Are Automakers Serious For 2010?

 

Are Automakers Serious For 2010?

Read more:alt fuel, nissan, toyota, volt

May 14, 2008

Are Automakers Serious For 2010

Nissan just announced it’s planning to sell an electric car in the United States by 2010, which is the same year that Chevrolet will be releasing the Volt, a plug-in hybrid with a range of up to 640 miles.

Toyota says it will also offer a plug-in hybrid in 2010. Plug-in hybrids are powered, in part, by super long-lasting versions of current lithium-ion batteries, so it’s logical to assume that this technology will trickle down to other devices — for example, laptop batteries that last for days and days. Imagine what that would mean for the Tesla Roadster, which runs on 7,000 laptop batteries.

By then, Tesla says it will have moved on to the production of its next electric car, a four-door sedan, codenamed White Star, which will also go on sale in Europe. Fisker, Tesla’s rival in more ways than one, also plans a 2010 release for its plug-in hybrid, called the Karma.

Penny Lane was right. It’s all happening.

Maybe not. Naysayers argue that these products are just vaporware. Hype. Long-lasting lithium ion batteries still don’t exist. Cost of production for these future cars is still an issue.

How can we expect these automakers to mass-manufacture such brand new product in less time than Mike D’Antoni will need to turn around the Knicks?

Read the full story


 
Schedule
Choose a Newsfeed

Free. Unsubscribe at any time
O’ Brother Where Art Thou?
Abbot Brothers

“If he is out in front of me, I will pay a lot attention to where he is because I don’t want to hit him, Last year I took him out and I don’t want to do that again.”

A Gearhead’s Time Portal
Hod Rod- Full Of Vintage And V8 Cars

Everywhere you look are vintage car parts and tools and mementos of the cars he’s created or painted or wrenched on.
He concentrates on his own projects, which have become his key source of entertainment. “I threw my TV away over 14 years ago,” he said.

‘55 Bel Air Nomad Drag Racer Restored in Memory of Driver
'55 Bel Air Nomad Drag Racer Restored in Memory of Driver

More than 35 years after Danny Cummins parked his racing station wagon, his lifelong friend, Peter Pearce, pulled it out of storage and restored the car to its original look, something Cummins wanted to do but never had the time. 

Boxer Might Turn Down $5 million So He Can Be Drag Racer
Boxer Might Turn Down $5 million So He Can Be Drag Racer

Green, who was reportedly offered more than $5 million by Mundine’s manager Khoder Nasser to put an end to his retirement and fight in a rematch, could instead take up another adrenaline-fuelled sport.

The ‘Little King’ Of The Track
The ‘Little King’ Of The Track

He might not be able to drive on the street, but around the race track, 12-year-old Clint King can legally burn rubber.

Page 1 of 1 pages for this article