RE: Oof - Toyota is taking the GR Corolla racing 

RE: Oof - Toyota is taking the GR Corolla racing 

Thursday 17th October

Oof - Toyota is taking the GR Corolla racing 

Hot hatch gets the touring car treatment; keeps all-wheel drive, awesome vibe


Last week, Toyota dropped a motorsport bomb by announcing its (sort of) return to F1 via a partnership with Haas. Admittedly the reveal of the new GR Corolla TC racecar in North Carolina is going to cause fewer ripples internationally - but it is further evidence of the firm’s apparently inexhaustible enthusiasm for proving its competitive mettle, no matter the backdrop. Moreover, it has resulted in a great-looking touring car, and we can never get enough of those. Especially if the arrival of the road-legal variant in Europe - a subject long-mooted in these pages, and now rumoured more broadly - turns out to be true. 

But let’s not get ahead of ourselves. For now, the newcomer is very much an American concept: it was created to compete against the likes of the Honda Civic Type R and Mini Cooper JCW in next year’s TC America Series - a newly condensed, single-class touring car championship. Toyota will not feature as a factory team, with the Corolla being made available to race teams and privateers - although it’s still very much about growing the manufacturer’s presence in regional motorsport, and the car’s reveal coincided with confirmation that its racing division will now be formally known as Toyota Gazoo Racing North America. 

The TC derivative itself is notable because it retains the GR-FOUR system - apparently making it the first all-wheel-drive car in the competition. In fact, its relationship with the road-legal model is extensive: the 1.6-litre three-pot is kept too (albeit with a new race-specific Bosch ECU) as well as the new eight-speed automatic. The latter gets a new control unit too, and Toyota has significantly beefed up the cooling of the drivetrain generally and added custom-made MacPherson struts and JRi dual-adjustable dampers. Additionally, while the front and rear Torsen diffs remain, TC regulations require them to work with a fixed ratio - so there won’t be any adaptive shuffling of the torque distribution. But there will be six-piston Alcon brakes and entirely different parameters for the ABS. Not to mention much more senior wheels and tyres. 

Inside, it’s much as you’d expect it to be, with most of the interior trim carved out to make room for an FIA-approved roll cage and OMP fibreglass race seat. There’s proper steering wheel too, with paddles to match - although the stock gear lever remains as does the bulk of the dash. “The opportunity to take the GR Corolla and make it a track-ready racecar with the team here at TGRNA was exciting project to tackle,” said Mike Norem, manager of the customer racing department. “We knew that the GR Corolla was the ideal platform for this series and would provide the perfect opportunity for our team to continue to grow the GR sports car ladder in the United States.” Toyota says it is even hoping to snare some ‘track day enthusiasts’. They’ll surely need deep pockets. But what a way to move up one rung. 


Author
Discussion

dunnoreally

Original Poster:

1,116 posts

115 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
Of course, there's been a Gazoo Racing touring car based on the GR sport in the BTCC for a bit. Mind you, that is just the sport and NGTCs have a lot less in common with the road car in any case.

Hadn't looked at it for a bit, actually. Is it me or is the BTCC entry list looking a bit thin these days?

markyb000

14 posts

42 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
i think Toyota are missing a trick here, the car is a good looker, it could be made into a Golf R esq. replacement if they had the urge, maybe with a meatier engine than the 1.6, would be a winner in my book

DanielSan

19,173 posts

174 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
markyb000 said:
i think Toyota are missing a trick here, the car is a good looker, it could be made into a Golf R esq. replacement if they had the urge, maybe with a meatier engine than the 1.6, would be a winner in my book
The GR Corolla is a 300bhp turbocharged 4wd hot hatch. How is it not a Golf R rival?

smilo996

3,065 posts

177 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
GR racing dept must be a great place to be working at the moment.
Three pot - good for 250bhp?
However, do the right thing and put the V6 in it, with forced induction of some kind, keep the AWD and blow Audi and VW out of the water.

