
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Should we bailout Detroit's Big 3? Will the bailout work? and other thoughts and opinion's...

GM has decided to delay incentive payments to it's dealer body... Read the letter that Mark Laneve GM's Vice President sent out to dealers...
Here is a copy of the letter that GM's Mark LaNeve, Vice President of North America, sent to the General Motors dealer body explaining why they are delaying dealer incentive payments to them.
We are reaching the tip of the iceberg, if GM cannot find some free cash flow, they will not make it till the end of the year. The company is just burning up to much cash coupled with the worsening economy, it isn't nimble enough to make adjustments as retail sales worsen.
Enjoy Today!
That Car Guy
HERE IS THE LETTER:
To All Dealers:
I am writing to you to update you on changes we are going to implement with regard to the incentive payment schedule.
As I discussed in the IDL last week, one of the biggest issues facing General Motors is our liquidity. That is the cash we have on hand to pay for our regular operating expenses.
In this cash crunch, we have examined every aspect of our business in an effort to improve cash flow, including our relationships with all of our key stakeholders, like suppliers, agencies, employees and dealers. In this regard, we are implementing minor changes to incentive payment timing. So, what does this mean for you? Basically we are delaying the payment of the incentives by two weeks. Here is the new schedule that will be in effect until further notice:
· Incentive applications previously scheduled to be paid on November 28th and December 4th will be delayed to December 11th and December 18th respectively. Please see the attached payment schedule.
· Weekly incentive payments will continue thereafter reflecting one week of dealer application activity. On average, payments will be made approximately 2 - 3 weeks after a valid dealer application has been processed by GM. Effectively this is a 2 week delay from the current schedule.
· As a result of this retiming you will not receive any incentive payments on November 28th and December 4th.
This liquidity crisis has an obvious effect on all of us. As you are aware we are asking the federal government for some temporary relief. I need your continued help in talking to Congress. There are three things you need to ask your congressional delegation for:
· First, ask the government officials to approve a new $25 billion loan package to help us deal with our current liquidity crisis.
· Second, while the rules for the distinctly separate and already approved $25 billion loan package for investments in technology and enhanced fuel efficiency have been issued, we'd like to see that program move as fast as possible, so we need to encourage the government to minimize red tape and act on loan applications as quickly as they can.
· Third, the automotive industry needs some additional government support to stimulate retail sales, like making interest on car loans tax deductible, etc.
We've set up a website that will assist you in making your voice heard in Congress and to help spread the message. Please visit www.gmfactsandfiction.com. If you have not already done so, please call and e-mail your congressional representative.
This is a critical time for our industry, your dealership, and General Motors. Please continue to do what you do best, selling vehicles one customer at a time. Please make every effort to integrate your promotions with the recently announced Red Tag sales event.
Together we can work through this crisis. As always, thank you for all of your hard work and effort.
Good Selling.
Mark R. LaNeve
GMNA Vice President NA Vehicle Sales, Service & Marketing
Thursday, November 13, 2008
GM prepared to lay off 35,000 people by this weekend 11/14/08...

Thursday, November 6, 2008
Toyota Profit drops 73.6 % for the fiscal year ending March 31, 2008... I said it before and I will say it again Toyota is headed for a big fall...
Wednesday, November 5, 2008
BRACK OBAMA Elected President of The United States... Can he save the auto industry...
Barack Obama was elected president of the United States of America on November 4, 2008. History made, and as the President elect voiced in his Election Night Speech, "only in America can his story happen".
Now, Mr. President Elect, we have a Auto Industry crisis looming and verging on catastrophe, and the industry can use a little assistance.
As this story is being written, the Big 3 auto Manufacturers are preparing for a congressional begging hearing, under the auspices of needing money for research and development, for the further development of hybrid technologies. In short they need money bad and raiding the treasury coffers is just the ticket for a low, low interest multi billion dollar loan.
Mr. President Elect can you help an industry out?
Enjoy Today!
That Car Guy
Friday, October 24, 2008
500 All Electric BMW Mini's to be leased next year...
BMW has just announced that it will be test piloting a program which will lease 500 All Electric Mini vehicles called the Mini E in California, New Jersey, New York.
The vehicles will be powered by lithium-ion batteries that have a range of 150 miles with a maximum speed of 95 mph and will go 0-60 in 8.5 seconds.
