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Detroit Electric to launch Tesla-beater in June?

Wednesday, November 26th, 2008

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Ever since that Malaysian press melée in September there haven’t been any perceptible noises emanating from the resurrected Detroit Electric. Perhaps former Lotus CEO Albert Lam and friends have their noses to the grindstone getting product ready their announced end-of-2009 production run. Secretly, we hope they’re preparing several models to brandish at the motor show in their namesake city, (we’ve heard some room may have opened up) but with a website that looks like it’s in need of life support, we suspect not.

They may have some surprises up their sleeve though. A comment (as pointed out by “VFX” over at the Tesla Motors Club forum) appeared on the Tesla Founders blog of Martin Eberhard attributed to Mr Lam inviting the former to come check out some of his pre-production sports cars in Europe. Much more of a converted Lotus Elise that the Tesla Roadster has been accused of being, the vehicle is supposed to do 0 to 60 in under 4 seconds and have a 140 mph+ top speed. Range is stated to be about 200 miles. The kicker? Volume production is planned for June. Believable? You tell us.

[Source: Tesla Founders Blog via VFX at Tesla Motors Club Forum]

Detroit Electric to launch Tesla-beater in June? originally appeared on AutoblogGreen on Wed, 26 Nov 2008 15:57:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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click above for a high res gallery of Martin Eberhard’s Tesla Roadster

Martin Eberhard was along for the Tesla Motors ride for quite some time before unceremoniously leaving the company and starting his own blog. As one of the chief architects behind the current Tesla Roadster, he knows more than a thing or two about how it works, but even he is caught off-guard from time to time with how the vehicle works now that there is a shiny Roadster sitting in his garage. The latest interesting bit of information comes by way of Eberhard’s blog and involves how much energy the car uses — get this — when parked. Astonishingly, the car’s battery constantly has coolant run through it, just so long as it’s at least half-charged. Because his car is nearly always fully charged, Eberhard’s pump is always running. To track its power usage, a meter was installed and Martin was very surprised to find that 22-percent of his car’s energy usage was being used while the car sat!

Besides using up precious energy, Eberhard also wonders how long his pump will last, considering that it’s running almost constantly. A much bigger issue could be a reduction in the life of the battery, as Eberhard’s calculations indicate that his battery’s life could be reduced by up to two years or 20,000 miles, and that’s a really big deal.

[Source: Tesla Founders]

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Click on the photo for a high-res gallery of the Tesla Roadster suitable for wallpaper

This is part 2 of the AutoblogGreen interview with Tesla CEO Martin Eberhard that was in ABG Podcast #1. You can find part 1 here.

ABG: What’s the timing for WhiteStar? When would you expect to see that in production?

ME: Target production is mid to late 2009.

ABG: And what about production volumes? How many a year would you expect to to see?

ME: We would like to step up by a factor of ten of what we’re doing now roughly. So the initial year of production we would like to build in the neighborhood of 10,000 cars.

ABG: And how about price? What’s going to be the price target for the WhiteStar?

ME: There will be of course versions of this product, but we’d like to bring the price point down significantly and we right now have been saying that the target price for the low end version of the car is going to be under $50,000.

Gallery: Tesla Roadster

Read the conclusion of the ABG discussion with Martin Eberhard after the jump, including some discussion of the EV business and other manufacturers.


ABG: Under $50,000?

ME: I don’t have an exact price yet, because we’re not done yet. I guess a little bit more on WhiteStar, this is a big step up in terms of technology to the company and this is not based on somebody else’s chassis or chassis technology or anything like that. It’s a car that’s designed from scratch as a Tesla first car. That means a significantly higher percent of our engineers now are automotive engineers with experience in chassis design, body design, suspension design and the like. And this, this is the primary reason why we opened our office in Michigan.

ABG: So WhiteStar is a four-door sedan as I understand. And is it going to be a fairly convention layout, will it be a front wheel drive, rear wheel drive or has that even been decided at this point?

ME: If you want to have quick acceleration you have to be rear wheel drive. It’s just the thing. But the reason that the car were designed with front wheel drive, is because it’s a cheaper drive train with a gasoline engine. So if you’ve got to design an engine then you need to get it in the front of the car plus or minus the Volkswagen Beetle and that’s the main reason why most cars are front wheel drive.

ABG: For smaller cars packaging front wheel drive makes a lot more sense.

