: Official Information and Photos on Compact Hybrid Out And About

Official information for Lexus's  Euro-fighting hybrid, the CT 200h, has just come out of the Press  Release closet. Riding on 17-inch wheels mounted to a newly-developed  front-wheel drive platform, the smallest Lexus ever is powered by a  1.8-liter gasoline engine mated to an electric motor with power (no  performance figures have been released) going through an E-CVT  transmission with, surprise surprise, settings that include ECO, SPORT,  and NORMAL. But these are all facts we  already know.
 Spacially, the CT comes in at 4,320 mm  long and 1,765 mm wide, with a 2,600 mm wheelbase. That helps Lexus'  Audi A3-fighter provide owners with 345 liters (12.2 cubic feet) of  cargo room with the rear seats up, or 700 liters (24.7 cubic feet) with  them folded down.
Spacially, the CT comes in at 4,320 mm  long and 1,765 mm wide, with a 2,600 mm wheelbase. That helps Lexus'  Audi A3-fighter provide owners with 345 liters (12.2 cubic feet) of  cargo room with the rear seats up, or 700 liters (24.7 cubic feet) with  them folded down.
Suspending the car are McPherson struts  and an anti-roll bar up front, while a double-wishbone setup does the  job in the rear. Standard-fare shocks and springs are at all four  corners, although the rear springs and shock absorbers were "positioned  separately to minimize intrusion into the load-space floor".
Lexus says the rear suspension, which  makes use of a lightweight trailing arm, is "exclusive to the CT 200h".
The interior - much like the exterior -  is pulled heavily from  last year's LF-Ch concept model, with its "asymmetrical dashboard"  broken into a Display Zone (upper area) and Operation Zone (lower area  including the shifter and Remote Touch control knob).
Other cool features include a switch in  personality when SPORT mode is engaged: the "hybrid indicator" becomes a  tachometer and the mood lighting goes from blue to red. Sporty.
Will this front-wheel drive compact-luxury-hybrid hatchback solve Lexus's sales woes in Europe? Time will tell, but having a small hybrid hatchback in one's lineup never hurts. Especially in Europe.
-By Phil Alex
















 
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