The Toyota GR Yaris Has Arrived With All-Wheel Drive And A 257bhp Triple

Toyota has revealed its first homologation special since the Celica GT-Four, and it lives up to our high expectations
The Toyota GR Yaris Has Arrived With All-Wheel Drive And A 257bhp Triple

We may only be a few days into 2020, but it doesn’t seem too soon to call this the most important fast car reveal of the year. We’re talking about the new Toyota GR Yaris, and despite extraordinarily high expectations, it looks to have met them. And then some.

The WRC homologation special has a completely unique body - the new, boggo Yaris is available only as a five-door vehicle, but the GR is in a three-door configuration. Plus, the roof is 91mm lower, and the doors are frameless, to give a coupe-like aesthetic. The icing on the cake is a set of widened arches for the fatter tyres and wider rear track.

The Toyota GR Yaris Has Arrived With All-Wheel Drive And A 257bhp Triple

Under that unique body you’ll find more unique stuff - the GR’s dedicated platform was created by joining the front part of the standard Yaris’ GA-B architecture with the rear of the GA-C platform used for the likes of the Prius and Corolla. To help weight distribution, the battery has been mounted in the boot, and the engine positioned as far back as possible.

Speaking of which, the GR Yaris’ method of propulsion is - intriguingly - an inline-three, rather than a four. But don’t go thinking it’s going to underwhelm - packing a single-scroll ball-bearing turbocharger, the 1618cc engine is good for a mighty 257bhp and 266lb ft of torque. It’s by far the most powerful production inline-three available right now, giving the GR Yaris a 0-62mph time of 5.5 seconds and an electronically-limited top speed of 143mph. Ford Fiesta ST - you ought to be watching your back.

That mighty thrust is channelled to all four wheels via a six-speed manual gearbox (no automatic option here). In theory, it can send up to 100 per cent of torque to the front or rear ends, but how the system behaves will mostly depend on what mode you’re in.

In ‘Normal’, you’re looking at a 60:40 split. The car is at its fastest in the mostly 50:50 ‘Track’ setting, but if you want to introduce a little drifty fun into the mix, ‘Sport’ will give a 30:70 balance.

The Toyota GR Yaris Has Arrived With All-Wheel Drive And A 257bhp Triple

Toyota hasn’t gone into specifics about the GR Yaris’ bespoke suspension system, although we do at least know it has an unusual MacPherson strut front/double-wishbone rear combination. Taking care of braking is a set of 356mm discs with four-pot calipers at the front, working with 297mm rotors at the rear squeezed by two-piston calipers.

225/40/18 Dunlop SP Sport Maxx tyres are fitted as standard, switched for Michelin Pilot Sport 4s if you option the Circuit Pack, which also includes front and rear limited-slip differentials.

Despite packing an all-wheel drive system, the Toyota GR Yaris weighs only 1280kg
Despite packing an all-wheel drive system, the Toyota GR Yaris weighs only…

The best part of all of this is that the GR Yaris - built with input from both Toyota Gazoo Racing and Tommi Mäkinen Racing - isn’t going to be a very limited-run special like the Yaris GRMN. Toyota will need to make a decent number of them to ensure the three-door body complies with WRC homologation rules, as it’ll be forming the basis of the firm’s next rally machine. Plus, the Japanese company will no doubt be wanting a return on the considerable investment necessary to make something like this.

All of this means it’ll have to be priced competitively. We still don’t know how much it’ll cost in the UK, but the RZ First Edition weighs in at 3.96 million Yen in Japan, which is just under £28,000. It’s looking like this will be a homologation special for the masses.

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Comments

Jorge Enanon

so, cheaper than my prius? :O

01/10/2020 - 19:40 |
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Anonymous

Nice, tbh this is first pure Toyota sporta car since… MR2. (gt86 - made with subaru, supra - made “with” BMW). This is also one of very few new cars that I may consider buying.

Btw, don’t you think 5.5s to 62 is.. a bit slow for this weight/power? Maybe it has short gears and you need to get to third gear to hit 62.

01/10/2020 - 23:07 |
2 | 4
🎺🎺thank mr skeltal

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

5.5s is pretty fast, the Golf GTI TCR with more power and DSG needs 5.6s.

01/11/2020 - 10:17 |
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Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Some similar vehicles (both modern and older) in terms of AWD, manual gearbox, turbo engine etc are:

Modern:
2nd Gen Audi S3 - 195 kW/265 hp, 1450 kg, 0-100 in 5.6s
S series Subaru WRX - about 169 kW/230 hp, about 1400 kg, 0-100 in about 5.9s
VW Mk7 Golf R - 221 kW/300 hp, 1416 kg, 0-100 in 5.0s
V1 series Subaru WRX STI - 221 kW/300 hp, 1489 kg, 0-100 in 5.2s
Audi S1 - 170kW/230 hp, 1370 kg, 0-100 in 5.9s
V1 series Subaru WRX - 197 kW/268 hp, 1468 kg, 0-100 in 6.0s

Older:
Volvo S60 R - 220 kW/300 hp, 1548 kg, 0-100 in 5.7s
Mazda 6 MPS - 191-204 kW/260-275 hp, 1575 kg, 0-100 in 5.6s
Nissan Pulsar GTiR - 169-172 kW/230-235 hp, (cant find weight figures), 0-100 in 5.4s
B5 Generation Audi S4 - 195 kw/265 hp, 1469 kg, 0-100 in 5.7s

Compared to this selection the 5.5s claim seems a little optimistic if anything. Yes the Yaris GR is lighter, but that will primarily help with launch and 0-60ish km/h, for speeds higher than that, power starts to become increasingly significant.

01/13/2020 - 05:54 |
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Anonymous

Budget Rally Car.

01/11/2020 - 09:50 |
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Anonymous

RX7 tail lights

01/13/2020 - 01:20 |
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