TOP NEWS

March 31, 2008

Mercedes Sees Electric-Car Progress

ARTICLE TOOLS        | E-MailPrint

NEW YORK – Mercedes-Benz said it will have a demonstration fleet of practical electric vehicles on the road in two to three years. They’re expected to run 80 miles or more on lithium-ion batteries the German automaker is developing. Regular production could begin a few years later, according to www.usatoday.com. The announcement followed its recent declaration that it will be first in the U.S. market with a gasoline-electric hybrid using a lithium battery pack.

 

The first-to-market Mercedes hybrid using lithium-ion batteries will be a gasoline-electric version of its S-class sedan in 2009. Its V-6 gasoline engine, helped by an electric motor, will feel like a V-8 but use less fuel.

A key hurdle to using auto-scale lithium batteries is that they require careful temperature management and monitoring of the charge in each individual cell. Mercedes said it has solved those issues for the hybrid batteries and hopes to say the same soon for a different version needed for its pure electric car based on its Smart brand of tiny two-seaters.

Mercedes’ lithium batteries will come from a new factory in France, operated by JCS. That’s a joint venture between U.S. components supplier Johnson Controls and French battery company Saft.

 

Even though Mercedes expects to be first with hybrids using lithium-ion batteries, General Motors aims to be first to field a showroom-ready pure electric vehicle using lithium. Its Chevrolet Volt two-seater is planned for late 2010 or 2011, priced about $35,000, according to www.usatoday.com.

Unlike gas-electric hybrids, electric cars such as Volt and the Smart will be propelled entirely by an electric motor running on batteries. They can be recharged by plugging into an outlet for six hours or more.

Lithium batteries’ extra storage capacity would allow plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) to go farther before needing help from their gasoline engines. PHEVs, like electric cars, can be recharged by plugging into an electric outlet. PHEVs and electric cars need more robust lithium batteries than conventional hybrids, because the batteries undergo a more severe duty cycle, charged to the brim then nearly drained.

Toyota Motor is also expanding lithium battery development and production.

RATE THIS STORY

Average Rating: 3 out of 5 (1 vote)

COMMENT ON THIS STORY

Please log in to write comment.

New user? Sign up for new membership now!

NEWS ARCHIVE SEARCH

Sponsored Links

6 Ways to Go Green and Save
By analyzing driving patterns and historical location reports from Networkfleet®, fleets can reduce miles and optimize schedules. Click here to download our free Green paper.

BLOG

Strategic Fleet Management Focuses on Management by Objective

By Mike Antich
The greatest challenge facing the future of fleet management is how we see ourselves as a profession. Are we administrators of a fleet or are we managers? Do we manage from a tactical level – putting out day-to-day fires – or from a strategic level focusing on specific long-term objectives using metrics to benchmark progress? In the future, you will need a strategic focus to succeed in fleet management; otherwise you run the risk of fading into irrelevancy.

When Fleet Collides With HR

By Mike Antich
The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (also known as HIPAA) makes it a criminal act to divulge medical information to a third-party without the employee’s permission. Many fleet managers believe HIPAA non-disclosure requirements are counter-productive to fleet safety. One fleet manager lamented to me that “HIPAA is the worst thing that has ever happened to fleet.”

Fleet Safety Must be Your No. 1 Job Priority

By Mike Antich

Upfitters Increase Prices 3%-8% Due to Higher Commodity Prices

By Mike Antich

STORE

$10.00

World of Special Finance - March 2008

In This Issue:
Marketing & Sales, Legal, Near & Subprime, Buy-Here, Pay Here and much more…