The Electric Fomites on Display this Year can be ‘fuelled’ at home
At the 2011 Vancouver International Auto Show, in the midst of hybrids, super cars, SUVs and more, also production-ready electric vehicles can be anticipated to grace the floors of the Vancouver Convention Center.
Ford, Nissan, Chevrolet and Mitsubishi are all exhibiting their most modern and supreme in green, or may be blue, engineering aspiring to get people charged-up with regard to zero emission, environmental-friendly cars.
All the electric fomites presented at this year’s Vancouver International Auto Show (VIAS) can be charged by a conventional household 120v/200v wall socket or thru an elective quick-charge station set up in the home. The following electric cars (EVs) were on display:
Ford Focus Electric 2011
The Ford Focus Electric will be launched late in 2011. This is the first fuel-free, rechargeable rider car from the American Producer. Out of the five EVs which Ford has planned to launch into the North American and European markets by 2013 Ford Focus Electric is the first car. With a single-speed transmission system producing a peak speed of 136 km/h, this EV has some energy.
Ford Focus Electric vehicle has further added to its “green” appeal by making the seating surfaces of 100 per cent post-industrial stuffs; meaning they have used materials that would or else wind up in landfills. The cushions of the seats are created of bio-based polyurethane foam made from oils of soybeans plant seeds.
The Leaf which is Nissan’s EV is planned to be Canada’s first obtainable battery-only EV. This EV will be on sale later this year in certain selected Canadian areas. It will be sold nationwide in 2012. Nissan Leaf is power-driven by a rechargeable lithium-ion battery. These batteries are the same type of batteries which are used for iPods. The Leaf is a five seater and is dimensionally ranked between the Versa and the Altima. It provides a range of more or less 160 kilometers; the Leaf has a yield of 107 horsepower and 207 lbs.-ft of torsion. The Leaf is styled dynamically and do not forget to check out the rear end of this five-door EV. Tailpipe is absent as it is a 24/7, zero-emissions vehicle.
The Chevrolet Volt has produced quite a hum in the automotive industry. The Chevy Volt has gained several awards for its environmentally aware engineering. At the same time the Chevy Volt is also the world’s original electric vehicle to be mass-produced with extensive range potentialities. After the electric charge has been exhausted -subsequently around 40 to 80 kilometers of driving -a 1.4-litre 63-kW which is 84hp gasoline-provided committed engine will routinely contribute to lengthen the range by about 500 kilometers. All information relating to the Volt’s fundamental statistics can be observed on its trouble-free-touse info center situated in the cabin, or can be supervised distantly via a smart phone.
According to Roy Olson a user “Having our future in our own hands is really important,” he said. “I’m insulated from what’s going on in the Middle East. If I had to pick one reason for getting this car, that’s probably No. 1.”
Last but not least in the line of EVs that can be charged at home is the Mitsubishi i-MiEV, meaning Mitsubishi innovative Electric Vehicle. Established on Mitsubishi’s “i” minicab program, this four-seater’s high-powered lithium-ion batteries are situated beneath the floor so inner space is not infringed upon. Another vantage of its down-under battery location is that it produces a lower center of gravitation for bettered driving dynamics. Its battery pack develops 47 kW of power, the equal of 67 horsepower from a gas engine.
Categories: Car Brands, Chevrolet, Focus, Ford, Leaf, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Recharging vehicles, Volt Tags: Chevrolet Volt 2011, Ford Focus Electric 2011, Mitsubishi i-MiEV 2011, Nissan Leaf 2011
Electric Vehicles to be Sold at Appliance Stores by Mitsubishi
2011 is being acclaimed as the year that electric cars at last emerged as a competitor for the hearts, minds, and progressively tight wallets of users. Electric vehicles, at any rate at first, will call for people to act in a different way, having to locate or make their own way to charge it instead of depending on gas stations being ever at hand as they are now.
Due to this people’s driving customs, whether it is the duration of travel or how quick they drive, will be re molded. Who drives electric cars foremost will be much diverse than early adopters of preceding generations of petroleum founded vehicles. So it makes good judgment that vehicle sales will also take place outside the common places where you would anticipate.
