PRADO PERFECTLY DELIVERS ON LAND CRUISER PROMISE

Prado VX-R


New Prado VX-R is all its cooked up to be. Well, almost

We’ve had a lot of fun introducing you to the New Toyota Land Cruiser Prado over the past year or three. Starting with our exclusive, and as always shockingly accurate teaser images, through the world launch and to now finally having it on our driveway. So we trust you’re ready for our warts and all review!

Fortunately the warts are few. There’s only one, actually, but let’s leave that for last, because the rest is pretty much all good news. Getting back to basics to start, Prado is Spanish for prairie, by the way. It joined the Land Cruiser range in 1985 and today sits alongside the 300 and classic 70-series on the range. It has also grown closer in character to the larger, more luxurious 300 over time.

Land Cruiser

New Prado VX-R takes Cruiser back to its roots

This all-new 2024 Prado was designed from the ground up to take the Cruiser back to its roots. As a functional, practical and affordable luxury SUV. Built on Toyota’s simple and easy to repair and customise all-new GA-F platform it shares with the 300, it’s styled to suit, too.

Toyota has peppered this classic new silhouette nuances from across its 40, 60 and 70 Series gene pool to take Prado back to its deepest Land Cruiser roots. It’s a robust, functional and solid design that promises quality, durability and reliability, as much as it precisely tells you that it is very much a Toyota Land Cruiser.

Featuring a strong horizontal axis, long bonnet, upright windscreen, short front overhang and distinctive trapezoidal arches, there’s no mistaking its roots. Even if there’s also more than just a passing resemblance to the Land Rover Defender lurking in there.

Prado VX-R

Prado VX-R cockpit is bang on the button

Our VX-R tester is made even bolder by those high-set triple-eye LED DRL intelligent headlights, bold Toyota stamped grille, and safe, deeply recessed fog lamps. And we really dig those machine grey 18-inch Alloys. Not quite sure about the Paarl white finish, but then how many people ever buy a bright coloured Cruiser anyway?

Step aboard to a bang on the button – excuse the pun – cabin fine-tuned for the second quarter of the twenty-first century. Heated, vented and more cosseting leather lumbar seats have thinner backs for improved rear passenger space. There’s a generous boot behind the 60:40 split second row with the third row down, even reasonable space behind the raised back row. All easily to get to through the top-hinged power cargo door.

Sharp and clear WRC inspired customisable combimeter dials and the 12.3-inch high-definition Auto, CarPlay, Bluetooth, etcetera touchscreen multimedia displays sit high on the dash. For easy visibility with intuitive driving controls close at hand on the console. Best of all, this high-quality digital cockpit is controlled by functional simple buttons and knobs. No space junk that none of us will ever figure out here.

Prado VX-R

Tougher New Global Architecture shines through

New Prado packs it all in to that fine dual zone auto air conditioned space. From 6-speaker sound with seven USB ports to clearance and parking sonar, and so much more, it has it all. Toyota Safety Sense 3 includes everything from the kitchen sink to Blind Spot Monitor with Rear Cross Traffic Alert. And it’s no trouble to switch it all off, if you don’t want it.

Toyota’s far tougher and more rigid New Global Architecture GA-F body-on-frame platform is the foundation of better response and improved ride and handling both on and off the road. New extended stroke independent double wishbone front suspension has electric power steering for the first time. And there’s a four-link solid axle at the rear.

Like the 300, New Prado also gets new lightweight Stabiliser Disconnect anti-roll bars for increased off-road wheel articulation. Add Downhill Assist and Crawl Control and Multi-Terrain Select and Monitor among its extensive chassis arsenal and Prado is poised and ready to take on literally any driving conditions.

Land Cruiser

8-speed auto: more than just two more cogs

Prado gets a new 8-speed automatic transmission that promises better performance and fuel economy and offering quiet performance. Optimised with closer gear ratios and a compact new torque converter, it has precise lock-up control, rhythmic shifting and a smooth acceleration feel. That much is immediately noticeable when you drive it.

And then we get to the engine. And this one’s the double-edged sword. Look, there’s nothing at all wrong with Toyota’s 2.8-litre turbodiesel. We raved about how it transformed the 76 Wagon just last month, and we love it in the Hilux. Not that there’s anything wrong with it in the new Prado in its own right, but this is a lot more car than a Fortuner, and a class or seven above Hilux and 70.

This engine’s biggest downfall in this application, is when you compare it to Prado’s perceived market rivals. Starting with the Fortuner, which entire range sits well under a million rand. As a Prado owner I’d expect a better engine for my half-a-million premium. And then don’t dare pull this car up against even a base model Defender 250 at the lights. Even if it costs a pretty penny more, the Landy destroys it in a straight line.

Prado VX-R

A 2.8 for every Toyota a step too far in Prado GX-R?

Talking about the lights, never go near an entry X5 or GLEs there. They will eat you for breakfast. Even if this car is far better off road and a bit cheaper. But then so is the GWM Tank 500 at a couple of hundred grand off, and way stronger than all of the above.

Of course Toyota also sells the Prado with a 207 kW 430 Nm 2.4-litre turbo petrol four-cylinder, and a 243 kW 630 Nm turbo 2.4-litre four-cylinder petrol-electric hybrid in other markets. Which would either make this argument redundant, or immediately propel Prado to the top of the pile, depending which unit we’re talking about.

All of that said, however, we really and truly enjoyed our week with our New Prado. It is far more refined on the road than a Fortuner or a top Hilux. Partially so because of those two extra cogs in the ‘box, which also bring a major step in overall refinement. The engine, albeit asking versus its rivals on paper, is perfect on the road and that will more than satisfy most tastes. Never mind, everyone loves this Tonka Toyota.

It also seems that everyone loves it because if you just walk into a Toyota dealership and ask for a New Prado, the salesman will probably just giggle and walk you to the end of a pretty healthy order book queue.

Yes, we looked forward to this one. And it lived up to expectation when we drove it. Even if there’s room on top of the range for something like a kicking 243 kW 630 Nm turbo 2.4-litre four-cylinder petrol-electric hybrid flagship. To immediately put an end to any one-2.8-turbodiesel-for-all discussions. – Michele Lupini.

ROAD TESTED: Toyota Land Cruiser Prado 2.8GD VX-R
Engine: 150 kW 500 Nm 2.8-litre turbodiesel I4
Drive: 8-speed Automatic 4x4
Braked Towing: 3,500 kg
TESTED:
0-60 km/h: 4.27 sec
0-100 km/h: 9.74 sec
0-120 km/h: 13.80 sec
0-160 km/h: 27.43 sec
400m: 16.9 s @ 132 km/h
80-120 km/h: 7.26 sec
120-160 km/h: 13.63 sec
CLAIMED:
VMax: 165 km/h
Fuel: 7.9 l/100km
CO2: 209 g/km
Range: 1,400 km
Warranty: 3 years 100,000 km
Service: 9 services 90,000km
LIST PRICE: R1.45M

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