ME: Right, it makes a lot more sense if you have a gasoline engine. But remember the size of our motor. I mean, the size of our motor it’s about 10 or 12 inches in diameter and 12 to 14 inches in length and that’s it. So you know, we can package it anywhere in the car front or back without it being a packaging issue. It’s a different problem. The neat thing about WhiteStar not being based on somebody else’s chassis is we can architect the vehicle to optimize it as an electric car instead of trying to cram batteries into an architectural designed for gasoline-powered car.

ABG: Can you tell us a little bit about what the structure of the car is going to be like or is that something you don’t want to get into right now? What I’m asking is it going to be a metal chassis with plastic body or all metal, or is that something else?

ME: We’re not yet ready to talk about that yet. I mean, we do know pretty well what we’re going to do, but we’re not ready to talk about that publicly.

ABG: Okay, no problem. Can you elaborate a little bit on how the construction of WhiteStar is going to happen as far as dealing with suppliers and subassemblies and that sort of thing? systems coming in from suppliers, how are you going to be doing that? Because, from what’s been described so far of the factory that you guys are going to build in Albuquerque it sounds like it’s going to be fairly small. Your volumes still aren’t that huge. But obviously you’re not going to be doing as much in-house as most bigger car-makers would be doing at this point.

ME: Don’t be too sure that we won’t be doing more or less than other car companies. Remember, the suppliers that we’re using to provide us components to use for our cars, also supply to all the other car companies. When we’re buying, for example, suspension components, we’re buying them from a company that sells suspension components to American car companies. When we buy interior components, they’re from suppliers that supply the other guys. So it is a smaller factory and we produce fewer cars per year, although substantially more than we’re producing for the Roadster. Substantially more cars than the Lotus factory is capable of producing at full volume. But it’s certainly less than let’s say a Ford Focus factory. Somewhere in between and what that means inside the factory is that the factory tends to be more mechanized, than automated. So we’re not going to have giant robot assemblers. We’re going to have humans doing assemblies with mechanization helping them and requiring a higher skill level on the part of our employees than is required in a highly automated factory.

ABG: Aside from the environmental aspects of EVs, one of the other selling points people tout for EVs is the simplicity and the reliability of the electric power train. And that’s undoubtedly true. Obviously you have to do essentially no maintenance over the lifespan of the vehicle. No oil changes and that sort of thing. No filters to deal with. But once you move beyond that to the rest of the car, all the other systems in the car, that’s an area where, where many cars tend to have problems. When people have problems with their cars, it’s things like heating and ventilation systems having problems, or window mechanisms and all the other assorted subsystems of the vehicle.

ME: Well obviously we’re doing our best to design the subsystems of the car to be as reliable as possible. We’re not going out on engineering limbs so to speak to design wacky systems that will be unreliable. But I mean the larger answer to your question is that we are building customer centers in cities across America so that we can service vehicles and will be providing a high quality level of service to our customers directly.

ABG: That’s where I was going, How are you going to be handling service and sales of your vehicles moving forward?

ME: Moving forward, we will continue to sell our cars directly through our own customer centers where we will provide a very high quality level of service. At this point we think it’s very important for us to make a direct relationship with our customers rather than putting a dealership in between us and the customers because our cars are frankly different than the kind of cars that dealerships are used to dealing with and we want to make sure our customers get the absolute best service. So for, for that reason we’re building our own customer centers across the country.

ABG: So, I take it for now, your sales are going to be strictly in the U.S. market or are you going to be making your vehicles, once you get onto WhiteStar, are they going to be available overseas as well or…

ME: That’s a very good question. Every single country has its own rules about the vehicles it sells in terms of safety, in terms of labeling, in terms of insurance requirements and also has its own requirements on how you can sell vehicles. Do you have to sell through a dealership, do you have to offer this or that service and so on. So it’s a big job to get into each market. Our plan is to initially begin selling in the United States and we’ll expand internationally as we can basically. Obviously there’s a great big market for our cars outside the United States and we very much would like to sell to that market. But at this point we’re still in the one-thing-at-a-time phase.

ABG: Beyond the current generation of lithium ion technology, that you’re using in, in the Roadster and presumably in WhiteStar are you looking at other battery technologies or other, other types of energy storage systems for your vehicles?

