Sunday, June 16, 2013

Review: Toyota Camatte57s Concept Car. A Toy Story.

IMG_8554

Cops? I see no cops.

TTAC is owned by Verticalscope, a company that quietly owns hundreds of car sites. This allows for an interesting division of labor. Colum Wood of Autoguide can drive "13 Porsches in 8 hours," while yours truly has time to visit the Tokyo Toy Show.  At work, Mr. Wood "wound up hitting 0-60 mph in three seconds in a 911 Turbo S, sliding sideways in the 2014 Cayman S and winding up on three wheels in a Cayenne… all in the span of just a few hours," while yours truly wound up in a Tokyo jail for attempted grand theft toy auto. Not just any toy auto. I was caught stealing a prototype that costs somewhere in the neighborhood of the grand total of Colum's 13 Porsches.

And here is the story.

IMG_7915

Camatte's proud parents

Kota Nezu and Kenji Tsuji remind me of my spent youth. They look like "Art Director meets Product Manager," casted for a Japanese version of Mad Men.

IMG_8156

The designer

Nezu's hair is dyed red, there are jewelry implants in his teeth, he has two piercings in the ear, and who knows how many elsewhere. My cross-cultural adviser, Frau Schmitto-san, says: "He would be a big hit at certain Tokyo parties I used to go to before I met you."

IMG_7909

Designer and client

Tsuji is prim, proper, and he would vanish in the sea of  millions of salary men that squeeze each morning into the Tokyo subway. The redhead and the salary man fathered a child together.

IMG_8074

Camatte, semi-nude

The child is the Camatte, and it is one of the biggest toy cars I have ever seen. It is nearly 10 feet long, and a little bit less than 5 feet wide. Right now, it has a top speed of just 25 mph, but switch the engine, and it "could go much faster" grins Nezu, and the diamond in his choppers blinks furiously.

You can buy a truly bespoke Camatte - if you could buy it

You can buy a truly bespoke Camatte – if you could buy it

The two fathered the Camatte when Toyota was invited to show something at last year's Tokyo Toy Show. Tsuji is a Project Manager at Toyota's Product Planning Department, a title and a function that are as nondescript as the millions of salary men. Tsuji develops cars. Nezu-san, the man with the red mop, designed cars for Toyota before he went out on his own to start Znug Design, an industrial design company that does everything from $100,000 motorbikes to thermos cans. Tsuji and Nezu have done other projects together before, and the Camatte is a joint brainchild.

IMG_8075

Take 'em off!

The brainchild was illegitimate for a while, a skunk works project, until then Toyota R&D Chief Takeshi Uchiyamada out his hanko of  approval under the matter. The first generation Camatte was shown at last year's toy show. Akio Toyoda made an appearance, loved what he saw, and Tsuji is now full-time toy car development chief.

Or maybe the conventional

Or rather the conventional "We made that car" pose?

The backbones of the car are provided by a structure made from welded aluminum tubes and profiles. A lot in the car is exchangeable. The car I am looking at has an electric motor, powered by a mere mortal 48 volt lead acid battery. The engine can easily be swapped for an internal combustion engine. All four wheels are on double wishbones, for added soup-upability.

IMG_7921

Tsk, TTAC – no manners

When I hear that the car is drivable, I immediately ask for a test drive. I am given the "are you out of your expletive deleted mind, Schmitto-san?" look.

IMG_8053

Panel-opticum

The skin of the car is made from 57 small lightweight panels. That's why the Gen II camatte is called Camatte57s.

"Camatte" can mean "pay attention," in Japanese, or "take care." The "s" stands for the Japanese word sawaru, which means "to touch," I'm told. I need to remember that word.

IMG_8064

Even the vicarious racer will remember this

Swapping of the 57 panels is fast and easy: They attach with quick-release pins without any tools.

IMG_8051

Touch me, twist me, tweak me

The quick-release pins have a green ring. On the Camatte, the color green signals that something can be changed or adjusted. The toy car is dotted with many, many green rings.

What are little girls made of?

Without tools, the car can one minute be a vehicle that projects an air of kawaii sugar and spice.

IMG_8347

What are little boys made of?

Pull a few snaps, attach new panels, and the thing morphs into a brutish GI-Joe military-mobile, for the snails and puppy-dogs' tails contingent.

IMG_8014

Seat and pedals adapt to person

Driver seat and pedals adjust to accommodate both kid and grown-up. Pull a lever, and the seat slides back, and the pedals move forward: Room for a mature driver.  Pull a lever again, the seat comes forward and up, and the pedals touch the tootsies of the tyke. Sugoi!

IMG_8150

This Middle-Eastern gentleman tried to order a whole fleet of Camatte for his children. The order was denied

The car is strictly a design study, a concept car with no plans for commercialization. In the strictly hypothetical case of the car ever going on sale, it could be driven by a grown-up through traffic, and, with the tuck of the two levers, by a child. The latter on a closed course, of course. When we discuss where kids could drive the Camatte, its fathers admit that that's a problem in Japan. Very few people have a fenced-in yard, and if they have one, it is barely wide enough to accommodate a wheel barrow. Muzukashi desu nee – that'll be difficult.

IMG_8305 (2)

Survey says: He will soon lose his appetite for cars

The car in search of a place to be driven is born from a concern that kids are no longer interested in cars. "We have done studies that show young kids actually like cars very much," says Kenji Tsuji, and his research is confirmed by rows of pre-schoolers that line up for a minute behind the wheel of a stationary Camatte while Mom or Dad whip out the iPhone to snap a few pics, for immediate upload to Facebook. "Once children go to elementary school, they rapidly lose interest," says Tsuji, and he frowns, while Nezu mimes throw-smartphone-out-of-the-window.