The vehicles will have the ability to be charged overnight or a special high speed wall box charger will be able to charge the batteries in 2.5 hours. The initial test vehicles will be two seaters because of the space that is needed to house the battery pack.
The vehicles will be leased for $850.00 per month which will include all maintenance.
BMW has committed itself to producing energy efficient vehicles and reducing emissions on the road.
Enjoy Today!
That Car Guy
Thursday, October 16, 2008
BYD Hybrid Vehicle... Warren Buffet invest $230 million dollars into company...
Thomas Jefferson quote from 1802...
Who is running this financial mess... The people want to know...
Check out this link from Newsweek:
Hirsh: Make Big Banks Pay for Financial Crash Newsweek Voices - Michael Hirsh Newsweek.com
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
How lenders are responding to delinquent auto loans... The repo man is giving you a little more time...
Banks and Finance companies are rethinking their repossession strategy, the current financial crisis and lower wholesale values have prompted them to wait a little longer to pick up your ride.
As reported by MSNBC.com
Enjoy Today!
That Car Guy
GMAC will not make loans to customers who's credit score is below a 700 beacon score...
Saturday, October 11, 2008
Friday, October 10, 2008
Chevrolet Volt may get a 100mpg rating if the EPA approves of proposed testing formula...

Friday, October 3, 2008
Smart car gets even Smarter... Daimler is testing 100 battery powered Smart ED's...

Thursday, October 2, 2008
Expect to see more Retail Auto Dealerships closing in the coming months...
With tightening credit markets and poor consumer confidence, the retail auto industry will forever be changed. In a market in which a perfect storm as some have described of recession aided influence, your local Chevy, Ford and Chrysler store will be hurt the hardest.
It is currently been reported that 1 in 5 car dealerships will be closing over the next 2 - 3 months, that is nearly 4,000 dealerships across the nation. A staggering number considering the number of employees those dealerships employ and the Real Estate involved with these closings.
It has long been known that sales per outlet for GM, Ford and Chrysler stores have performed way under same store sales as compared with import stores, especially Toyota and Honda. Industry consolidation has been put on the back burner because of product issues and cash flow for the manufacturer, so natural financial attrition has reared it's head and the stores in poor performing markets will soon be gone forever.
The financial bailout that is helping Wall Street will not help this situation and I believe most people want to keep people employed and this bailout does nothing for that. What this bailout does is keep the financiers in business while working class individuals will be on the unemployment line. This crisis is only the beginning of a slow down that has been in the making for quite some time, going back over 2 years. I want to say with clarity that the bailout will not loosen access to capitol to small business, the requirements will be fundamentally tougher as we move forward period. As a result of a continued decline in real estate values and low consumer spending for an extended period of time which will take a while to recover, I predict that a turnaround will take quite some time. We should start to see some stress reduced sometime in the third quarter of 2009 with the economy breaking loose in 2010. Primarily what will be the distress in the commercial real estate markets, which no one is talking about, since the emphasis on the current crisis is with residential markets, is the catalyst for the extended recession.
When you look at the amount of dealership real estate that will be on the market, some of the most one dimensional facilities in the market place in which there will not be another auto brand to take it's place, the real estate in those market places will be hurt considerably.
The silver lining will be that as always markets will return eventually and the consolidation that has been needed for the last several years will move forward, even if it is not voluntary.
Enjoy Today!
That Car Guy
Toyota sales fall 32% for the month of September 2008... It's worst decline since June 1987... Is this the beginning of a steep sales decline?
Monday, September 29, 2008
Bill Heard Chevrolet Closes all of it's dealerships...
Tuesday, September 23, 2008
Monday, September 22, 2008
Saturday, September 20, 2008
PHOENIX MOTORCARS...


The Phoenix SUT front view
Monday, September 15, 2008
DONATE TODAY! A Whole Lot of People can use your Assistance...
Saturday, September 6, 2008
The Magnet Car...



The Magnet Car
Aug 16, 2008
Once again I am forced to express my jealous admiration for the new breed of magic, eco-friendly car. Oops, did I say magic? I meant magnet: this car overcomes the force of gravity through the strategic use of an electric engine...and magnets.
Winner of the unseen technology award at the Interior motives design awards 2007, the MAG magnetic vehicle concept (designed by Matúš Procháczka) finds an unusual solution to the problem of, expending fuel to get somewhere. Rather than finding a different fuel source, or building a smaller car, Procháczka ingeniously reduces the weight of the car by using an electric engine with magnets the same polarity as the roads. The resulting upward force lightens the vehicle's weight by 50%.