ME: Yeah, absolutely. Tesla of course is battery chemistry agnostic. We are not called Lithium Ion Cars, Inc. for a reason. Our, strategy is to use the very best batteries that are actually available for purchase and for installation in a car. And today that absolutely is lithium ion batteries. My feeling is, that that’s probably going to be true for a good long time. Lithium ion batteries have been improving in capacity at a very good rate. Something like 8 percent a year for a long time and there’s every indication that that will continue for a long time going forward. We looked at some of the other chemistries of batteries around and they’re either not available actually, you couldn’t actually buy some, which is a drawback to putting them in a car, or they have substantially lower energy density. Energy density translates to shorter driving range, and for us driving range is one of the most important factors for an electric car to be successful

ABG: When you mention some of the other chemistries, are you referring to the older things like the nickel metal hydrides or are, are you referring to some of the other newer types that have come along in the last year or so, like for example the AltairNano batteries?

ME: Well, for example, the AltairNano batteries from what I’ve seen of them they have less than half the energy density. That means in the same space, the same weight, the car drives half the distance.

ABG: Compared to your current lithium ion?

ME: Compared to our lithium ion battery pack, exactly. Yes, exactly. And then additionally for that same battery pack the thing would cost triple or maybe quadruple what our battery pack costs. So what you get is for an increase in price of let’s factor three or four, you get half the driving range. It’s solving a problem that we don’t have.

ABG: So where does, Tesla go beyond WhiteStar and what do you see as the competitive landscape for the electric vehicle market in the next year or so and moving forward in the next five to ten years?

ME: Tesla’s goal is to grow into a full-blown full-service car company. We are growing as quickly as we can to make make high quality and good looking vehicles for sale to everybody who wants one. Obviously, our strategy was to come in at the top of the market and make a, make a truly excellent electric car to develop our technology, to demonstrate that electric cars don’t have to be dork mobiles and to begin to build the company. WhiteStar is our next step. It’s a lower priced, higher volume car, but still carries Tesla DNA but it makes electric cars more available and more accessible. And a note, by the way, somewhere in the second year of production of WhiteStar if we’re successful at all what we plan on doing, we will have sold more electric cars than the sum total of what’s been sold in the history of the United States. There’s only tens of thousands of electric cars that have ever been sold from 100 years ago to now. And in fact, just to toss in another number. If we’re successful, in 2008 we will sell more Roadsters than GM leased EV1s.

ABG: I think there were only about 600 or 700 of those.

ME: I think it was 900, but something like that yeah. At any rate our goal is to grow into a full-service, full-fledged car company that competes with the rest of the car companies out there, not just some of the electric car companies that are out there. If you look around at the landscape right now there’s a lot of press now about pretty much every little electric car company that’s been around and I think part of what’s going on is that newspaper reporters and magazine reporters like to have a category. So they hear that Tesla Motors has got this car, that they’ve raised a bunch of money, but they’re producing this great car. And they look around and find anybody that’s got a web site and a prototype and think well, that’s Tesla’s competition. And it’s important to look to see that there are companies that are trying to build full-on electric cars and have the right funding and the right business model to do so and others that are basically a couple of people and an idea and a very small amount of funding and a very small vision of where they’ll go with that car. And then there’s others that are mainly producing press releases. And I think it’s important to keep those apart.

ABG: Well, Tesla definitely seems to be on the right track, as far as you seem to have the resources necessary to get up and running and produce some real cars and from all I’ve seen, you seem to be very serious about it and you’re not producing backyard specials like many of the vehicles that have been shown in the past. I think you are definitely on the right track.

ME: I was listening to the radio this morning and I heard an article about another electric car company whose business model basically depends on selling California zero emissions credits for a total of $200,000.00 per car they sell, thus allowing them to sell a car for $45,000.00. That’s the kind of thing that I think is a crazy business model. And when somebody is doing that, basically first of all, their business model can be destroyed with the stroke of a pen in Sacramento. You can bet that there’s a massive amount of encouragement from the big car companies to change the rules so that they’re not in that situation.

ABG: That’s certainly not a sustainable model.

ME: Of course. And Tesla Motors is of course generating zero emissions credits as well by producing electric cars. But our business model don’t have to depend on those at all. If you look at my business plan you would not see aside from a footnote any mention at all about zero emissions credits. They would not show up in the financials at all. The idea of the zero emissions credits is that there will be a free market and companies such as Tesla or C&H or whoever could produce electric cars and produce zero emissions credits and then companies such as Ford or General Motors or whoever could purchase those credits to offset their needs and meet the requirements of the California zero emissions mandate. Of course it is a free market. So if one company thinks that they can sell their credits for let’s say $200,000.00 each and another company says well, we’re selling our credits for $1,000.00 each that sort of torpedoes your business model, doesn’t it?

