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Comments on: Silicon Valley engineers peek at the Tesla

Mechanical engineers get a look at what makes Tesla Motors' electric sports car tick.
Photos: Under the hood of the Tesla Roadster

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LiON batteries
by kpedraja May 4, 2007 1:57 PM PDT
Hopefully the Tesla isn't using Sony batteries.
Reply to this comment
LiOn batteries
by Fil0403 May 8, 2007 2:45 PM PDT
Yeah, lets hope it uses batteries from a brand that, when things go wrong, doesn't assume the responsability.
Hopefully...
by rfelgueiras May 4, 2007 2:11 PM PDT
... the price comes down some more, so that more people can own
some of this technology.
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Unreliable Tesla
by theBike45 May 5, 2007 7:59 AM PDT
I hope their car is more reliable than the folks who are running the Tesla company. They avoid all talk of battery costs, which for an electric car, is the same as fule costs. That battery pack costs between $21,000 and $30,000 and gets a paltry 100,000 miles, making the costs per mile a staggeringly high 25 cents just for the batteries, not counting the electricity. That's equivalent, folks, to $7 to $9 per gallon gasoline. Tesla claims the car cost "a few pennies per mile" to operate. Actually, the figure is between 20 and 30 pennies per mile.
I also note that Tesla officials originally claimed that the roadster would travel 250 miles on a single charge, no exceptions,. Well, eveyone knows that an electric's mileage depends upon terrain, weather, use of A/C, etc. The EPA recently tested
the roadster and gave it a 200 mile range rating,
which is 20% less than that originaly claimed by the company. Now I see the company is claiming 200 to 250 miles. The 250 mile figure is out of line with the official mileage test results. Tesla is playing games again.
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Get a clue.
by ralfthedog May 5, 2007 10:00 AM PDT
If things like cost per mile or the cost of the battery pack are a concern for you, The Tesla is not your car.

The Tesla is targeted to the market segment that considers a $100,000 purchase near trivial. If a Tesla is much more than an impulse buy for you, you should get a Honda Civic (Great car, with just a bit of work, it has great performance).
give a chance
by rosnow May 5, 2007 7:14 PM PDT
hey they cars are not even out yet - lets give it a chance before
we condemn it.

also note:

1) they warrant the batteries for 100k, real world they may go
longer.
2) tesla made a public statement, blog entry a while back from
the founder, that they had to back off on the 250 mile range.
The car needed to gain weight for stiffness and safety, things
like that. I am sure if you are on the list of purchasers, you can
get your money back, since there is still a long waitinglist.

and if you dont like tesla, why not just buy from one of the other
all electric car companies, like the cars that go 40 miles and 25
miles per hour, look like a giant blob - those are great.
Get a blond.
by ralfthedog May 5, 2007 10:00 PM PDT
I give this car a chick magnet factor of 8.5
New LiON Technology Goes Further
by jlfelder May 7, 2007 11:29 AM PDT
Current technology Lithium Ion batteries are only good for about 500-750 charge cycles before they start loosing a significant fraction of their charge capacity. At 200 miles range, Tesla is sticking with the 500 charges number (200*500=100000). So they are being conservative and still get about 10 years life (assuming play car miles per year).

And if you want to make your comparison fair, you need to throw in the cost of a new Porche 911 motor, which you would probably need after 100k miles in that car as well.

And all of this assumes that they don't quickly make the switch to AltairNano batteries which with new anode material that gets more on the order of 5000 charge cycles, or about 1 *million* miles, not to mention demonstrated charging times of 10 minutes with an external charger (see their website and Phoenix Motorcars for a vehicle driving around with those batteries today).

So your comments seem a little prematurely bitter.
New LiON Technology Goes Further
by jlfelder May 7, 2007 11:29 AM PDT
Current technology Lithium Ion batteries are only good for about 500-750 charge cycles before they start loosing a significant fraction of their charge capacity. At 200 miles range, Tesla is sticking with the 500 charges number (200*500=100000). So they are being conservative and still get about 10 years life (assuming play car miles per year).

