Tech Headlines
- China Rejects “Illegal” EU Carbon Tax on Airlines
- Ambitious UN Sustainability Conference in Rio to Avoid Climate Talk
- Another Taxpayer-Funded Green-Tech Company Files Bankruptcy
- Warren Buffett to Benefit From Obama’s Keystone XL Decision
- House Republicans Question Safety of Chevy Volt Batteries
- Columnist Calls for Internet “Quality Control” to Quash Dissent
Some ads are provided by Google
They are not endorsed by The New American
| The Problem With Electric Cars | | Print | |
| Written by Ed Hiserodt | ||
| Monday, 12 January 2009 15:20 | ||
|
So how expensive? The GM Chevrolet Volt has a sticker price of $40,000. Hey, that's what a house should cost, not a car. And the Volt has another problem: though announced to be in the showrooms in November 2010, there are indications the batteries haven't been developed — a fact that seems to have gotten lost in the public/environmentalist relations campaign — and at this late date there are no working prototypes. My guess is the odds are 10:1 against this car actually happening, much less happening in 2010. Trackback(0)
Comments (2)
![]()
Ray Rogers
said:
|
|
Electric Cars Bravo Mr. Hiserodt! I work as an automotive engineer, and your are right on the mark. Electric cars are limited by the battery, and all current and potential technologies only offer marginal gains to the standard lead-acid battery design. The facts are pretty straight forward: The actions that an indiviudal takes to save money will reduce consuption. Turn off the light, combine trips in the car, close the refriderator door, etc. Those things that don't make sense, such as spending thousands of dollars to get "green car", well, we should leave that to those who would rather waste their own money. Ray Rogers |





William Morrison of Des Moines is credited with building the first electric car in 1891. It was successful, except for two problems: the batteries were heavy and expensive, and it wouldn't go very far on a charge. In 2009 Ford and General Motors showed their new line of electric cars at the Detroit Auto Show. They were as pretty as you can make a vehicle. But they have two major problems: the batteries are heavy and expensive, and they don't go very far on a charge.

