Automotive

Toyota offers Tundra Pie Pro hydrogen-fueled mobile pizza maker at SEMA

Toyota offers Tundra Pie Pro hydrogen-fueled mobile pizza maker at SEMA
The Tundra Pie Pro's mobile pizza factory consists of two robotic arms, a refrigerator, and a high-intensity conveyor oven
The Tundra Pie Pro's mobile pizza factory consists of two robotic arms, a refrigerator, and a high-intensity conveyor oven
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A hydrogen fuel cell powertrain ensures that the only emissions from this Toyota Tundra Pie Pro truck are water vapor and pizza
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A hydrogen fuel cell powertrain ensures that the only emissions from this Toyota Tundra Pie Pro truck are water vapor and pizza
The Tundra Pie Pro's mobile pizza factory consists of two robotic arms, a refrigerator, and a high-intensity conveyor oven
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The Tundra Pie Pro's mobile pizza factory consists of two robotic arms, a refrigerator, and a high-intensity conveyor oven
The finished, sliced pizza is boxed and delivered to a customer by a robotic arm
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The finished, sliced pizza is boxed and delivered to a customer by a robotic arm
After the pizza is cooked, a robotic arm moves it to a cutting board where it's sliced perfectly into six pieces
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After the pizza is cooked, a robotic arm moves it to a cutting board where it's sliced perfectly into six pieces
View gallery - 4 images

The Specialty Equipment Market Association (SEMA) show often has some odd one-off designs and weird concepts to showcase. Toyota flipped the dough on this year's show with a mobile pizza maker conceived out of a Tundra pickup truck and some pie-making expertise from Pizza Hut.

The Tundra Pie Pro is more than just a pizza-making machine on four wheels, though. It's powered by the latest-generation hydrogen fuel cell system out of the Toyota Mirai and includes cutting-edge robotics from Toyota's Texas neighbor Nachi Robotic Systems. With help from Pizza Hut, the Tundra Pie Pro can truly make a pizza from scratch. Without exhaust gasses from the truck interfering.

Toyota started with a Tundra SR5 pickup stripped down to its bare chassis, and then built it from the ground up, reassembling some parts and replacing others. The hydrogen fuel cell power unit from the Mirai was added in, using expertise from Toyota's commercial truck endeavors along the same fuel cell bent.

The finished, sliced pizza is boxed and delivered to a customer by a robotic arm
The finished, sliced pizza is boxed and delivered to a customer by a robotic arm

The truck's bed was converted entirely to a customized pizza factory with the Toyota Motorsport Technical Center as coordinator and with input from Pizza Hut and Nachi. Self-contained, the kitchen in the truck has a refrigerator for storing pies, two computer-guided robotic arms, and a portable high-efficiency conveyor oven. The entire kitchen is also electrically powered by the Tundra's hydrogen fuel cells.

The Tundra Pie Pro is capable of making a pizza in six to seven minutes. A robotic arm opens the refrigerator and removes the selected pre-made pizza, places it on the oven conveyor, and closes the refrigerator. The pizza goes through the conveyor oven at a pre-selected temperature and exits out the far end. Another robotic arm removes the finished product, places it on a cutting board, expertly slices it into six pieces, boxes it, and delivers it to a waiting customer.

The Pie Pro is currently serving pizzas to denizens of the SEMA show in Las Vegas.

Source: Toyota

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2 comments
2 comments
ljaques
Darn! They never offered that option when I bought my Tundra in '07.
piperTom
It's too bad that Toyota could not find a partner that actually knows how to make pizza.