The 2017 Toyota Mirai. |
Day one of Media Days is a driving program, with journalists taking cars from the staging area at Quail Lodge in Carmel Valley to Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca via Laureles Grade. Once there, you swap cars with another journalist for the drive back, and then swap cars again once back at the Quail. Apart from an hour's lunch, this is your day from 9:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. Each run is about half an hour, and driving 10 to 12 cars back-to-back-to-back gives you interesting points of reference about the next one.
My eighth car of the day made up for some small amount of the hydrocarbons I'd been spewing in the first seven...the 2017 Toyota Mirai.
Quail Lodge to Mazda Raceway Laguna Seca via Laureles Grade (courtesy Google Maps). |
2017 Toyota Mirai. |
The biggest problem is infrastructure. Even here in California, a gas station with hydrogen pumps is pretty rare. As a result, Toyota is only selling the Mirai in California...and then only through eight specially authorized dealers in Los Angeles and Orange Counties, the Bay Area and Roseville (suburban Sacramento).
Despite (or maybe because of) the exclusivity, Toyota is being very aggressive about marketing the Mirai to prospective buyers...making a point of letting them know that the fairly stiff $57,500 purchase price gets whittled down by a $5,000 California tax rebate, offering a 36-month lease deal for $2,499 down and $349 a month and throwing in three years' worth of complimentary fuel. And, if you look at the photo above, that white sticker just aft of the rear wheel...that's like gold here in California...it allows you to use the HOV lane when it's just you in the car. The Mirai qualifies. A simple hybrid doesn't.
2017 Toyota Mirai interior. |
Bottom line: If you believe nothing more harmful than water vapor should come out of your tailpipe, live in California, can swing the purchase or lease and are comfortable with the Prius' driving dynamics, the Mirai is your car.