IMG_8329

Elementary school marks the onset of vehicular attention deficit syndrome

There are two theories for the sudden vehicular attention deficit syndrome. One theory blames the smartphone. I have heard that many times. The other theory is new, and it surprising to hear from the developer of contemporary cars.

IMG_8227

Surveys measure the Camatte's impact on show goers

"Modern cars are communication killers," says Tsuji with a worried face. "Toddlers are strapped into a child seat in the back. No communication. In the olden days, father and mother would at least argue about the temperature being too high or too low. Now it's all automatic, and there is no need to communicate." Our discussion is – chotto matte kudasai – interrupted by an incoming call on Tsuji's Smartphone on vibrating manner mode.

IMG_8221

We need to talk.

Nezu and Tsuji see the Camatte as a conversation starter, as a car parents and children can build, change, and rebuild together. They can do that undisturbed by modern frills. A regular car reviewer would decry a dash made from hard plastic in the Camatte, and a lack of both Bluetooth and USB. It doesn't even have radio.

IMG_7893

Car made from 100% unobtainium

No price of the car is known or even contemplated. Knowing what drivable prototypes cost to build, I throw out that a few millions of dollars must have been sunk into the project, and nobody rises to say my assertion is way off. Currently, no amount of money can buy the Camatte. I get a firm "No!" when I ask whether Toyota would listen if, say, a big toymaker would walk into the booth, with an offer to license the design. Not even on an OEM basis? "No!"

IMG_8193

I want it!

I have driven many cars in my life, they came with the job. Usually, cars stir emotions in me similar to what the sight of a sausage does to a butcher: We watch car and wurst with professional detachment.

That little Camatte however, the machine that is made to make parents and children talk to each other, speaks to me. The more I look at it, the more I want to take it home, the lack of a yard be damned.

IMG_8182

They thought I had lost it

I try to talk my handler from Toyota into a long-term loaner, he says I am very funny. I ask Tsuji whether he would take a check, and how much should I make it out for. He agrees with my handler that I am a very humorous guy.

So I decide to steal the thing..

IMG_8047

Those aren't miles. And it exaggerates, as usual

On Sunday afternoon, before the show ends, I come back sans chaperone. The crew is busy taking down the booth, nobody watches me. I adjust the seat, and sit behind the wheel of the baby blue Camatte.

IMG_8040

How do I start that thing?

I turn the back knob to ON. Nothing happens.

Nezu and Tsuji left with the other Camatte, the sportier version. I am alone with baby blue. I move the white lever next to the "ON" switch down. I release the hand brake. I tap the accelerator lightly, and the Camatte starts to roll. It does so silently, and nobody notices.

IMG_8446

Which way is out?

I invite two kids to sit in the back. If I get arrested for grand theft toy car, I might as well go for kidnapping. But then, who would stop an aging foreigner with two lolly-sucking adorable natives in the back? Nobody does. The kids think it's a hoot.

IMG_8449

I hope it doesn't have Lojack

We roll past people busy taking booths down. Brown cardboard boxes are being filled with toys.

IMG_8467

How do I get off the 4th floor?

We are on the fourth floor of Tokyo's Big Sight. On foot, you have a choice of a very long escalator, or an elevator. But how do I get away by car? Mondai nai! No problem!

IMG_8473

Where there is a will, there is a door

The Big Sight is where the bi-annual Tokyo Motor Show takes place, and it will do so again in November. If cars get in, they must get out. I know the place. There is a ramp behind that roll-up door. Let's roll.

IMG_8478

Which way to Roppongi? Does this have GPS?

The Camatte is well-behaved. It accelerates effortlessly, well above walking speed.

IMG_8489

Explain that heel and toe thing to me, kids, don't you have Gran Turismo at home?

I forgot the lap timer, please don't ask.

IMG_8495

Drive it like you stole it

Does the Camatte understeer? Oversteer? No idea. It pretty much goes into the intended direction, I'd say.

IMG_8502

Where did the girl go?

It's all downhill from here.

IMG_8529

Ah, she's back. That car is a girl magnet

Only two more floors to go.

IMG_8551

Let's go!

Terra firma! One more turn, and we will vanish into Tokyo's afternoon traffic, in a baby blue baby roadster and with two lolly-popping kids. What's their name anyway?

IMG_8562

Don't taze me!

Ooops! I am intercepted by Tsuji-san, and a redhead with a diamond in his teeth. Baton-wielding law enforcement is walking up. Hontoni gomen nasai! I am very sorry. This is all a big misunderstanding, and I will explain, given the chance. Please?

IMG_8567

There goes my baby blue

Two Camatte are being rolled on a truck. There is a metallic click behind me, and my wrists are touched by a metallic cool. They have free Wifi at the Odaiba jail. I'm sure Verticalscope will bail me out.

IMG_8616

Bye!

Or will they?

IMG_8074 IMG_7909 IMG_8156 IMG_7915 IMG_8554 IMG_7921 Or maybe the conventional You can buy a truly bespoke Camatte - if you could buy it IMG_8075 IMG_8053 IMG_8064 What are little girls made of? IMG_8305 (2) IMG_8150 IMG_8014 IMG_8305 (2) IMG_8329 IMG_8227 IMG_8221 IMG_7893 IMG_8193 IMG_8182 IMG_8047 IMG_8040 IMG_8446 IMG_8449 IMG_8467 IMG_8489 IMG_8478 IMG_8473 IMG_8467 IMG_8495 IMG_8502 IMG_8529 IMG_8051 IMG_8551 IMG_8616 IMG_8567 IMG_8562

from The Truth About Cars http://www.thetruthaboutcars.com




ifttt
Put the internet to work for you. via Personal Recipe 680102

No comments:

Post a Comment

Archive