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Leaf and EV1 Comparison

Discussion in 'EV (Electric Vehicle) Discussion' started by hill, Apr 4, 2010.

  1. hill

    hill High Fiber Member

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    With Leaf pricing available, it got me thinking. GM claimed the EV1 couldn't be sold because it was not practical. They said parts were too expensive, and maintenance was too expensive. GM claimed at one time, that they spent over a BILLION dollars to create the EV1. Since GM made just over 1,000 EV1's ... that cost would divide out at almost a MILLION a piece. Few believed GM's billion dollar claim. Perhaps if one factored in lobbying to remove the CARB mandate that forced GM to build them ... and costs for crushing, etc ... maybe.

    Enter the Leaf. Pre-incentive price is just above $30,000 and leasing the Leaf will cost in the mid $300's (EV1 leasing in the $600's) per month. Nissan plans to make way more than 1,000 units so the R&D will spread over a lot more units than the EV1. At some production number, EV1 development costs would have been spread thin enough to be 'reasonable'. Yet GM held the EV1 out to be impractical. Nissan believes that the EV WILL be practical, and that they CAN make money with it.

    History already shows GM was wrong about hybrids. GM's leadership said Toyota's hybrid is money lost ... just a PR stunt. Does it follow that GM will be proven wrong about EV's too? If GM is proven wrong about EV's. What would be causing GM to miss the boat? Cheaper batteries? Corporate culture differences? Labor/material costs? Fossil fuel concerns?
     
  2. mitch672

    mitch672 Technology Geek

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    GM is a corporation that should already have disappeared from earth, they should have filed for bankruptcy, and been gone. They should never have been bailed out, and given another chance, because history shows they are too stupid to do the right thing, as they are too entrenched in "big oil's" back pocket.

    If they where not so short sighted, the EV1 would have been a fabulous success, battery technology would have improved at a much greater speed, and the entire world would have been a better place by now (less green house gass's, less polution), and well onto the conversion of the entire US auto market to EV technology.

    No, I and many others can NEVER forgive GM for their stupid, bonehead moves with the EV1.

    P.S. as far as the volt is concerned, that is another dumb move by GM, as the Leaf will be far better as a pure EV, than the Volt will be as a hybrid.
     
  3. dogfriend

    dogfriend Human - Animal Hybrid

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    I think it was GM management deciding that they did not want to be compelled to build EVs by CARB. They had to argue that it was not economically feasible because any other reason would not have been justified.

    I think history now shows that it was a short sighted decision. If they had the EV1 (or an even more modern equivalent) available for sale during the summer of 2008, they could have sold a boat load of them. Instead, the US government had to bail them out.
     
  4. Erikon

    Erikon Active Member

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    Big Oil and the Big Three were always two sides of the same coin. GM developed the EV1 as a stopgap (thus the lease as the only option) until they and their Oil masters could find a way to crush the CARB mandate. They finally did with the Hydrogen Fuel Cell fantasy! Once BO had their HFC plants on the CARB board, the EV1 and other EV projects were history. Nissan apparently isn't as beholden to Oil, so they can introduce the Leaf and see how the general public receives an EV.
     
  5. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    I do not know.. laziness? They only built EV1s because they had to?? Maybe that's why it was so expensive.
     
  6. hampdenwireless

    hampdenwireless Active Member

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    While I do agree that GM only built the EV1 because they were forced to by CARB I do not believe they are beholden to big oil. GM did try to find any way it could to not continue to build more and to kill the ones they had. Not because they love oil, because they HATE CHANGE.

    Change is very expensive for them. They need to continue to build gas cars because that is what they have factories to build. As for the Volt, they are having to build new (and expensive) battery facilities and motor and electric car research centers. They will loose money on the Volt for a while. Maybe a long while!
     
