Posted on 07/10/2007 1:44:39 PM PDT by grundle
July 8, 2007
Tesla Roadster
The most fun you can have without fuel
Jay Leno
People think that if youre a car enthusiast you have something against electric cars. Not in the least. To me the nice thing about electric vehicles is, if nothing else, they free up the gasoline for our other cars.
I think many car enthusiasts see the future as one where they will use some kind of electric car or hydrogen car during the week and will save their sports cars for the weekend, just as you would play golf or football at the weekend.
What Tesla, an American company that has made an electric version of the very British Lotus Elise, has done is find a way to enjoy a sports car all week long and be green.
The problem with electric cars up to this point is what I call the veggie burger syndrome. When they came out with the veggie burger they made it look like a hamburger, which was disappointing because it doesnt taste anything like a hamburger. It had been the same with electric cars until this point.
They would take a Volkswagen Golf or some equivalent, rip out the innards and replace it with an electric motor. So you get a car that is not only slower but would not be as safe because most of the safety features were probably taken out of it, it wouldnt go as far and youd have something that was less than what you started with.
Tesla is quite smart in that it is reaching the enthusiasts of the market. If you like sports cars and you want to be green, this is the only way to go. The Tesla is a car that you can live with, drive and enjoy as a sports car. I had a brief drive in the car and it was quite impressive. This is an electric car that is fun to drive. Prior to this, most electric cars were driven by people with earth shoes.
I love electric cars. One of the favourites in my garage is my 1909 Baker Electric car. But in the 98 years since that car was made, battery technology and therefore electric car technology has not changed a huge amount.
In the early 1900s Thomas Edison developed an alkaline battery to double or triple the range of the electric car. It didnt quite do that, but alkaline batteries were neat in that they could be rinsed out and used over and over again. In fact Im still using the alkaline battery that came with the Baker and was made by Edison himself.
In 1909 a frustrated Edison wrote on a napkin at a dinner and handed it to Henry Ford. On it hed written: The electric car is dead. Almost from that note right up until Tesla, Edison wasnt far wrong. Not much has been done to progress the battery-powered car since.
Tesla is not the first major manufacturer to have an electric car. GM came out with the EV1 in the early 1990s. I had one for a week and I loved it. It was quick but it only went about 125 miles on a charge. In 80 years it went only 10 miles further that my 1909 Baker Electric, and really a 125-mile range means you only have about a 60-mile range, because you have to come back.
One of the hidden things they dont tell you about electric cars is that you get good mileage when the temperature is 20C, but when it drops down towards freezing you lose 20-40% because theyre dependent on the ambient temperature. What Tesla has done is put in a cooling/heating system that keeps the battery at a constant temperature.
Its also built a car that weighs 2,600lb, which is a few pounds heavier than the standard Lotus, whereas most electric cars would be hundreds of pounds heavier. And it handles and drives, for all intents and purposes, like a real sports car.
The difference with this is that its faster than a standard Lotus. For something to succeed it has to not only do it as well but better. The Wankel engine was the only brand new engine of the 20th century, but the trouble was it was the equal of the internal combustion engine, it just wasnt better. So why change? To the average person its a case of Ill stick with what I have.
With this Tesla, you have a Lotus which is faster. The only disadvantage is that you cant refuel quite as quickly. However, when you do refuel, its the equivalent of five cents a gallon, or something similar.
The Tesla handles well. I suppose if you took both it and a Lotus on a racetrack, the standard Elise would win. But for the average person taking it out for a drive, I think you would be really, really impressed. Its a proper car that meets emission and safety standards. Prior to this, when you saw an electric car in America you didnt get the airbags and it was sort of a kit car. All you were doing was saving energy. This one meets all federal standards of car production.
Driving the car takes some getting used to. But boy is it quick. It does 0-60mph in 4sec. Like a petrol car, you just put your foot down and go. The real trick with electricity is that its alive. You put it in a box and it either escapes or dies. The best way to use power is at the point of generation, which is what hybrids do but then you are back with the problem of having two powerplants and the extra weight. Electricity is the best way to run an automobile in the sense that there is no maintenance of any kind.
I have never done any maintenance on my 1909 Baker Electric, other than maybe greasing the wheel hubs. You dont do anything. You plug it in, charge it and drive it. The motor is virtually maintenance-free. This is a car made back in 1909 I am talking about, and the Tesla is the same way. There is nothing much to break or wear out in the engine department, with the exception of maybe the battery, which remains to be seen. They are claiming well over 200 miles per charge, which is pretty impressive.
Behind the wheel the power comes on sharply because its linear. You have instant torque. The faster you accelerate the faster you go. Youve got a two-speed transmission so you can actually shift it. Its a slightly different sensation but I think its something youd get used to quickly. Youve got air-conditioning and a radio and all the things you would have in a normal car. Its quiet. But many fast cars now are quiet.
When I drove the EV1 I was amazed at how fast it was. Back in the 1990s it was really quick. Top speed was about 85-90mph, but in the real world most of the fun is between 40mph and 80mph, where you put your foot on it.
