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Featured The story behind the Prius

Discussion in 'Prius, Hybrid, EV and Alt-Fuel News' started by usbseawolf2000, Dec 2, 2015.

  1. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    NAGOYA -- Since its first-generation Prius debuted in December 1997 with the slogan: "just in time for the 21st century," Toyota Motor has been a pioneer in hybrid vehicles.

    Back then, hybrid cars were seen as a marginal segment in the auto industry, yet they quickly caught on with consumers and other carmakers have followed Toyota's lead.



    Company Chairman Takeshi Uchiyamada was the man behind the development of the first-generation Prius. He recently spoke to The Nikkei about the various challenges encountered during development of the world's first mass market hybrid car.

    After joining Toyota in 1969, Uchiyamada spent many years testing various methods of resolving car vibration and noise issues. His life took a dramatic turn in January 1994, when he was appointed as the leader of the company's G21 project, an engineering team that paved the way for the development of the Prius.

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    Toyota Motor unveiled the Prius, its first-generation hybrid vehicle, at the Tokyo Motor Show on Oct. 22 in 1997.

    "As we were approaching the 21st century, Toyota needed to figure out what a 21st-century car would look like. I was told that this was the management's thinking behind the launch of the project. Although then-Honorary Chairman Eiji Toyoda was often talking about that, we engineers were quite busy and deferred the project time and again. But then, we came under increased pressure and started a study group in September 1993."

    "Initially, everyone in the team had other responsibilities as well, so I was named the leader because someone had to be solely dedicated to this project. Normally, carmakers think of target customers or rival models when developing a new car. But the only direction I received was to 'make a 21st-century car.' So, I thought we needed to create a clear vision first."

    Uchiyamada and his team therefore set about the task by listing all the social issues and challenges they could think of -- traffic accidents, greater participation of women in the workforce, a declining birthrate and an aging population, the integration of information technology and automobiles, and many more. After much brainstorming, they decided to focus on the issues of energy and the environment.

    "The company had already worked on a variety of issues, but energy and environment were areas that remained little addressed. As I looked more into these issues, I realized it was actually a huge challenge. So, I decided to commit myself to providing a solution to one of the most significant problems of the 21st century."

    "At Toyota, however, opinions were divided on what to do with standard automotive features, such as air bags, at the time. Some said there was no telling whether consumers were willing to pay more for car safety. Given that, they argued it would be very difficult to focus on environmentally friendly technology. But contrary to expectations, the board of executives accepted our proposal with little hesitation."

    Uchiyamada and his team set a number of goals, such as improving the fuel efficiency of existing gasoline engines by 50%. But a turning point came at the Tokyo Motor Show in 1995, when the team came up with the idea of installing a hybrid vehicle system to demonstrate good fuel economy, an important step toward the development of the Prius, the world's first mass-produced hybrid vehicle.

    "Hybrids were initially positioned as a concept car for the motor show. Compared with passenger vehicles, our hybrid car ran with great difficulty and it was still lacking in reliability. But Akihiro Wada, the executive vice president at the time, and other executives started arguing that a 50% increase in fuel efficiency was not enough for the car of the 21st century and it should be a 100% increase. I believe they knew that it would be almost but impossible to achieve a 100% increase without using hybrid technology."

    Panasonic was producing batteries for our electric RAV4 sport utility vehicle, which we released ahead of the Prius. This company also therefore developed batteries for hybrids but it was Toyota that decided on the testing method. While it may seem like a low-profile process, it is important to decide what kind of tests to conduct in balancing battery performance with costs. Since none of us understood what to do, we decided to assign this task to engineers in their late 30s."

    "When it comes to developing ordinary passenger cars, many experienced, senior staff are too eager to offer advice. They often say 'Don't do that' and stop younger engineers from doing something new. But with hybrid technology, nobody knew what to do so they couldn't interfere. The people given the task had to think on their own and find a solution. There was a lot of pressure, but that helped raise our morale."

    The development of the first-generation Prius was a race against time as well. Initially, Toyota was scheduled to release the Prius in 1999 but then twice brought forward the launch, first to 1998 and then to 1997. In the end, the automaker managed to roll out the first-generation model in time for the adoption of the Kyoto Protocol in December 1997, but only just.

    "In 1995, the company decided to bring the launch forward by one year to 1997. Although we had created a prototype vehicle at the time, it didn't function for 49 days and we were still struggling. Parts production was proceeding, with 1998 as the target release year. I wasn't confident, and I was afraid I couldn't deliver. Setting aside the time needed for production preparation and other procedures, we had little more than a year left for development. So, we agreed with the management that we would set checkpoints along the way and would postpone the launch of the Prius if the vehicle's quality and performance were deemed insufficient."

