oxygen in the air and that supply this electricity to electric motors to produce driving power.
In pursuit of the ultimate environmentally friendly car, in 1997 Toyota introduced the world's first mass-produced hybrid vehicle, the Prius - one of the most fuel efficient 5-person mass-produced gasoline passenger vehicles in the world.
In December 2002 Toyota began limited marketing in the U.S. and Japan of the hydrogen-powered TOYOTA FCHV (Fuel Cell Hybrid Vehicle, the first-ever market-ready fuel cell vehicle. After further improvements, the TOYOTA FCHV became the first fuel-cell vehicle in Japan to acquire vehicle type certification under the amended Road Vehicles Act, and on July 1, 2005, Toyota began leasing it in Japan and the U.S. The FCHV is seen as the closest yet to the ultimate eco-car.
However, Toyota will not be satisfied until such ultimate eco-cars become available to everyone. Toyota's completely original fuel cell - the Toyota FC Stack - is a performance leader among vehicular fuel cells worldwide, and is already on the verge of surpassing gasoline engines in power density.
Toyota has developed the concept of Hybrid Synergy Drive, upon which it has developed a new-generation Toyota hybrid system called THS II, which achieves high levels of compatibility between environmental performance and power by increasing the motor output by 1.5 times, greatly boosting the power supply voltage and achieving significant advances in the control system, aiming for synergy between motor power and engine power. As a consequence the Harrier and Kluger hybrids have qualified as vehicles that meet an exhaust emissions level 75% lower than the 2005 Exhaust Emissions Standards.
Since 1990 Toyota has been actively working to make easy to recycle vehicles, taking into consideration the entire vehicle lifecycle, from development to disposal. In the development stage Toyota has been developing easy to recycle materials and designs that take dismantling into consideration, while developing and introducing various recycling technologies in the production stage. Toyota has built a system for dealers to promote the reuse of automobile parts and for collecting and recycling bumpers that have been replaced. For end-of-life vehicles Toyota has been advancing research into efficient dismantling technologies as well as promoting the use of shredder residue. The recycling activities of the individual stages are coordinated and information from each stage is provided to Toyota's development divisions.
Toyota's efforts in recycling end-of-life vehicles began with the foundation of a shredding company in 1970, Toyota Metal Co Ltd, and in 1990 the establishment of the Recycling Committee, which led to the operation of the world's first mass-production ASR Recycling Plant in 1998. In 2003 Toyota announced the Toyota Recycle and the launch of the new Raum into which Toyota incorporated many new designs for recycling features. Toyota plans to continue taking action to attain goals such as the early achievement of a 95% vehicle recovery rate.