  7. mitch672

    mitch672 Technology Geek

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    my point EXACTLY. They had ALREADY developed the technology for the EV1, had they stuck with it, they would have converted their factories for dual use already, and the Toyota Prius and other hybrids might never have been built, the EV1 and GM would have had a huge headstart over all other auto manufacturers. Had they EMBRACED change (because after all, that is the only constant in the world, is change), they would have been far better off than they ended up today, a shell of their former greatness and essentialy bankrupt without masive cash infusions by the public (Government)
     
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  8. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    Yes but Toyota used the EV Department (those building the RAV4 EVs) to help develop batteries for the Prius. This was in 1995.
     
  9. TonyPSchaefer

    TonyPSchaefer Your Friendly Moderator
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    WRONG!!
    They would be selling them by the truckloads. And we wouldn't HAVE to buy Prii by the boatloads.
    (more than semantics, that's an important national distinction)

    Here's a couple things to read:
    This is three-part article written by Sam Roe of the Chicago Tribune. Sam's a really good guy. He gave me expressed written permission to reformat and distribute his work based solely on his insistence that it be read and made common knowledge for as many people as possible. It documents the introduction of hybrids in America in the 1990s and the immediate termination of the hybrid program in 2001.
    http://www.chicagopriusgroup.com/resources/SuperCar.pdf

    And here's what I'm reading right now:http://www.amazon.com/dp/product/1400068630?tag=priuschatcom-20 these things will only serve to reiterate any hard feelings you have towards the Big Three for failing to see the writing on the wall time after time after time. . .
     
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  10. dogfriend

    dogfriend Human - Animal Hybrid

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    I meant boat load in the sense that a boat load > a truck load. Not in the sense of the origin of the load. ;)
     
  11. TonyPSchaefer

    TonyPSchaefer Your Friendly Moderator
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    I know. I'm the one who went the next step and went literal. But when framed just a little differently, you have to admit it would be a much different world.
     
  12. dogfriend

    dogfriend Human - Animal Hybrid

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    Yes, it is a good point. The Supercar article is both fascinating and sad.
     
  13. 2k1Toaster

    2k1Toaster Brand New Prius Batteries

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    Well with the current perception of world geography by many americans, maybe Japan is just a truck-drive away from California? Japan is by Chinatown right?
     
  14. vegasjetskier

    vegasjetskier New Member

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    Wasn't the EV1 a two-seater? I don't see that as a direct competitor for the Prius. A good commuter car, yes. A good family car, no.
     
  15. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    Where did you get these numbers? I'm on their mailing list and have not yet seen official pricing.

    Edit: Okay, I saw in the other thread where you got the numbers. Thanks.
     
  16. Flying White Dutchman

    Flying White Dutchman Senior Member

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    wy did abama not aks for a name change
    from general motors to GEM ( General electric motors ) and start building -real- hybrids and evs
     
  17. Tideland Prius

    Tideland Prius Moderator of the North
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    The name GEM is already taken... It's an electric car manufacturer that is partially owned by Chrysler to the best of my recollection (someone can double check that for me if what I said isn't true).
     
  18. daniel

    daniel Cat Lovers Against the Bomb

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    While some extreme conservatives want to paint President Obama as a socialist, the truth is that he is a moderate capitalist who has no interest in exercising the government's ownership of GM. He wanted to save the company and the workers' jobs, but as a moderate capitalist, he feels the present corporate executives are better able to run the company than the government would be.

    In this I disagree with him, but this is not the politics forum. I merely answer your question: He does not dictate to GM because as a capitalist he does not feel it is the government's place to do so even though the government owns a controlling share of the company.
     
  19. That_Prius_Car

    That_Prius_Car Austin Kinser

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    This weekend, Brad and I get to go see an EV1 at a university :)
     
  20. mitch672

    mitch672 Technology Geek

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    Nice, but it has been disabled I'm sure, the few that remain in the world are in muesems, sad really. See Darells page on the EV1 as well: Darell's Electric Vehicle Page