    Nevertheless, the senior management didn't fully live up to this "promise." At a public meeting in March 1997 senior executive announced plans to "release a hybrid car by the end of the year." In other words, the company officially made a promise about the launch. Uchiyamada was too busy to be involved and all of a sudden felt he had been put in a very difficult situation.

    "Our technology was not ready yet, so I told the management that they hadn't kept their word [on potentially delaying the launch]. We had yet to achieve the target fuel efficiency levels. But once the senior management had made the announcement, it became official. From then on, we worked 24 hours a day and seven days a week. We worked 1.5 times more than we did with regular projects and managed to keep the promise. All the engineers involved were under intense pressure, but we were all highly motivated to produce the world's first hybrid vehicle. That's how we overcame such a daunting challenge."

    Toyota's release of the Prius came as a big surprise to rival automakers. "They wondered how on earth we were able to develop such a complex system in such a short period of time," Uchiyamada said. Uchiyamada believes they managed it by setting high targets while ensuring they avoided risks, such as by setting up the checkpoints along the development process.

    "I wouldn't advise setting such high targets for every single task, but I think we should set a very ambitious goal when it comes to tackling a critically important issue. Easy targets would only amount to an accumulation of conventional efforts and "kaizen," or continuous improvement. But with a challenging target, there is a higher chance of making a breakthrough. I have learned that aspiring to become the No. 1 and the first in the world will naturally force us to work harder."

    "That's why we stuck to the release of the Mirai, our fuel cell vehicle, by the end of 2014, not by the end of fiscal 2014 (in March 2015). Even if the task at hand seems daunting at first, it is always possible to find ways to overcome it with the determination to do so. We are aiming to achieve annual sales of 30,000 fuel cell vehicles around 2020, but I personally think this is the lowest possible sales target for us. Failure to achieve it would mean that we would not be able to put in place the necessary hydrogen infrastructure and make fuel cell vehicles widely accepted."

    Toyota started selling the Prius only four years after the G21 project was launched. The achievement can also be attributed to the company's years of technological know-how.

    "I think our electric vehicle technology was useful. Of course, electric vehicles and hybrids require different types of battery performance. Electric cars consume stored electricity gradually, whereas hybrids constantly alternate the use of electricity and gasoline. Our strength was that we had nurtured a pool of engineers with experience in relevant battery technology. We assigned those electric car engineers to hybrid development."

    "A lesson I took away from this experience is that company officials, be it general managers or executives, need to challenge themselves to do what they think is necessary, aside from working on company-mandated development projects. Thus, I encourage such "nonofficial" research projects. I even tell our group company Toyota Central R&D Labs to spend 25% of their management resources on developing technology that will be necessary in the future, as opposed to just doing commissioned research projects."

    Hybrid vehicles: The story behind the Prius - Nikkei Asian Review
     
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  2. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    oh, don't try to make it sound like toyota is some type of visionary, altruistic company. have you seen their gas guzzlers and the damage they did to the nickle mines in canada???
     
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  3. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    And the landfills that are choked with failed, $10,000 Prius traction batteries.

    Bob Wilson
     
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  4. mrbigh

    mrbigh Prius Absolutum Dominium

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    Great repost article, Thank you USB.......
     
  5. usbseawolf2000

    usbseawolf2000 HSD PhD

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    I couldn't find a section that I can remove so I posted the entire thing.
     
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  6. JimN

    JimN Let the games begin!

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  7. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    and they don't care at all about emissions or fossil fuel use, they were just trying to make themselves look good. because, you know, they make a lot of other cars that don't get good mileage, so that proves they don't care.
     
  8. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    From the prius that shook the world pdf above, the goals of the g21 project (prius)
    Emissions were not a goal, but of course carbon dioxide on a gasoline only vehicle is inversely proportional to fuel economy, which was a goal. They settled on the trw type psd/hybrid and atkinson type valve timing as the best way to implement the car. VP Wada then asked for a 100% better fuel economy.

    I get that you are being sarcastic. Top management was fully behind the project This G21 car was not at first looked upon as the main vehicle of the company. Right now two decades after the prius was green lighted, about 12% of toyota's cars are hybrids. Management still wants to sell a lot of cars, and make big profits, weather they are producing efficient cars or fuel hogs. The prius is just one car in the family.
     
  9. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    what company doesn't? whadda you guys all work for non profits?:rolleyes:
     
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  10. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Well I am still married and 'She who must be obeyed' announced plans to go Christmas shopping <GULP>.

    Still, we have two paid-for, working Prius and they have been a joy.

    Bob Wilson
     
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  11. telmo744

    telmo744 HSD fanatic

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    Amen. Same happiness of not profit here, but only one Prius. :love:
     
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  12. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    I think Honda shows that profits can be made without descending past the level of American brand, full size trucks. Tesla is also making money on their cars.

    Some scoffed at the idea that the Volt halo effect was worth anything. Well, Toyota has reaped from the halo effect of the Prius.
     