ABG: Right. From all what I’ve seen of the Roadster and what’s planned for WhiteStar and what you’ve said today, it seems like your model is definitely premised on actually being able to build and sell cars profitably from an operational standpoint.

ME: Exactly.

ABG: As opposed to relying on some intangible thing that may or may not exist a year or two from now.

ME: Yeah, that’s right.

ABG: Well, that sounds great. Is there anything else that you’d like to share with us before we finish this up?

ME: Well, I encourage people to to come and have a look at our website regularly. There’s all kinds of interesting things that get posted there, and we tend to be pretty open with what we’re doing on our blog. So for example, today or maybe late last night we posted a new blog that goes into some details about how we chose to locate our factory in Albuquerque, which I think you’ll find interesting. And, and every week it’s some other rather interesting subject like that.

ABG: I read that last night. In fact I’ve got your blog subscribed in my RSS list. So I definitely encourage anybody out there that’s listening to this to go over to teslamotors.com and go to the blog link, subscribe to that and, and then also check out the other information that’s on your site. There’s definitely a lot of interesting stuff there.

ME: We’re, we’re trying to have a fairly open relationship with our customers and with the public.

ABG: Well, I wish you the best of luck, Martin, and thank you very much for joining us on the first AutoblogGreen podcast.

ME: Well, thank you, Sam. Well, good luck with your podcast.

 

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AutoblogGreen interviewed Tesla Motors CEO Martin Eberhard for AutoblogGreen Podcast #1. We covered what’s happening with testing of the Roadster, development and manufacturing of the WhiteStar sedan and more. This is a transcript of that interview.

ABG
: This is Sam Abuelsamid from AutoblogGreen and I’m talking today with Martin Eberhard, who is the CEO of Tesla Motors. And for anybody who’s been following AutoblogGreen, I’m sure you’re familiar with Tesla Motors, but why don’t we start off first, Martin, I’d like to thank you for joining us today and sharing what’s going on with Tesla. And why don’t we start off by giving a little bit of background on yourself and how you got involved in this project.

Martin Eberhard: Well, thanks, I’m glad to join you. I started off I guess as a consumer, somebody who was looking to buy a car that was a fun car to drive but also getting more and more concerned about the gasoline consumption of my driving. And I got interested in electric cars just about when the zero emissions mandate was about to be wiped out and so I was considering some of the electric cars that were on the market. I didn’t particularly like them, but I thought about maybe I would convince myself to get one. And just about when I had talked myself into that, they disappeared from the market. I looked at some of the smaller electric car companies that you write about in your blog and none of those guys were I guess at that point actually producing any cars that you could buy. You know, a couple of them spent some time for example with AC Propulsion and I tried to convince them to build me a Tzero, unsuccessfully. And after a while I found that there weren’t really any companies out there that were trying to make a real car company out of decent electric cars. Eventually, I managed to talk myself into doing it myself.

Gallery: Tesla Roadster

Continue reading the ABG interview with Martin Eberhard after the jump to learn more about the Roadster, batteries and WhiteStar.


ABG: So you did this based on the fact that you wanted an EV but couldn’t find anything suitable that was on the market. How did you come to decide to build a car like the Tesla Roadster as your starting point?

ME: Well, I guess when I looked at so many electric cars are out there, it seemed to be that they were built by people who considering driving a necessary evil. You really shouldn’t drive. You should walk or take a bike or ride the bus. And if you must drive then a little glorified golf cart would be fine. I like cars. I’ve owned a variety of sports cars and I enjoy driving, and I think that I’m typical of a lot of Americans that we actually do like our cars. And of course we do feel guilty about how much oil is consumed and the dependence on oil, the CO2 production, global warming and all that. So we still actually like our cars and when I thought about this- when we started building a car it was designed for people who like to drive. We’d have a lot more success than a car that wasn’t designed that way and persuading people that cars were bad.

ABG: Well given the track record of many of the small companies that have tried to start up building EVs, which hasn’t been particularly successful so far, it seems like that’s a pretty good approach to take. Myself having been a longtime fan of Lotus, when I first saw the Roadster it was immediately obvious that it was based on the Elise or derived from the Elise. I was pretty excited to see what you guys were doing and when I saw the performance specs it was pretty impressive. How did you come to decide to use the Elise as a base and give us a little background on the technology in what you’re doing.

