Tuesday, October 12, 2010

Latest 2011 Chevy Volt Car Review


New 2011 Chevy Volt Car Review Pictures
New 2011 Chevy Volt Car Review
General Motors unveiled the final design for the car that it hopes will save the company: New 2011 ChevroletCar, the world’s first production plug-in hybrid. The New 2011 Chevrolet Car is designed to drive 40 miles on a single charge of its giant lithium-ion battery; after that, an onboard 1.4-liter four-cylinder flex-fuel engine kicks in to power the electrict motors that drive the car.
New 2011 Chevy Volt Car Review Pictures
New 2011 Chevy Volt Car Review
GM will most likely New 2011 Chevrolet Car make 10,000 of the cars in the first year of production; it’s expected to go on sale in November 2010. It’s unclear how much the car will cost, though the relatively unproven lithium-ion batteries could drive the cost close to $40,000. Government incentives could help drive that cost down closer to the $30,000 mark.
New 2011 Chevy Volt Car Review Pictures
New 2011 Chevy Volt Car Review
Chevrolet is designed to move more than 75 percent of America’s daily commuters without a single drop of gas.That means for someone who drives less than 40 miles a day, Chevy Volt will use zero gasoline and produce zero emissions.Unlike traditional electric cars, Chevy Volt has a revolutionary propulsion system that takes you beyond the power of the battery. It will use a lithium-ion battery with a variety of range-extending onboard power sources, including gas and, in some vehicles, E85 ethanol to recharge the battery while you drive beyond the 40-mile battery range. And when it comes to being plugged in, Chevy Volt will be designed to use a common household plug.
According to General Motors E-Flex spokesman Rob Peterson, the automaker has reached an agreement with the California Air Resources Board (CARB) that would see the 2011 Chevrolet get a unique classification different from other current hybrids. This new classification takes into account the fact that the Volt’s 40-mile battery range allows it to complete the bulk of the emissions and economy test procedure without ever running the engine, which would likely give it a mpg rating of 100 mpg or better.
This is problematic for the EPA, which considers dual-power vehicles like the series hybrid Volt no different than a parallel hybrid like the Prius. Currently the EPA is expecting the Volt to complete the test cycle with a charged battery, which means the engine would have to run a lot more and essentially kill the charge sustaining control plan. According to Peterson, GM is still a long way from reaching an agreement with the feds on how to test the Volt, despite what the Detroit Free Press says. However, having CARB consider the Volt essentially an electric car is certainly a bargaining chip in GM’s favor

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