For instance in Japan, Mitsubishi of late joined with appliance store Yamada Denki to sell its i-MiEV electric car. While this may on the face of it seem an abnormal move, think about it. Addition of electric vehicles in the store offers dovetail joint satisfactorily with Yamada Denki’s wish to be a “smart home” supplier, marketing solar systems, car charging stations and the same. It is the recognition of the lengthy talked about energy autonomous home.
Categories: Car Brands, Mitsubishi Tags: i-MiEV, Mitsubishi
Ford Focus Electric of 2012 Disclosed
After months of baiting, Ford has formally revealed the 2012 Focus Electric at the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas.
The specifics are kept with the company themselves at present, the Electric vehicle is provided with a lithium-ion battery which alters the car to thump a top speed of 84 mph which is 136 km/h and have a mile-per-gallon equivalent enhanced than the Chevrolet Volt and other viable battery electric fomites.” More prominently, an exhausted battery can be recharged in 3-4 hours by means of the elective 240-volt speedy charger and thus the time required to charge is only half the time needed by the Nissan Leaf.
In terms of titling, the prototype is made out by a retooled grillwork, a tailored front facade, 17-inch aluminum rolls, and a “light ring” that circumvents the fomites charging port. As the fomite recharges, twinkling quadrants symbolize a charge in progress whereas solid quadrants depict finished levels of charging.
The 2012 Focus Electric will be set in motion later on this year in the following markets: Austin, Houston, Atlanta, Chicago, Boston, Detroit, Denver, Los Angeles, San Diego, San Francisco, Phoenix, New York, Tucson, Orlando, Raleigh Durham, Portland, Seattle, Richmond and Washington D.C.
Categories: Car Brands, Focus, Ford Tags: 2012, Focus, Ford, Ford Focus
What is it that Nissan Dealers have to Pay to Organize for Leaf Electric Cars?
The 2011 Nissan Leaf, superficially, looks less complicated to service than usual gasoline cars; there’s no combustible liquid in the tank, no motor oil, no complex multi-speed conduction either.
But some dealers are almost certainly a little frightened to take a dealership that is set up to sell and service gasoline cars and trucks, and advancing it to sell and service all-electric vehicles, like the Leaf.
According to Mark Perry who is the Nissan’s director of product planning and strategy, and the hands-on executive who has seen the Leaf project through in the U.S. states thus:
“Just like home charger installation, the total cost to the dealership could vary quite a bit, estimated Perry, though he said we’re certainly not talking hundreds of thousands. The total cost for most dealerships would to equip themselves for Leaf will fall in the vicinity of $25,000 to $75,000, he estimated. Or in the same order of magnitude as the cost of one new 2011 Leaf (base price $32,780). So, tools and equipment, technician training, sales training, public charging stations, those are the things we’re asking our dealerships across the country to be able to do. It’s a bit of an investment, but it’s an investment in the future.”
Categories: Car Brands, Leaf, Nissan Tags: Leaf, Nissan, Nissan Dealers, Nissan Leaf
Car of the year 2010 – Nissan Leaf
Nissan Leaf, based on the judgment of the 58 judges for Europe’s annual Car of the Year contest gained the accolade. The essential, purpose-designed, all-electric family car made the most points and was rewarded the Car of the Year 2011. Nissan Leaf also earned more zero point scores than other cars in the seven-strong chosen apart from the bargain-SUV Dacia Duster.
Without doubt the Leaf is a noteworthy car, and the most technically advanced out of all the earlier period’s new cars. Car of the Year normally rewards for innovation, but frequently the victor in this completely democratic process is merely the car that the maximum number of people like enough not to punish with a low score.
Revolutionary cars are more potential to polarize views, so their triumph is all the sweeter. The Leaf’s win is a slim one, its 257 points only nine ahead of the second-place Alfa Romeo Giulietta (248) and 13 ahead of the Vauxhall Meriva in third (244).
The approaching year, then, goes to the Nissan Leaf. Before long it will be united by another pair of intention-planned electric cars from the Renault-Nissan alliance, the cute Renault Zoe hatchback and the Twizy city car.
Categories: Car Brands, Leaf, Meriva, Nissan, Opel / Vauxhall Tags: Leaf, Nissan, SUV Dacia Duster, Vauxhall Meriva