Another innovative touch is the desing of the seats: two outer layers, pile yarn, and a soft construction foam make it possible to adjust the final hardness and spring characteristics of the seat. This lightweight, adaptable seating not only cuts down on waste during construction and the overall weight of the vehicle while being driven, it also sounds pretty darn comfy.
Of course, the biggest caveat to MAG's road dominance is the very crux of it's construction: in order for the magnetic engine to properly polarize, the roads on which it's driven also have to be magnetized. Magnetic roads not being yet readily available, um, anywhere, the design for right now remains purely theoretical. But the day they are, you'll see me sitting on my adjustable foam seat cushion, zipping around on my magnet car. MR
Friday, August 22, 2008
EnerDel is set to hire 277 workers at Indianapolis, In plant...
EnerDel will hire hundreds at 2 sites
Lithium-ion battery deal for Think electric vehicle may return city to roots
Once a leader in producing electric cars, Indiana someday could become the center of the nation's new electric car business.
State officials raised the prospect Thursday when Indianapolis battery researcher EnerDel confirmed it will become one of the world's first companies to ramp up output of high-tech batteries for cars designed to run entirely on electricity.
EnerDel, a blend of Japanese and American engineers and Russian capital, said it will hire about 277 production workers and engineers in Indianapolis and Noblesville to make lithium-ion batteries for export to Think Global, a new car company in Norway.
If the Think cars prove reliable in Europe, the company could open an Indiana car assembly plant even as major automakers turn to EnerDel for high-volume production of the innovative batteries able to move a car 110 miles before requiring recharging.
"We aim to be a winner," Ulrik Grape, EnerDel's president and chief executive officer, told the company's nearly 100 employees at a news conference announcing the production ramp-up for Think.
In an era of costly fuel, drivers want better mileage. But no big car company ever has touted purely electric cars as a solution to the nation's fuel woes. The reason has been the limited driving range of conventional batteries.
Now, Think Global and a bevy of other small companies are trying to edge into the market with a battery capable of storing more than 10 times the electricity found in the battery of a Toyota Prius hybrid.
Think Global, backed by investors in high technology including Rockport Capital of Boston, plans to make about 10,000 electric cars a year powered by lithium-ion batteries.
Think could put a production line in the U.S. as early as 2011 to assemble electric cars, said Richard Canny, Think chief executive officer. Plans call for launching the 155-mile range Think Ox model in the United States. The Ox would be an upgraded version of Europe's Think City and would meet U.S. highway regulations.
"Our immediate goal is to ramp up production here," said Canny, in a phone interview from his office in Norway. An Australian, he earlier this year headed strategic planning at Ford Motor Co. in Michigan,
"There's no doubt we'll come to the U.S. The question is when. On one hand, we'd want to be close to where our customers are. On the other, there are good technical capabilities in the Midwest," Canny said, referring to the region's talented technical employees.
Automakers have honed gasoline engines for better mileage and also brought out hybrids that mate electric motors with smaller gas engines. But conventional batteries deterred carmakers from electric cars. Four years ago, General Motors scrapped the last of its California EV-1 electric car program, saying the 40-mile to 50-mile driving range was insufficient.
Hybrids like the Prius can run 40 to 50 miles per gallon, but still depend on gas engines and use relatively small batteries. The nickel metal hydride battery in the Prius stores about 2.6 kilowatt hours of electricity, compared with 26 kilowatt hours in EnerDel's 600-pound battery pack.
EnerDel, relying on innovative Japanese chemistry and former GM Delphi battery engineers, designed the lithium-ion battery in a quick program that has enabled the company to reach market sooner than most other battery researchers, Grape said.
Think Global tested lithium-ion batteries from more than a dozen developers and selected three suppliers: EnerDel; A123 of Watertown, Mass.; and Mes-dea of Switzerland.
By expanding capacity in Indianapolis and Noblesville, EnerDel could make 300,000 batteries a year, Grape said. Indianapolis will make the cells while Noblesville assembles the battery packs.
If the company lands new contracts, EnerDel could open a third battery plant in Indiana covering more than 300,000 square feet and employing more than 450 workers. Criteria for that plant would include access to rail, ceilings 25 feet high, good roads to withstand the heavy batteries, and proximity to engineers and production workers capable of advanced manufacturing.