  13. Jeff N

    Jeff N The answer is 0042

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    No, that sequence of events is wrong. Read around page 72 in that book again. They were hacking together a concept car for the Toyota Motor Show but at that point they had not decided to make the production G21 car a hybrid and they had not yet figured out what kind of hybrid design to use in the car that eventually became the production Prius:

    After this, in the first few weeks of 1995, Toyota pulled together this team of engineers and began intense discussions about hybrid design alternatives by studying and rapidly narrowing the choices based on as many as 80 possible known design approaches.

    By spring they had narrowed it down to four possible approaches and they did not officially decide on the actual TRW-style Prius hybrid design until a meeting on June 30, 1995. As I pointed out in my recent Revenge of the Two-Mode article, GM by that point had already filed their own TRW-style one-mode patent in February, 1995 that describes the Prius design as one of its alternative embodiments. Toyota didn't initiate their own Prius hybrid patent filing until the day that GM's patent was first disclosed and published on September 24, 1996. Toyota completed their US filing in 1997 and it wasn't disclosed and published officially until May, 1999.

    Revenge of the Two-Mode Hybrid
     
    #13 Jeff N, Dec 3, 2015
    Last edited: Dec 3, 2015
  14. austingreen

    austingreen Senior Member

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    Yes/no/maybe. Lots of versions of history. One thing is for sure, Wada didn't like the idea of just using di engine and a cvt transmission. My old goto source from 2006 (really need notes from 1994 and 1995 to see who said what.

    Here we have Wada - VP hand choosing Uchiyada to lead the team. Osiago is the only engineer throughout. Uchiyamada suggests a better economobox, and in this version at least Wada said hybrid. To make sure it was a hybrid Wada raised the fuel economy goal. He didn't think a better econobox would be a flag ship for the 21st century, he and the engineers wanted it to have a higher tech solution.

    I think you are right the type of hybrid was not chosen yet, but Wada knew bigger savings could be had with hybrid, and the new goal reflected that he had decided on hybrid.

    Battery technology had only recently become "good enough" to work in a hybrid. The electronics and software knowledge to make it work had also recently become available. If it had been 1985 instead of 1995 the project would have failed for lack of batteries and electronics.
     
  15. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    My kitchen cabinet has PVC spoons & forks (cough cough)
    .
     
  16. Former Member 68813

    Former Member 68813 Senior Member

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    the story is not complete without mentioning how US oil companies (that owned Ovonics) tried to suppress automotive batteries:

    Panasonic EV Energy (PEVE), a joint venture between Matsushita and Toyota begun in 1996, pioneered several advances in large-format NiMH batteries suitable for electric vehicles.


    PEVE supplied higher capacity (28Ah-95Ah) NiMH batteries for use in Toyota, Honda, and Ford battery electric vehicles (BEVs) that began production in 1997.[32] PEVE's lower capacity batteries powered the hybrid electric vehicle (HEV) Toyota Prius, which was introduced in Japan in 1997, and sold 18,000 units in its first year of production,[33] as well as the first Honda Insight and, with Sanyo Electric Co, first generation Civic hybrid models. BEV production by major automakers ceased in the early 2000s, with most leased BEV vehicles crushed by their manufacturers, and replacement batteries unavailable for remaining vehicles.


    A 2001 patent infringement lawsuit brought by ECD Ovonics and Ovonic Battery Company, Inc. against Matsushita, Toyota, and PEVE was settled in July 2004. Settlement terms called for cross-licensing between parties of current and future NiMH-related patents filed through December 31, 2014. The terms prevented Matushita, Toyota, and PEVE from selling certain NiMH batteries for transportation applications in North America until the second half of 2007, and commercial quantities of certain NiMH batteries in North America until the second half of 2010. Additionally, Ovonic Battery Co. and ECD Ovonics received a $10 million patent license fee, Cobasys received a $20 million patent license fee, $16 million of which was earmarked to reimburse legal expenses, and Cobasys would receive royalties on certain batteries sold by Matushita/PEVE in North America.[34]


    Licensing terms were expanded in 2005, with PEVE granted further license to sell NiMH batteries for certain transportation applications in North America, in exchange for royalties paid to Cobasys through 2014.[35]


    Cobasys - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
     
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  17. bisco

    bisco cookie crumbler

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    ah, it's honda that is saving humanity. i've been wondering.:)
     
  18. Trollbait

    Trollbait It's a D&D thing

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    They do have that cool robot to replace us if they fail.
     
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  19. dbcassidy

    dbcassidy Toyota Hybrid Nation, 8 Million Strong

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    During the same above time above, what was GM doing? A side by side comparison of Toyota and GM would be a interesting study in corporate differences.

    DBCassidy
     
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  20. bwilson4web

    bwilson4web BMW i3 and Model 3

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    Add Ford and Honda and I'm with you!

    Bob Wilson
     
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