Scion's 2013 FR-S sports car succeeds on the most important level: It's fun to drive.
Too bad Toyota couldn't have had a little more fun with the name. The FR-S is known as the Toyota GT-86 in the rest of the world, and even wears GT-86 badges on its front panels. The name brings to mind the expression, "86-ed," restaurant slang meaning a menu item has sold out, a customer has been banned, or something has otherwise been eliminated.
Imagine a television commercial wherein a Gen-Y hipster driving a GT-86 bests a competitor on a twisty road. At the end, we cut to a close-up of the winner as he looks straight at his nemesis in a VW or Hyundai and says, "You've been 86-ed!"
The actual TV ads for the Scion FR-S aren't as much fun, so it's a good thing the car is. It has a playful rear-drive character and curvaceous styling that should make it a hot commodity among Scion's under-30 target market.
The design represents a revisiting of the past for Toyota, evoking a time when the company turned out affordable, rear-wheel-drive performance cars like the 1980s enthusiast-favorite AE86 Corolla. Toyota's 1960s Sports 800 and 2000 GT are also cited as ancestors. The FR-S, which starts at $24,930, is also Scion's first proper sports car, augmenting the less expensive, merely "sporty" tC.
The FR-S ("front-engine, rear-drive, sport") was reportedly drawn up to appease Toyota president Akio Toyoda, who asked, "Where is the passion in our lineup?"
Scion's emphasis here is on driving character, not big performance numbers.So absent was the passion that Toyota looked outside its corporate boundaries and developed the FR-S in cooperation with Subaru. As a result, most of the FR-S' engineering and mechanicals – like its FA20 2.0-liter, four-cylinder boxer engine – come from Subaru. Subie will sell its own, nearly identical version – the BRZ – at a slightly higher price point.
The car's styling is determined by functional elements under the sheetmetal. For example, the engine is a flat, horizontally opposed four-cylinder, enabling a low hood line that highlights the front wheel arches. From the driver's seat, the benefits are a low cowl and the ability to place the car visually using those bulging arches. Also, the gaping grille is flanked by intakes with integrated fog lamps, ensuring adequate engine and brake cooling with minimal aerodynamic penalty. With these low-slung curves, the Scion's silhouette is vaguely Toyota 2000-esque. Its trapezoid-shaped rear incorporates a diffuser, dual exhaust and 12-element LED tail lamps.
This functional approach continues in the cockpit, where the black instrument panel is dominated by a big tachometer, a relatively simple center stack and a flat glovebox area. Imagine the central satnav/audio display pulled out, wires casually hanging, and it smacks of a stripped-out race car interior. The fabric seats are comfortable and bolstered enough for serious track work with attractive double-stitching. The steering wheel is, appropriately, Toyota's smallest, measuring just 14 inches in diameter.
A standard 300-watt Pioneer audio system can be upgraded to Toyota's 340-watt BeSpoke app-based multimedia system, whose 5-inch display can be used to call up Pandora, Facebook or Twitter, and includes points-of-interest and routing functions through satellite navigation. There are also the usual USB inputs and extra RCA outputs for external amps.