Nissan’s Taxi of Tomorrow hails wary New Yorkers with scents and sensibility
By Justin Hyde | Motoramic – Tue, Apr 3, 2012 8:48 AM EDT
Last year, New York's taxi commission chose the Nissan design — a variation of its NV200 van — over a Turkish company and Ford, which had pitched a version of its Transit Connect van. Being New York, the choice sparked immediate opposition; the Nissan will be built in Mexico, while the Transit Connect was slated to come from a U.S. factory, and and a federal judge has ordered the city to make any new taxis handicapped accessible, which Nissan says will be possible with an add-on kit when the taxis arrive.
Outside, Nissan and New York authorities made several alterations to make the new cab workable in city driving. The horn was altered for lessening the annoyance of passers-by, special lights flash when the passenger doors open and the van's 2-liter, four-cylinder engine should be far more efficient than the V8 that powered the Crown Vics. And while the Crown Vic's only safety features for passengers was seat belts and some padding on the partition, Nissan's van will come with an array of air bags and have crash-testing done with the partition in place.
Nissan's making a huge publicity push for the NV200 Taxi ahead of the New York auto show, because while the city has picked a winner, taxi companies and drivers remain unsure of the choice. The Crown Vic may have been old, cramped and bursting with stinky microbes, but it was also inexpensive to fix and durable over pothole-riddled streets at speed. There's no going back to the Vic, but Nissan still has to convince the public that it's the only taxi of tomorrow — and it'd be just like New Yorkers to decide you don't know what you've got 'till it's gone.
Pagination
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