Tokyo gets serious: at the 37th Tokyo Motor Show, Japanese automakers rejected wacky for workable and gave a glimpse of a stylish, alternative-powered future.The Tokyo Motor Show The Tokyo Motor Show (東京モーターショー) is a biennial auto show held in October-November at the Makuhari Messe, Chiba City, Japan for cars, motorcycles and commercial vehicles. is not the antic sideshow See Windows SideShow. of wacky and improbable concept vehicles it once was. No, the ambitions of the Japanese automakers this year focused on ideas that could soon make their way into production, rather than on the exuberant silliness of past shows. Even the few notably strange vehicles like the Toyota PM seem like plausible answers to future transportation needs. Fuel cell vehicles
TOYOTA PM. The darling of the show was the Toyota PM, which is a little disturbing since it looks like the vehicle of choice for a Pod People invasion. PM stands for "personal mobility" and Toyota calls it a "wearable" vehicle to emphasize unambiguously that it only fits a single occupant. The idea behind the PM is that instead of piling a group of people into one vehicle, each person takes his own and the group "platoons" to destinations. To keep the experience from being too isolating, the PM is equipped with a sophisticated communication system that senses when other PMs are nearby and can keep in constant contact with them, creating, in effect, a rolling chat room. (The diffused lighting that shines through the translucent carapace carapace (kâr`əpās), shield, or shell covering, found over all or part of the anterior dorsal portion of an animal. In lobsters, shrimps, crayfish, and crabs, the carapace is the part of the exoskeleton that covers the head and thorax of each PM even changes colors when communication is established to indicate "resonance mode.") The rear wheel and suspension assembly slides along a track in the back of the occupant pod allowing the PM to attain three distinct positions: upright for entry and exit; the slightly more lowered "city mode" and a high-speed mode that lowers the pod closer to the ground for the most aerodynamic profile. This makes for an unusual spec sheet A detail listing of the components of a system. with wheelbase wheel·base n. The distance from the center of the front wheel to that of the rear wheel in a motor vehicle, usually expressed in inches. wheelbase Noun ranging from 1,100 to 2,000 mm and possible height variances from 1,215 to 1,855 mm. HONDA ODYSSEY The Honda Odyssey is a minivan / large MPV produced by the Japanese automaker Honda since 1995. Since model year 1999, the name was used on two related but distinct vehicles, with the larger Odyssey sold in North America market, while the smaller Odyssey sold in Japan and other AND KIWAMI. Concept cars typically have supple lines that are the result of designers indulging themselves without regard to the harsh realities of manufacturability. Actual production vehicles inevitably embody many compromises which dull the original intent of the stylist. But at the Honda stand the roles were reversed. The production Japan market Odyssey, which premiered at the show, caused a stir with its long, low, aggressive take on a monospace people-hauler. with a steeply sloped hood and fenders that end abruptly at the line that demarks the chrome-laden grill and sporty thin headlights, the Odyssey seems to defy definition as a minivan. Of course, its low 1,550-mm height and lack of sliding doors may keep it from being a true minivan anyway (whatever that is). It is hard to imagine a concept with less sex appeal than the Honda Kiwami. Usually simplicity of line is a virtue, but this fuel cell concept carries lack of adornment to a logical but stultifying extreme. The styling team took traditional Japanese architecture Japanese architecture, structures created on the islands that constitute Japan. Evidence of prehistoric architecture in Japan has survived in the form of models of terra-cotta houses buried in tombs and by remains of pit houses of the Jomon, the neolithic people of and garden design as their inspiration, even to the point of fashioning a center console Center console may refer to:
NISSAN EFFIS. Nissan came up with a fresh take on the fuel cell vehicle by thinking small. The Effis is a "3.5 seater" concept that measures a mere 3000 mm in length and looks like a SMART car circa 2020. The design theme furoshiki, the Japanese wrapping cloth that changes shape to conform to its contents, stresses multifunction adaptability. The most clever example of this is the crescent-shaped front dash which can be pushed in for more passenger space or pulled out to twice its normal size to form a table with cup holders when the driver is solo. Nissan wanted to keep the Effis as light as possible, so in addition to making extensive use of aluminum and plastic, it went as far as to eliminate weight of paint and upholstery by electrolitically coloring the aluminum exterior panels and injection molding the front seats with a resin that requires no covering. The Effis is driven by Nissan's "Super Motor" which uses an innovative design to reduce size and weight to one-third of the previous electric motor, unlike a conventional motor that uses a rotor with permanent magnets permanent magnets, n.pl magnets containing the mineral boron and the rare earth metal neodymium; often combined to create a neoprene or ceramic entity. to rotate around an electromagnetic stator stator: see generator; motor, electric. to generate power through a single shaft, the Super Motor positions rotors on both the inside and outside of the stator and delivers power through two shafts. Because it can vary power output to each shaft independently, one Super Motor can replace two conventional units without losing the separate wheel control needed for advanced traction and stability systems. MITSUBISHI SE-RO. The Se-ro is a retro aero lozenge lozenge /loz·enge/ (loz´enj) [Fr.] 1. troche; a discoid-shaped, solid, medicinal preparation for solution in the mouth, consisting of an active ingredient incorporated in a suitably flavored base. 2. of a vehicle that resembles nothing so much as a shrunken shrunk·en v. A past participle of shrink. shrunken Verb a past participle of shrink Adjective reduced in size Adj. 1. VW Microbus mi·cro·bus n. pl. mi·cro·bus·es or mi·cro·bus·ses A station wagon in the shape of a small bus. dipped in aluminum. At only 3,395-mm long the Se-ro fits within the Japanese kei minicar min·i·car n. A very small car, especially a subcompact. Noun 1. minicar - a car that is even smaller than a subcompact car class, but its designers have taken great pains to offer as much usable space as possible. In addition to a second row bench seat that can fold up and out of the way, the front seats can swivel to face the rear and the steering column pivots into the dash to create a few extra inches of room. To keep the passenger compartment as open as possible, the Se-ro utilizes a mid-engine/rear-drive layout that puts all of the powertrain components between the two rear wheels. Rear-hinged rear doors open wide for cargo, but unlike most concepts with this design, there is a wide B-pillar that obstructs access. This is one concept that could be mass-produced with few modifications, and with its polished aluminum exterior panels replaced with painted steel it would not look out of place on the streets of Tokyo today. |
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