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Toyota has upgraded its diesel-powered HiAce work van as

stricter regulations come into force in Australia.

From November 1, all new vehicles designated ‘light-duty’

– including work vans and utes – must comply with the Euro 5

emissions standard. Both petrol and diesel engines are affected,

with diesel vehicles required to meet a particle limit.

As a result, several manufacturers have been working on

upgrades of their workhorse fleets.

For Toyota’s top-selling HiAce – which is sold as a long-

wheelbase (LWB) van, five-seat LWB crew van and Super LWB van

– the petrol-powered versions were upgraded to Euro 5 early last

year, when the company also added extra safety equipment such

as electronic stability control, brake assist, hill-start assist and an

emergency stop signal that automatically engages when severe

braking force is applied.

Now, the 3.0L ‘1KD-FTV’ four-cylinder turbo-diesel engine has

received attention to bring it up to speed, including a recalibration

and the addition of a particulate filter offering a choice of manual

or automatic regeneration.

There is no change to output – 100kW of power at 3400rpm and

300Nm of torque at 1200rpm – and the transmission choice is still

five-speed manual as standard or four-speed automatic for an

extra $2550.

Toyota claims fuel economy improvements of up to 4.6%

have been achieved on the official urban cycle, depending on

the variant. The biggest gains around town – where the HiAce

naturally performs most of its duties – were achieved with the

manual LWB crew van and Super LWB van, both of which return

10.3L per 100km.

That said, the benchmark combined-cycle rating, which

considers outer-urban conditions and takes an average of the

two, sees the fuel consumption figure largely unchanged – or

marginally higher than before. This ranges from 8.1L/100km on

the LWB van manual to 9.2L/100km on the Super LWB auto.

For comparison, the 2.7L ‘2TR-FE’ four-cylinder petrol

produces 118kW at 5200rpm and 243Nm at 4000rpm, driving

through a five-speed manual or six-sped auto. It returns between

9.8L/100km and 10.5L/100km on the combined cycle, while urban

figures can be as high as 13.3L/100km (LWB van manual).

Toyota also now offers the choice of steel panel on the left-hand

side (rather than a window) for the white automatic LWB diesel

van, responding to customers who preferred to forego the added

visibility offered by the window for the extra privacy and security

brought with a panel.

HiAce pricing recently increased by 2.0%, with the Australian

subsidiary blaming currency movements as forcing its hand.

Pricing starts from $33,650 plus on-road costs for the LWB

petrol manual van, topping out at $48,440 for the Super LWB

diesel auto.

Toyota

www.toyota.com.au

Toyota HiAce