It's Electric and it's FAST!
We WheelsTV bloggers are pretty much a bunch of gearheads with the skinned knuckles and grease under our fingernails to prove it. So, you'd think we were married to the gasoline-powered infernal combustion engine. I say infernal (of or related to hell) because, when you think about it, there have been countless wars over oil and too much misery.
Now back when domestic oil was plentiful and cheap we blissfully spent our weekends working on our cars, customizing our cars, driving our cars, racing our cars and occasionally smashing our cars, never really giving much thought to the future or to other ways of powering our metal friends.
With the shock of the '70's oil crises and now the middle east mess, everyone is looking around for other ways to get from zero to 60 in under five seconds. Well, as the guys here at WheelsTV have pointed out, electricity...and particularly electricity from wind and solar, is a real answer that is here now.
Sure, GM's EV1 was a victim of bad timing but sometimes it takes an entrepreneurial startup to make people realize that there are answers to problems right under our noses.
Tesla Motors is a good example of what can be done with some guts, brains and courage. With the sum of just $25M, this Silicon Valley startup has developed a two seater that will do everything we car buffs love...go from 0 to 60 in just 4 seconds, travel a respectable 250 miles on a single charge, and give a ride that is fun and exciting.
Martin Eberhard, the company's founder and chief executive, is a visionary and also a shrewd businessman. He named the company Tesla after the great Serbian pioneer in electricity, Nicola Tesla. Tesla's work forms the basis for modern alternating current and the AC motor. Although he is also credited by some as the inventor of the radio, (most credit Italian inventory Marconi) he never gained significantly from his inventions and died penniless in New York City in 1943 at the age of 86.
I don't see this happening to Eberhard or to Tesla Motors. The Tesla Roadster uses a carbon fiber body that was designed in the traditional fashion from quarter-sized clay model to full-sized prototype. Its battery pack of thousands of consumer grade lithium-ion cells feed an electric motor that weighs just seventy pounds! For those who are familiar with electric motors, the weight savings alone is amazing. As with all electric motors, torque is as strong at one rpm as it is in the high ranges, unlike gas or diesel engines that require rpms to build torque. And the Tesla Roadster's engine can wind up to 13,000 rpm. Try that with any gas-powered engine!
So, here is a car that will cost about a penny per mile for fuel, has head-snapping performance, turns on a dime and burns no gas! Rumor has it that Tesla may be adding solar cells to the roof for charging while you work (as I suggested in an earlier blog). At $85k-$100k, the Tesla Roadster is still a car for high-rollers. But, with volume will come economies of scale. And who knows, maybe the company that bought Hummer will be smart enough to align themselves with a true visionary and crank out Teslas at prices we can all afford.
Now, if we can all put a windmill on our roof or in our back yards, we won't even need those big oil fired power plants and maybe we'll finally wean ourselves off our dependence on foreign oil!
For more information, go to http://www.teslamotors.com/.
Now back when domestic oil was plentiful and cheap we blissfully spent our weekends working on our cars, customizing our cars, driving our cars, racing our cars and occasionally smashing our cars, never really giving much thought to the future or to other ways of powering our metal friends.
With the shock of the '70's oil crises and now the middle east mess, everyone is looking around for other ways to get from zero to 60 in under five seconds. Well, as the guys here at WheelsTV have pointed out, electricity...and particularly electricity from wind and solar, is a real answer that is here now.
Sure, GM's EV1 was a victim of bad timing but sometimes it takes an entrepreneurial startup to make people realize that there are answers to problems right under our noses.
Tesla Motors is a good example of what can be done with some guts, brains and courage. With the sum of just $25M, this Silicon Valley startup has developed a two seater that will do everything we car buffs love...go from 0 to 60 in just 4 seconds, travel a respectable 250 miles on a single charge, and give a ride that is fun and exciting.
Martin Eberhard, the company's founder and chief executive, is a visionary and also a shrewd businessman. He named the company Tesla after the great Serbian pioneer in electricity, Nicola Tesla. Tesla's work forms the basis for modern alternating current and the AC motor. Although he is also credited by some as the inventor of the radio, (most credit Italian inventory Marconi) he never gained significantly from his inventions and died penniless in New York City in 1943 at the age of 86.
I don't see this happening to Eberhard or to Tesla Motors. The Tesla Roadster uses a carbon fiber body that was designed in the traditional fashion from quarter-sized clay model to full-sized prototype. Its battery pack of thousands of consumer grade lithium-ion cells feed an electric motor that weighs just seventy pounds! For those who are familiar with electric motors, the weight savings alone is amazing. As with all electric motors, torque is as strong at one rpm as it is in the high ranges, unlike gas or diesel engines that require rpms to build torque. And the Tesla Roadster's engine can wind up to 13,000 rpm. Try that with any gas-powered engine!
So, here is a car that will cost about a penny per mile for fuel, has head-snapping performance, turns on a dime and burns no gas! Rumor has it that Tesla may be adding solar cells to the roof for charging while you work (as I suggested in an earlier blog). At $85k-$100k, the Tesla Roadster is still a car for high-rollers. But, with volume will come economies of scale. And who knows, maybe the company that bought Hummer will be smart enough to align themselves with a true visionary and crank out Teslas at prices we can all afford.
Now, if we can all put a windmill on our roof or in our back yards, we won't even need those big oil fired power plants and maybe we'll finally wean ourselves off our dependence on foreign oil!
For more information, go to http://www.teslamotors.com/.