State officials say if the electric car catches on in America, Indiana can become a center for production by drawing on resources of area enterprises, such as Delphi electronics in Kokomo and Crane Naval Surface Warfare Center, a U.S. Navy facility southwest of Bloomington known as a leader in battery storage technology.
"Our state is perfectly positioned to do the right thing and move fast and lead this revolution," said Gov. Mitch Daniels at the news conference. Later, he noted the state would try to persuade Think to locate the vehicle assembly plant in Indiana.
In Southern Indiana, Jeffersonville now is competing with Bowling Green, Ky., to lure Integrity, a Kentucky maker of an electric car called the Zap. The Zap is considered less sophisticated than Think, which is designed to run on freeways and accelerate from a stop to 60 miles an hour within eight seconds.
It's still not clear, though, whether that big contract is close at hand for EnerDel. About a dozen automakers and major auto-parts makers now are examining versions of EnerDel's batteries, Grape said.
Despite the disarray in the New York capital markets, EnerDel would have no problem raising money to build a big Indiana plant to supply a major automaker, said Gerard Herihy, chief financial officer of Ener1, a parent of EnerDel.
"The only industry able to raise a lot of capital right now is energy and solar. We're in the same area," he said.
Ener1 is the New York-based company financed in part by Russian timber mogul Boris Zingarevich.
Ener1 formed EnerDel in a 2004 joint venture with Michigan-based auto-parts maker Delphi and Japanese electronics company Itochu.
Ener1 this summer acquired bankrupt Delphi's share in EnerDel. EnerDel is housed in the Indianapolis plant that Delphi built for battery production near 86th Street and I-69.
Delphi's origins trace to Delco and Remy, companies with extensive Indiana ties that also had a large hand years ago in putting the first electrical systems in automobiles.
Early in the 20th century, before the gas engine displaced the electric car, historians say, Indiana was home to an array of electric car companies. These included Mills Electric of Ligonier, National Automobile & Electric of Indianapolis, Studebaker Electric of South Bend, Warren Electric of Indianapolis and Waverly Electric of Indianapolis.
*Courtesy Indianapolis Star reporter Ted Evanoff
Friday, August 8, 2008
The technology keeps coming and coming...106 mpg 'compressed air car' may become a reality!
Fred Flintstone used his feet to get his car moving forward, but what will you be using in the near future? What if we told you the answer to that question was "air?"Yes, friends, air. Compressed air, to be exact.The compressed air car is the inspired idea from a European company called MDI, founded in 1991 by a French inventor. The car would use compressed air in a way similar to how a steam engine drives pistons to create motion.With the goal of 106 miles per gallon of fuel (so you still need a little gas) and an 800 mile range, the car could be the super solution to the challenge of ever-increasing gas prices.New York-based Zero Pollution Motors is the first U.S. company to license MDI's technology, with hopes to have a six-seater model for sale in 2010 – for less than $18,000.There are skeptics, of course. The amount of air pressure required -- 4,500 pounds per square inch – is something typically seen only in industrial applications. But the company claims to be able to surmount this challenge. They also say that while their car will be small, it will still be safe to drive on American roads, surrounded by SUVs and 18-wheelers.Between zero and 35 miles per hour, the car would use only compressed air to move forward. Above that speed, a little extra juice is necessary, and that's where the fuel would come in to play.Next year, the car will compete for the Automotive X Prize, with a multimillion-dollar award going to the car that "can win a stage race for clean, production-capable vehicles that exceed 100 mpg equivalent fuel economy.
Wednesday, August 6, 2008
Nissan unviels EV-01 Electric Vehicle...
Yokosuka, Japan-
Nissan unveiled its new EV-01 electric vehicle to the public today, that they say delivers more power than a typical hybrid that is found today. The new vehicle that is being prepared to be sold by 2010 produces it's power with 600 pounds (300 kilogram) of lithium-ion batteries.
Nissan has not proved test data like cruising range and other data.
Nissan along with its partner Renault SA, has stated that it is partnering with the Portuguese Government to sell electric vehicles in the country by 2011, in addition Nissan also announced it has other deals with a Palo Alto, California company A Better Place to market electric vehicles in Israel and Denmark by 2011.
Nissan promises to have the vehicle on sale in Japan and the U.S. by 2010 and globally by 2012. Nissan has been slow to the marketplace with its electric vehicle program and is playing catch up with rivals Toyota and Honda, in addition to entries from Ford and GM.