ME: Well, so we set out to build a high performance sports car and we looked at who we could partner with to put that car together. Lotus was a company that made sense for us because of the size of the cars that they made and the fact that their factory has built cars for other companies already. They’re used to doing that. I’d like to clarify something, we do have some carryover equipment on the car from the Elise. We have the same airbag system. We have a similar crash protection system. But it isn’t so much based on the Elise. There was maybe 10 percent common parts to it in our cars. The windscreen, the airbag system, some of the surround, some of the rubber seals, that kind of thing. The chassis of the car is not a Lotus chassis and the body is clearly different than the Lotus body. There are no common parts.

ABG: Well, I guess when I first saw it from, just from the shape of the windshield and the general proportions of the car you could see some, some heritage there of the Elise. But yeah, you’re right, it is a different car. How are things progressing with the development of the Tesla Roadster and are you guys still on track for a launch this year?

ME: Things are going quite well. I mean, you know it’s difficult to put on. There’s a lot of pieces to it. You’ve probably heard the rumors that we changed to a different supplier for our transmission and went into a redesign on that and that’s definitely the long pole in the tent right now. But even that problem is under control and things are going well. We are on schedule to ship cars this year.

ABG: Okay. With the testing, obviously you don’t need to do emissions and fuel economy testing for this thing. But what what sorts of other things are you doing as far as testing and particularly durability testing? What sort of program do you have for that?

ME: Basically the testing falls into two classes. There’s safety testing and the durability testing. The safety testing is the standard gamut of standard motor vehicle safety standard testing and that involves smashing quite a few vehicles because the requirements are for low speed frontal crash tests, high speed crash tests, offset and deformable front crash tests, side intrusion tests, low speed and high speed rear crash tests and roof crush tests. So that’s really a large number of tests have to be done. The way that this testing is done is we do testing to learn some things and then they’ll redesign whatever needs to be redesigned and then you get approval. So that usually means a full set of testing once and then a full set of testing again with whatever changes went into it. The same thing goes with durability testing there’s two classes of durability testing we do. We do a super accelerated test that’s called the Belgian Pavẻ test, which basically drives the car over a very harsh cobblestone road at high speed and will take pretty much any car to destruction in about, in about 4- or 5,000 miles. That’s designed to catch early failures as quickly as you can in the program. We finished that test and actually did quite well on it, had a very small number of failures. We had one bracket break on a front suspension component that we redesigned. And then parallel with that is a much longer durability test. It’s about 50,000 miles on a calibrated durability track that’s designed to simulate a much larger number of miles of actual driving, and that’s ongoing still today. We’re running three shifts a day six hours a day of that car driving on the track. And that’s going well also. We’ve learned a few things; things that needed some adjustment and we’ll do all those tests again with the next round of cars we’re building right now that capture everything we’ve learned.

ABG: From that testing, I think probably the big question that everybody is going to want to ask is; How are the batteries holding up during the testing? Particularly, I’ve driven cars on the Belgian Pavẻ, so I’m familiar with how severe that is. How is the battery pack holding up, especially given the nature of your battery pack, where you’ve got I think 6,000 some odd individual cells in there, that are wired together, on the longer term durability testing. How is the performance of the battery over a larger number of miles, how is that holding up?

ME: Oh, the battery pack has been essentially perfect. We’ve had no trouble at all with the battery packs in the Pavẻ test or in the long-term durability test. You understand that these are not just a pile of batteries that are just chucked in a box. These are mounted in, in a very, very sturdy way with some our patented technology and that works frankly, just great. We had a problem with a bracket on the battery box early on in the testing that mounted to the frame. The bracket wasn’t strong enough and we had to increase the strength of the of the bracket. This is the kind of thing that typically gives out during this kind of testing. We’ve had other kinds of problems. We had on the long-term durability track, one of the pieces is driving through a saltwater bath, which is abusive of a car. And we did have some water getting into one of our cables. So it required us to change the design of the cable and make sure it was simply more waterproof. Those are the kind of things you learn along the way. But the battery system has been one of the most robust parts of the tests so far.

ABG: What about the performance of the battery after 40-50,000 miles? Have you been able to take a look at that? And how’s it, holding up?

ME: So far it’s holding up just great. Holding up well, somewhat better than the computer models predicted.

ABG: Well, that’s great to hear because that’s clearly an issue with lithium ion batteries these days. Everybody has had experience with them in consumer electronics devices and they know that over the span of a couple of years they start to lose their ability to hold a charge. And so I think that’s other than the mechanical durability of the components of the cell or the battery pack, that’s the other big question when dealing with lithium batteries.