And if you want to make your comparison fair, you need to throw in the cost of a new Porche 911 motor, which you would probably need after 100k miles in that car as well.

And all of this assumes that they don't quickly make the switch to AltairNano batteries which with new anode material that gets more on the order of 5000 charge cycles, or about 1 *million* miles, not to mention demonstrated charging times of 10 minutes with an external charger (see their website and Phoenix Motorcars for a vehicle driving around with those batteries today).

So your comments seem a little prematurely bitter.
Re: Unreliable Tesla
by markwil August 14, 2007 9:41 AM PDT
Have to take issue with your numbers here. A Porsche gets 20mpg avg, tops. Also you need to figure in the cost of motor maintenance: oil & filters, spark plugs, air filter, coolant, everything that just doesn't exist on an EV. Also maintenance on brakes will be much lower since it uses regen braking.
The Green Machine
by YankeePoodle May 5, 2007 10:40 AM PDT
If you want to buy a car that is environment friendly, then go ahead buy a diesel vehicle and make it run on BioDiesel. It is less expensive to the owner of vehicle with just the least adjustments. Even though it is a solution that is far from perfect, it is the one with least transition and costs attached.

Hybrids (esp. the ones that give good mileage) are good option.

I forgot to mention, if you live in a region where there is lot of sun, dont shy away from that Motor Bike.
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RE: The Green Machine
by markwil August 14, 2007 9:44 AM PDT
Don't know where you get that, a diesel still produces pollutants and CO2. Not very environmentally friendly. I does cut our dependence on the middle east though.
If only...
by ethana2 May 5, 2007 7:41 PM PDT
The design was open source. Oh, well. Once OSH catches up to OSS, we'll have a better one in no time.
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Promises, Only Promises
by bobbydi May 5, 2007 9:47 PM PDT
Another electric car that is supposed to come out
in the future. Fishing for investment capital?
News.com.com usual article.
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RE: Promises, Only Promises
by markwil August 14, 2007 9:45 AM PDT
First cars will be delivered in September.
You guys never change
by Richie May 6, 2007 5:22 PM PDT
I've owned an electric vehicle for 5 years now with no problem at all. I find it to be fun to sneak up on people and scare them. I have not hit anyone with my vehicle yet and the braking is super.
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electric car...
by pjamese3 May 7, 2007 2:48 AM PDT
Besides price, performance is the only thing keeping us from going to an electric car. As a soldier, I'd love to be able to tell all those OPEC countries to go play in their sandbox and kill each other. Without needing their oil, we really wouldn't care. But I also would want a car that would perform. Many of my peers have sports cars (I have a Mustang GT.) I couldn't give up my performance car for an Ed Begley style electric car. I'd need something with power. So would many Americans.
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Why do you need excess power?
by MSSlayer May 7, 2007 7:50 AM PDT
Compensating for something?

It doesn't matter if your car takes 5 seconds or 15 seconds to hit 70, it is not like you are racing, or can ever go much faster then 70-75 without risk of a ticket. So what are you gaining? I know, Americans were told that you need powerful cars and like good lemmings you bought into it.

This irrational "need" for power by Americans is odd.
Did you even check out the Tesla?
by jlfelder May 7, 2007 11:52 AM PDT
Is 0 - 60 mph in 3.9 seconds enough performance for you! Performance isn't the problem with electrical cars. What has held them back on a pure performance front before now is the batteries, namely their power density. Lead-acid and NiMH just can't dump a lot of Watts per Kg.

But Lithium Ion has not only better energy density, but also better power density. So for a given size battery pack, you can accelerate faster and go further. So with current generation LiON batteries your Mustang GT looks anemic. With the next generation batteris like the A123 and AltairNano with 2 to 3 times the power density, old technologies like internal combustion engines will looks positively geriatric.