The vehicle has some unique features such as a side collision prevention feature that uses sensors to detect oncoming vehicles even in blind spots and will warn drivers when switching lanes. The driver will feel a slight tug on the wheels that is carried out with very light braking through the wheels, said Nissan Senior Manager Junichi Kobayashi.
More to come.
Enjoy Today!
Kevin Kimbrough
That Car Guy
Tuesday, August 5, 2008
EnerDel will produce lithium-ion batteries for the THINK Car...
Indianapolis, Indiana plant expanding to produce lithium-ion batteries
EnerDel plans to expand its Indianapolis plant by the end of the year to start commercial production of 600-pound lithium-ion battery packs that will power a Norwegian-made all-electric car.
"We're planning to expand rapidly. We're scaling up to some big numbers," said Charles Gassenheimer, chairman and chief executive of Ener1, the Florida-based parent of the battery maker.
The batteries will go into the Think car, a two-seater produced in Norway that aims at becoming the first commercially available electric car.
Think wants to gear up to produce 10,000 cars a year in 2009, Gassenheimer said, with EnerDel supplying the batteries.
EnerDel plans a 49,000-square-foot expansion and remodeling of its plant at 8740 Hague Road, where batteries are produced, according to a state-filed building permit. Currently EnerDel does battery research at the plant and produces limited numbers of lithium-ion batteries for testing and development in electric cars and gas-electric hybrid vehicles.
"This is one of the crucial steps" in EnerDel's history, Gassenheimer said of the expansion. "The next six months are crucial. We want to make sure we execute on the production side."
EnerDel employs about 100 people at the plant and could hire 150 more in the next 18 months, said spokeswoman Rachel Carroll. Many would be engineering jobs, she said.
EnerDel has been talking to the state about economic incentives, such as property tax abatement, for the project. An announcement about incentives could come soon.
Think was an electric car project of Ford Motor Co. until Ford sold it in 2003. Norwegian investors bought Think in 2006. Think cars with the EnerDel battery are expected to be sold first in Europe in late 2008 or early 2009, with U.S. sales following.
The auto industry needs a light, powerful battery to make the electric car a viable alternative to the gasolinepowered car. The lithium-ion battery appears to be the best solution, but energy experts say kinks must be worked out, including weight and heat production problems.
EnerDel, formed in 2004, is staking its future on the lithium-ion battery, which is commonly found in laptops and cell phones. It claims to have a battery that runs cool and doesn't short out or explode even if punctured. Hybrid vehicles currently use nickel metal hydride battery packs.
EnerDel is one of a handful of battery makers that have received millions of dollars in funding from the three major U.S. automakers through the U.S. Advanced Battery Consortium. It also has received grants from the U.S. Department of Energy.
EnerDel's hybrid battery, which is the size of a conventional car lead battery, is not as far along in development as the much larger battery for all-electric cars.
When tested in the Toyota Prius, the hybrid battery achieved 77 miles per gallon, Gassenheimer said. The nickel metal hydride battery used commercially in the Prius gets 50 to 55 mpg, he said.
Gassenheimer said EnerDel wants to sign two contracts with car makers by the end of the year to develop its hybrid battery for commercial use.
Ener1, which is publicly traded, last week received bankruptcy court approval to buy out the 20 percent stake of its EnerDel founding partner Delphi Corp. for cash and stock worth $30 million. That gives Ener1 100 percent control of EnerDel.
"They were unable to help us financially due to their bankruptcy," Gassenheimer said of Delphi.
He said Ener1 now wants to find a new partner, such as an automaker, for the battery business.
"I don't believe EnerDel's best approach is to go it alone. We need partners," he said.
EnerDel is competing with Japanese powers Panasonic and Sony and other companies to come up with better car batteries that are low-cost, efficient, high-performing and safe.
Carroll said EnerDel is committed to producing its batteries in the United States. That could give EnerDel an advantage in the U.S. marketplace. The thinking among some alternative-energy analysts is that government policymakers looking to reduce America's dependence on foreign oil wouldn't be eager to give economic incentives to a foreign battery company that would send money spent on energy out of the country.
"EnerDel is well-positioned" to find users for its batteries, said Susan Eustis, an analyst for WinterGreen Research in Lexington, Mass. Besides cars, she said, "there are just so many places where this stuff can be used: wheelchairs, scooters, robots, power tools. You'll just see a proliferation" of users if the lithium-ion battery works well.