ME: Right. There’s nothing unique about lithium batteries for Heaven’s sake. You have lead acid batteries and nickel metal hydride batteries and nicad batteries, every battery chemistry that’s come along. Batteries do degrade with time and with usage. The lithium ion battery is actually better than all of the predecessors for the most part. But the the difference between the Tesla Roadster and let’s say, for example, your laptop computer is that your laptop computer was designed to last a short number of years. I mean, Microsoft just conspired to make sure that your laptop is obsolete in five years and so if the battery pack poops out in five years that’s okay, that’s fine. So there’s no attempt to keep the battery pack cool. There’s no attempt to optimize the charging of the battery pack just so long as the battery lasts a couple of years is good enough. We have of course a different approach with the Roadster as you’ve seen, we do liquid coolant in the battery packs to keep the battery packs at their optimal temperatures throughout their lives. and similarly we have a much, much more gentle charging and discharging algorithm on the batteries to optimize their life. It’s just a matter of design.

ABG: So you’ve got a cooling system for the battery pack. Does that mean that it also warms the battery pack? Because that’s another issue with lithium batteries, when they get cold they obviously don’t perform as well either. So are you heating it as well in cold weather?

ME: So what happens with lithium ion batteries and mostly any other batteries when they get cold is they have a somewhat reduced power output. We don’t under normal circumstances heat the battery pack because if you’re driving at minus 20, your 0 to 60 time instead of being 4 seconds might be 5½ seconds. That’s probably okay. Especially considering that you’re probably on ice.

ABG: Odds are if you are at that temperature then you probably don’t want to be accelerating that fast anyway.

ME: Yeah, you can’t. And in fact if you look a little bit harder what you find is that the way that reduced performance manifests itself in the batteries is by increased internal resistance of the battery. So when the battery is cold it will have higher internal resistance. And what that means is that as you use the battery it will self-heat. That resistance in the battery produces heat in the battery and actually warms itself. With use it’ll warm right up anyways. But it actually doesn’t matter. If you come to our web site and see there’s several videos of our cars being tested up in Sweden on a frozen lake in the Arctic Circle. It was minus 30. Our car runs just fine.

ABG: We posted those up on our site as well, and it does look like it’s performing well.

ME: And by the way, that driver is a better driver than I. Yeah, it was, it was common place for people to do tuning of mainly ABS and traction control, that’s what we were doing. Besides we’re just getting an opportunity to really run the car hard in a cold climate. Those are the specific tests that were done. We were out there working with our ABS manufacturer side by side and getting help from them.

ABG: So moving on then, there’s obviously been a lot of discussion and rumors in the last couple of months regarding WhiteStar. Can you give us a little background on WhiteStar? What are the goals as far as performance, production volumes, timing and price and so on?

ME: Yes. The larger goal of WhiteStar is to grow Tesla’s market and build another model car that appeals to a broader class, a broader group of people. Obviously the first step of that is to seat more people. A two-seater car appeals only to a limited market and obviously price matters as well, which is the reason why we’re building our own factories with WhiteStar instead of building them overseas. Then of course across that, you want to carry the Tesla motor’s DNA into that car by building a car that is great to drive and beautiful and is still seriously efficient and burns no gasoline. So that’s kind of what we started out. We’re in the middle of the program, people ask us on our blog and so forth when are we going to post pictures. And the answer is not for a while yet. There’s a lot of work to be done.

The transcript of second half of this interview will be coming soon.

 

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD Step behind the curtain at Ford Motor. Experience the documentary first-hand.

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AutoblogGreen Podcast #1

Monday, March 12th, 2007

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It’s finally here! The very first AutoblogGreen Podcast! Sebastian and Sam talk about some of the green highlights from this week’s Geneva Motor Show, including the new diesels from Cadillac, Mazda, and Subaru, and the Subaru R1e electric car. The new Honda Small Hybrid Sports Concept could be a fun, green successor to the old CRX and the Insight and the Toyota Hybrid-X gives a hint of the styling of the next generation Prius. We’ve also got an extended interview with Tesla Motors CEO Martin Eberhard. We hope you’ll subscribe to the podcast so you can get them automatically when they come out and we’re going to try an put one out about every two weeks. We’ll also make sure the sound quality is better next time.

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BOLD MOVES: THE FUTURE OF FORD Step behind the curtain at Ford Motor. Experience the documentary first-hand.

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