This fall, Toyota's Scion division will be rolling out its latest ride, the iQ, into dealer showrooms on the West coast.
With the small, extremely fuel efficient and feature-laden iQ, Scion is aiming for the same sweet spot as other undersized city cars – the Smart ForTwo, Mini Cooper and Fiat 500 – but it's doing so with a much more affordable, and, it hopes, hipper package.
With a starting list price at a little under $16,000, the iQ continues Scion's reputation for making inexpensive, funky-looking cars for young urbanites.
This blunt little box seems like a knock off of the two-seater Smart ForTwo, but it's actually a four-seater. Cleverly dubbing the car a "3+1 seater," Scion has massaged the overall design so the front passenger seat can be slid very far forward, allowing an adult to occupy the back seat immediately behind it without sacrificing leg room for either passenger (though the seat behind the driver is still a very tight squeeze). Scion bought the extra room by relocating things that normally occupy the area in and around the front seat passenger to other parts of the car. The glove box has been moved under the seat, and the heater/air conditioner unit has been miniaturized and moved to the center console. The airbag and dash remain the same.
And speaking of airbags, the iQ features eleven of them – a record for any car, and a feat made all the more impressive considering the iQ's minuscule size. There are separate airbags for the head and knees of both the driver and the front passenger, side-curtain airbags, seat-cushion airbags, and even an airbag for rear window, which is a first.
>Cleverly dubbing the car a "3+1 seater," Scion has massaged the overall design so the front passenger seat can be slid very far forward, allowing an adult to occupy the back seat immediately behind it without sacrificing leg room for either passenger.
Just how small is the Scion iQ? A tenth of an inch over ten feet long. That's a little more than a foot longer than a ForTwo, and a full 20 inches shorter than a Fiat 500. It definitely makes the Mini look anything but. The iQ also tips the scales at a flyweight 2,127 pounds, or about as much as a first-gen Miata.
Speaking of Miatas, although the upcoming iQ is not sports car, nor does it possess handling that would make Colin Chapman smile, it does have an amazingly small turning radius. The front wheels can be spun to nearly 45 degrees, giving the iQ a turning radius of an astonishingly low 13 feet, or about the length of a Miata. Ergo, maneuvering this little guy through inner-city traffic and hanging a quick U-turn to snag that last parking spot is a snap.
The iQ is motivated by a 1.3 liter inline four. Nothing fancy, no turbos or superchargers. And no, there won't be a hybrid version – lord knows where they'd put the batteries and other hybrid gear. To keep the length down, Toyota did some rather ingenious things like push the wheels and suspension bits way, way out to the corners of the car, much like Mini and Fiat have done. The 8.5 gallon gas tank has also been relocated so it resides under the drivers seat. Yes, that gave me a rather disconcerting feeling when I was tooling around Seattle in the iQ, but I eventually got past it.