*Courtesy Star reporter Jeff Swiatek
Monday, August 4, 2008
Did you see lightning... Introducing the Lightning GT!
A native car company unveils a 700-horsepower electric supercar at the British Motor Show 2008 — but will it really work?
By Christopher Hubbard of MSN autos
Click to see more pictures
The Lightning is all classic GT, with a long hood, low curving roofline, and massive multi-spoke alloy wheels.
Well here's a shock: a good looking British sports car (sorry Lotus). This is the Lightning GT, and instead of guzzling super unleaded it creates 700 horsepower using batteries.
Or so the Lightning Car Company claims. But we'll leave off being cynical for a moment (don't worry, it is only for a moment) and continue telling you just how good this thing looks. It is all classic GT: long hood, low curving roofline, and massive multi-spoke alloy wheels, complete with a major surprise.
View Pictures: Lightning GT
Those blue discs? They ain't the brakes — at least not in the traditional sense. The Lightning GT uses four hub-mounted electric motors, providing direct drive to the wheels. Combined with just 30 battery packs, these deliver the electric equivalent of "700 horsepower+" and each motor can be individually controlled.
This means the car can modify the speed of the wheels depending on steering angle and velocity, and presumably any other parameter the team can program into the system — suspension load, for example. This should lead to exceptionally dynamic handling — assuming all the computers are talking to each other.
Zero to 60 mph will, apparently, take less than four seconds — "when it's fully developed." This leads us to the more eyebrow-raising areas of the Lightning’s specifications. Having just 30 batteries is surprising enough (most electric supercars use far more than that), but the claim is these give the car a 300-km [186-mile] range — on just a 10-minute charge.
This is, quite frankly, unbelievable. That's not to say the Lightning Car Company hasn't achieved it — it does have video footage of the car moving under its own power displayed on the stand at the British Motor Show 2008 — but we would really like to see a full demonstration before even thinking about handing over any money.
Lightning officials say deliveries could start in 2010, but the company still requires investment to make that happen. It also claims "£20,000+ [US$40,000+] savings on annual running costs versus equivalent petrol sports car" — very bold. But if your biggest concern is the lack of an exciting engine note, fear not: the Lightning GT includes a “sound module.”
You can blast out the sound of a smooth V6 or throaty V12, or cruise along in serenity of silence. Make of that what you will. We love the concept of the Lightning GT — the look, the idea, the innovation, the British engineering. But my goodness, we need some convincing that the thing is really going to work.
Thursday, July 17, 2008
The hottest used cars these days... I don't really want to say I told you so...
I reported recently that the resale value of preowned used Chevrolets, Fords and Chrysler products would soon have dramatic increases in value. J.D. Power released its 10 used vehicles with the fastest-rising prices (May and June 2008) and low and behold look what popped up on the list among the Toyotas and Hondas. The good 'ol Chevrolet Aveo and Ford Focus, as the story indicated, these vehicles are flying off dealers lots and pricing is rising fast. It goes on to say economy models haven''t been big sellers for the past few years, car makers (domestic) have built relatively few of them.
As I said in my earlier report, all anyone has to do is the math, the Domestic output of fuel efficient vehicles has been low, now demand is high, simple supply and demand mathematics. The Imports will be less and the Domestic used vehicle values will increase as this demand continues to increase.
All of the sudden that Chevy Metro is worth some moola!
I really don't like saying I told you so, so I won't, however you folks should listen up, look at the great values on deals from the domestics and take advantage of them. I am not being pro Domestic or anything like it they have made major blunders in there product development and offerings to the public, but if you see a great value you should take it.
Lets see how the next reports look, maybe I will have to adjust my time lines, I will keep doing the math.
Enjoy Today!
Kevin Kimbrough
That Car Guy
Wednesday, July 9, 2008
Nissan Pivo 2 Concept...
Carmaker, government link up to form charging network
Portugal’s Prime Minister Jose Socrates, 2nd right, and Nissan’s Vice President Carlos Tavares, right, look at a model of Nissan’s concept electric vehicle Pivo 2, in Lisbon.
Hybrid payback?You want to buy a hybrid, but you’re concerned about the cost. Here’s what you need to know about buying some of the most popular hybrid vehicles.
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TOKYO - Automakers Nissan and Renault will sell electric vehicles in Portugal in 2011 and the allied companies have partnered with the government in an attempt to create a national network of charging stations.