86wasagoodyear

559 posts

103 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
Why oh why oh why can we not have the production GR Corolla in UK ? It's the perfect modern family funhatch. Come on Toyota, please do the decent thing.

Silvanus

6,078 posts

30 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
It's been discussed before, the price of the GR Corolla would likely be knocking on the door of £50k if they brought it to the UK. Thats some serious money against a Golf R and Civic type R. They'd sell a handful at best, despite how good it's is.

CKY

1,935 posts

22 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
smilo996 said:
However, do the right thing and put the V6 in it, with forced induction of some kind, keep the AWD and blow Audi and VW out of the water.
If you want a 4WD hatchback with a turbocharged boat anchor in the front and an automatic gearbox, VAG already cater for your needs.

GreatScott2016

1,490 posts

95 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
Nice smile

AlpineA110NL

34 posts

32 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
I like those rims.

loudlashadjuster

5,508 posts

191 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
smilo996 said:
GR racing dept must be a great place to be working at the moment.
Three pot - good for 250bhp?
Well, considering the road version already leaves the factory with 300 hp...

smilo996 said:
However, do the right thing and put the V6 in it, with forced induction of some kind, keep the AWD and blow Audi and VW out of the water.
I think the point of this formula is that it has to be based on an existing road car, not be some Rally1-style lookalike/silhouette, so I would guess an engine swap is out.

Besides, saddling the thing with a massive, heavy V6 would only make it slower.

Jay_87

1,056 posts

211 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
Looks great, like a proper touring car. Lets hope GR can throw some weight behind the BTCC effort. They have the driver in Rob Huff to get the job done.

dunnoreally

Original Poster:

1,116 posts

115 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
loudlashadjuster said:
smilo996 said:
However, do the right thing and put the V6 in it, with forced induction of some kind, keep the AWD and blow Audi and VW out of the water.
I think the point of this formula is that it has to be based on an existing road car, not be some Rally1-style lookalike/silhouette, so I would guess an engine swap is out.

Besides, saddling the thing with a massive, heavy V6 would only make it slower.
TCR technical regs mandate single-turbo engines from 1.75-2.0, and it seems they need to be from a production car in the same model line with at least 5,000 units sold. I love the idea of Toyota doing a homologation special with a single turbo 2.0 v6 especially for TCR domination, but that feels a little implausible.

Mind you, technical regs also specify only fwd cars are permitted, so who even knows at this point?

Jules Henry

61 posts

133 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
Errrrrm.....it appears to have overheated

GTRene

17,793 posts

231 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
I see 'smoke and mirrors' hehe


British Beef

2,370 posts

172 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
Silvanus said:
It's been discussed before, the price of the GR Corolla would likely be knocking on the door of £50k if they brought it to the UK. Thats some serious money against a Golf R and Civic type R. They'd sell a handful at best, despite how good it's is.
I would take a GR Corolla over a Golf R or CTR for my £50k to spend on hot hatch.


nismo48

4,453 posts

214 months

Friday 18th October
quotequote all
GTRene said:
I see 'smoke and mirrors' hehe

Hahaha

Jon_S_Rally

3,690 posts

95 months

Sunday 20th October
quotequote all
Nice that Toyota are investing in local racing in the US. In fact, it's surprising how many manufacturers still support motorsport in so many countries. Peugeot have just launched a new entry-level rally version of the 208 in France, and there are a few other manufacturer-supported rally series across Europe.

What's sad is that the same level of support doesn't seem to be present in the UK. Are there any manufacturer-backed teams in the BTCC now? Obviously British rallying is on its arse in terms of manufacturer support. Sad that the UK is no longer deemed worthy of investment.

Evolved

3,766 posts

194 months

Sunday 20th October
quotequote all
markyb000 said:
i think Toyota are missing a trick here, the car is a good looker, it could be made into a Golf R esq. replacement if they had the urge, maybe with a meatier engine than the 1.6, would be a winner in my book
Meatier than what? The engine is producing 300hp out of the box, and tuners have it pushing 1000hp now.