Recent Updates

 

10/28/2023 12:00 PM

Toyota to offer manual gearbox in next-generation electric cars

 

10/28/2023 12:00 AM

Toyota Supra could revive GRMN badge with BMW M2 engine

 

10/27/2023 12:00 PM

Editor's letter: Why Mazda isn't just looking at EVs

 

10/27/2023 12:00 PM

Lamborghini stalls EV supercars amid synthetic fuel uncertainty

 

10/27/2023 12:00 PM

From the archive: on this day in 1955

 

10/27/2023 12:00 PM

Maserati Grecale

 

10/27/2023 12:00 PM

China 'wake-up call' forces Nissan to reconsider affordable EV plans

 

10/27/2023 12:00 AM

H2X Darling is 248-mile hydrogen van with KTM lightweight chassis

 

10/26/2023 12:00 PM

Mercedes-Benz EQS SUV gains bigger battery for 447-mile range

 

10/26/2023 12:00 PM

Hyundai Ioniq 5 N electric hot hatch priced from £65,000 in the UK

<<    223   224   225   226   227   >>

EV, Hybrid, Hydrogen, Solar & more 21st century mobility!

< Prev    of 6235   Next >
Toyota C-HR
Tuesday, Oct 17, 2023 12:00 AM
toyota c hr front action 5 Second-generation version of Toyota's crossover smash hit gains sharper styling and a new plug-in hybrid powertrain It’s fitting that the development work for the new Toyota C-HR was led by the firm’s technical centre in Brussels, the de facto capital of Europe. It may be the product of a Japanese manufacturer, but this is a machine that has been developed in Europe, is focused on pleasing European drivers and will be built in Europe.Eschewing Toyota’s previous strategy for ‘global cars’, the original C-HR was developed to help the brand grow its share in the European market – and it clearly worked. It’s Toyota’s fourth-best-seller here, helping the firm’s rise up the sales charts. Most significantly, it’s been by far Toyota’s most successful car in winning over new customers: 59% of C-HR drivers switched from another brand.Key to that success has been how well the C-HR was placed for the European market. Its mix of sharp styling and coupé-crossover shape helped it to find a genuinely rare space at the small end of the C-SUV market (think Volkswagen T-Roc and Kia Niro) and stood far apart from Toyota’s previously stodgy designs, attracting buyers who wanted a bit of edge to their high-riding family runabout. So Toyota has doubled down on its approach, both in terms of European-focused development and styling, with this second-generation C-HR.
< Prev    of 6235   Next >
Leave a Comment
* Name
* Email (will not be published)
*
Click on me to change image  * Enter verification code (Click on the CAPTCHA to refresh the image!)
* - Reqiured fields