As for price, price is just volume. Low production rate sports cars with cutting edge tech in them already run $100K. But back off the bleeding edge a little, and up the volume level, I don't see why $25-$30K electric Miata isn't possible.

But new manufactures have to start small, and Tesla went the right path in coming out with a car that appeals to people willing to drop serious cash on a play car. Success here can be leveraged to do the next generation (already on the books) at a lower price point, and then a third gen at even lower prices, and so on.
Did you even check out the Tesla?
by jlfelder May 7, 2007 11:52 AM PDT
Is 0 - 60 mph in 3.9 seconds enough performance for you! Performance isn't the problem with electrical cars. What has held them back on a pure performance front before now is the batteries, namely their power density. Lead-acid and NiMH just can't dump a lot of Watts per Kg.

But Lithium Ion has not only better energy density, but also better power density. So for a given size battery pack, you can accelerate faster and go further. So with current generation LiON batteries your Mustang GT looks anemic. With the next generation batteris like the A123 and AltairNano with 2 to 3 times the power density, old technologies like internal combustion engines will looks positively geriatric.

As for price, price is just volume. Low production rate sports cars with cutting edge tech in them already run $100K. But back off the bleeding edge a little, and up the volume level, I don't see why $25-$30K electric Miata isn't possible.

But new manufactures have to start small, and Tesla went the right path in coming out with a car that appeals to people willing to drop serious cash on a play car. Success here can be leveraged to do the next generation (already on the books) at a lower price point, and then a third gen at even lower prices, and so on.
Back up a step
by BrianFH May 8, 2007 1:19 PM PDT
Electricity from thin air!! Not.

Where do you think most of the electricity that charges your car and heats your toaster(s) comes from. Mostly oil- and coal-fired generating stations, plus some natural gas. Also, about 1/6 of US oil comes from the ME; the real problem with ME oil is that, like poppies, it funds those who'd like to exsanguinate the West with as dullish knife to the throat - on Al Jezeera, of course.

So work on getting secure non-hydrocarbon generating capacity, such as microwaved power from lunar solar farms.
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Performance.
by Speakerboxx July 9, 2007 10:41 PM PDT
I totally agree with you,I love performance! I drive a Tahoe police package. But a 0 - 60 in 4 seconds is better than a Mustang could come close to. And a Mustang isn't really a performance car to me. a BMW M5 (heavy ass sedan) will blow its doors off. Yes, it costs more. but like you said. More performance.

RiversK
What about the costs to recharge the batteries?
by dougwong55 May 8, 2007 12:38 PM PDT
The article and comments don't address the issue of recharging the batteries. How are the batteries recharged? How long does it take to recharge? How much does it cost to recharge? Doesn't a lot of the electricity used for recharging come from coal-fired plants which produce CO2? If recharging is taken into consideration the car might not be as green as it first seems.
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Indeed.
by timinraymond July 16, 2007 10:40 AM PDT
In general, producing power in a central location to feed many end-users, is cheaper, cleaner and more efficient than producing power on an individual basis, so there is a moderate gain there. Coal, petroluem, waste oil, garbage, wood; *anything* we burn releases CO2. Coal just happens to be a lot dirtier than some of the other things that we burn.
RE: What about the costs to recharge the batteries?
by markwil August 14, 2007 9:49 AM PDT
The battery takes several hours to recharge depending on how depleted it is. But since the range is enough for a daily driver you just plug it in at night.

California's power mix includes around 40% non-CO2 producing sources:
http://www.teslamotors.com/efficiency/environmental_benefits.php
secret media(aka big brother) will try to make it seem unreliable
by Zupek May 8, 2007 12:45 PM PDT
If you cant figure out how massive effect on the world economy this car or any car that is oil free, will have, you should go back to highschool. This car is perfectly reliable, easy to work on, and has "guts" to back it up. NO MATTER WHAT, ANYONE ELSE SAYS, THIS CAR IS GREAT. dont believe everyone elses lies.
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