Nissan has said it will sell electric cars globally in 2012, but the technology is still being developed. On Wednesday, Carlos Ghosn, chief executive of the French and Japanese automakers, and Portuguese Prime Minister Jose Socrates said they would work together to raise awareness about the vehicles and try to make them easier to fuel.
Nissan has aggressively pursued deals with cities and governments on electric vehicles, as soaring gas prices and worries about global warming make the green technology more appealing.
Tokyo-based Nissan Motor Co. and partner Renault SA have previously announced deals with Project Better Place, based in Palo Alto, Calif., which promotes electric vehicles, to mass market electric vehicles in Israel and Denmark in 2011.
While other car manufacturers concentrate on fuel cells and hybrids, Nissan is going all out on electric vehicles, promising to sell them globally in 2012, with the first models arriving in Japan and the U.S. in 2010.
“We are feeling more strongly than ever that we must speed up our development of electric vehicles,” said Nissan Senior Vice President Minoru Shinohara.
Nissan is also in talks with parking lot and railway companies to set up recharging stations, he told The Associated Press at the company’s Tokyo headquarters Wednesday.
The lack of charging stations has made electric cars impractical in the broader market. Skeptics say electric vehicles will stay niche for some time.
Combined with high costs and other technological hurdles, electric vehicles for the broader public are still experimental.
Proponents say tax breaks, preferential highways lanes and other incentives would boost the appeal.
“It’s still a very new technology and so much remains to be seen,” said Yasuaki Iwamoto, auto analyst with Okasan Securities Co. “It’s unlikely people are suddenly going to switch in big numbers from gas-engine vehicles.”
Portugal is a global leader in promoting renewable energy, including wind and solar power.
“This agreement with Renault-Nissan will place Portugal also on the front line in terms of sustainable mobility with zero-emission vehicles,” Socrates said. “Promoting electric cars in Portugal will reduce our dependence on imported oil and will contribute to a cleaner environment.”
Shinohara said Japanese urbanites drive about 12 miles a day — so the limited range of electric vehicles isn’t a problem for daily grocery shopping and other errands.
Nissan has not yet given details of the electric vehicle it has in the works.
Fuji Heavy Industries, which makes Subaru cars, and Mitsubishi Motors Corp. plan to offer electric vehicles in Japan next year. Mitsubishi’s electric vehicle travels 99 miles on a single charge, while Subaru’s goes 50 miles.
Mitsubishi plans to sell its electric vehicle in Europe in 2010, while tests are planned for the U.S. for 2009. Subaru has not decided on overseas sales plans for its electric vehicle.
Toyota to add solar panels to Prius hybrids
Masahiko Otsuka, president of Automotive Energy Supply Corp., a joint venture between Nissan and Japanese electronics maker NEC Corp. to produce batteries for electric vehicles, said Nissan has a history dating back to 1992 of testing lithium-ion batteries for cars.
Lithium-ion batteries are now more common in laptops and other gadgets but can pack more power than the kind of batteries in the gas-electric hybrids made by Toyota Motor Corp.
All major automakers are pushing new technology.
Honda Motor Co. is leasing a fuel-cell vehicle in California which emits only water.
U.S. automaker General Motors Corp. is developing an electric vehicle called the Chevrolet Volt, which it hopes to launch in 2010. Ford Motor Co. has a demonstration fleet of 20 plug-ins.
Saturday, July 5, 2008
VW1-Liter concept vehicle...



A few years back, Volkswagen introduced a concept vehicle which derived its name from its stated goal of using just one liter of fuel per one-hundred kilometers traveled, and according to CAR production version may be on the way in 2010. The original concept actually beat its lofty goal rather handily as it managed to achieve a miserly 282 miles per gallon in testing. Much of its amazing fuel-saving capability stemmed from its 660 pounds (300 kilograms) curb weight. The concept also featured a single cylinder engine and a 1+1 seating arrangement down the center of the car. While the engine is likely to be replaced by a twin-cylinder turbodiesel with hybrid drive, the carbon fiber construction and canopy-style roof are likely headed for production. As you'd expect, such technology and carbon-heavy construction isn't going to come cheap. To offset part of the cost, the automaker is surely looking for some government assistance for purchasers of the limited edition machine, though it could still be sold at a loss. Safety features like airbags, anti-lock brakes and stability control aren't lacking, but convenience items like air conditioning may be optional. In that case, we'd recommend being really comfortable with your passengers in the rather close-knit quarters.
Gallery: VW One-Liter Car