In the real world I have a Porsche Carrera GT, I have a McLaren F1, and anybody that tells you theyve taken those cars to 200mph is a liar. They havent. Believe me. I did a couple of hundred laps at Talladega and the fastest I got to was 190mph on a track. By myself. And it was scary. Nobody does those speeds on a public road. If you do, you should be in prison. The real-world fun of acceleration is between 40mph and 80mph.
I think Colin Chapman, the Lotus founder, would be impressed by the technology in the Tesla. He was always looking at making cars lighter and lighter. Lightness is, of course, what makes a car handle. I would say this is the first electric car that truly handles. I think Chapman would be pleased if his design was chosen as an example of superior handling and dynamics.
If one day they were to start a green racing league that used no petrol of any kind, this car would probably win the race the first year out. It feels like a proper sports car.
Would I buy one? Well yes, I would be interested in it. Right now theyre $100,000, so consequently its something rich people would buy. But most new technology starts out with rich people. Antilock brakes started out on the big Cadillacs and Lincolns. They didnt start out on economy cars. To start with its the rich buyers that can absorb the cost. Anybody who buys a Tesla now is making a statement about buying responsibly. Its a way to make a high performance statement for the new millennium.
If you dropped somebody in from another planet and said, this one with a petrol engine or this one with an electric motor, well, theyd probably say the Tesla. The only downside is the time it takes to charge and that is probably the next step.
The Tesla shows sports cars can be electrifying. The sports car neednt die once oil runs out. I guess this is the first car that means we as sports car aficionados can see beyond the end of the internal combustion engine.
Vital statistics
Model Tesla Roadster
Engine Electric motor powered by lithium-ion battery
Power 248bhp @ 8000rpm
Torque 200 lb ft @ 0-6000rpm
Transmission Two-speed manual
CO2 n/a
Acceleration 0-60mph: 4sec
Top speed 130mph Price $98,000 (£48,600)
Ping!
ghey
I could see commuting in that. I would have to keep the gas burner for interstate travel, of course...
Wow these things are great! I like the way they run off of solar power and free up all that gas. Hey, wait a minute, you have to charge the batteries using coal or oil-fired power plants. Hmmmm nevermind
I guess this sort of thing is the future, but I’m sure going to be miss the majestic roar of a 350 small block chevy.
Is this the one with the Lithium batteries? Quite a number of them too, if I recall correctly.
p.s. No “big” name would be caught dead on O’Reilly (the Hollywood moonbats are so original) and yet, he manages to capture the lion’s share, every single night.
Ok, but what class does it race in under SCCA autocross rules? And how well does it do?
“CO2 n/a”
Yeah, no CO2 in our electricity (from our coal-fired power plant)...
I don’t know those numbers. But it goes from 0-60 in 4 seconds, and has a top speed of 130.
I thought he did a good job. Not a whole lot of eco-proselytizing but instead a straight forward piece based upon his own experiences with the good and bad of electric cars. He is even honest about these sort of cars currently being a rich man’s toy.
You could also use nuclear power.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tesla_Roadster
Tesla Roadster
# Cell type: lithium ion, 18650 form-factor (18mm diameter by 65mm length). Most laptop computer batteries already use this type of lithium-ion cell.
# Cell count: 6,831
okay, from the top:
1. There are O2 emissions, unless the electrical power comes from nukes or wind. If it comes from nukes, then you’ve got strip mining and all that goes with uranium production, along with storing spent nuke waste. Wind power is, percentage-wise, negligible ‘cause it’s so inefficient.
2. The manufacturing of batteries is very hard on the environment, and the replacement of the batteries causes a decision to scrap the car far sooner than its diesel counterparts.
3. Charging batteries takes time. To charge a 100AH to 80% in 1 minute with a 220v connection, you’d need around 4800 amps. You’d need 480 amps for a 10-minute 80% charge. That would mean that a “filling” station would probably pull 10MW or more — the average power generation station produces around 500 to 2000 MW.
4. Your electric car flips upside down. The batteries are normally under the passenger’s compartment. Now would be a great time to discover prayer, and pray that the contents of the batteries don’t leak out on you, or that the electricity doesn’t catch something on fire.
BTW, it’s tough to screw up a new Lotus, no matter what the drive train. There are more than a few people putting together replicas of the Lotus 7 (aka “Caterham” or “Clubman”) using forklift electrical components.
Exactly. Electricity is the very least green type of energy we have. But the greenies don't see or smell the coal/oil emissions in their driveway, so they think it's all good and clean.
My neighbor was going on about the new weed whacker he got. He was all happy that it is so good for the environment. I just nodded and tried to stay neighborly while I was thinking, "How the *bleep* do you think they make that electrictiy that's running through that nine-mile extension cord you are dragging around your yard?"
Good news on the alternatives to gasoline. Now if they could just make one affordable to us middle-class folks that didn’t look like it’s *ss had been cut off we’d be in business!
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