http://www.digitaltrends.com/cars/imagining-the-perfect-electric-sports-car/
Imagining the perfect electric sports car
By Rob Enderle   —    July 27, 2013

[images  
http://www.digitaltrends.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Jaguar-CX75.jpg
Jaguar-CX75

http://www.digitaltrends.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/Ron-RXX.jpg
Ron-RXX

http://www.digitaltrends.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/07/GT-R_dash1.jpg
GT-R Dash
]

In my last column, I talked about how and why I chose the Jaguar F-Type over
the Tesla S. I was kind of surprised how upset a couple Tesla fans got. In
my head, I thought was giving the Tesla S a compliment for putting a large
sedan in the same company as a lot of thoroughbred sports cars – and above
many of them. Ultimately, I believe that electric is the eventual, and
better, future. But right now, there’s just not an electric sports car that
does what it needs to.

This got me thinking about what the perfect electric sports car would look
like. Tesla has one on the books, and numerous other companies (including
Jaguar) have been hinting that they have them on the way. Let’s take a look
at what they’ll need to succeed.

Appearance

An electric needs a low center of gravity. Tesla did a good job working
around this in the Model S, giving it an almost F-1 look. Take it a step
further and you get something like the Ron RXX – a car designed in Mexico of
all places. The semi-open-wheel design could let you hit the optimum lines
while on the track, and you could even remove the fenders to help. I’m not
sure I’d go to a tandem design like the RXX (that may be a bit too far over
the top for most drivers), but if you widened the body of the car it’d still
be very low, providing a great view of the track. You’d just have to get
creative with the convertible top. You have to admit, the RXX is both
attractive and just a bit mean looking, which would fit the requirement.

An upstart Croatian company is building a beautiful electric car called the
Concept One, but at $1 million and with a design that looks a lot like other
supercars (most of which you’d be a fool to take on the track unless you
were Bill Gates rich) I just don’t think it is the way to go. Jaguar had a
C-X75 hybrid that was even more beautiful to my eye, but it didn’t make the
cut (issues with the really cool turbine generators I’m told) and was also
too expensive. It did have one really unique feature: A passing button on
the steering wheel that gave you an extra 100HP for a short burst. I so want
that button.

It has to appeal to a broader audience be priced closer to $50,000 than $1
million. If Jaguar just created an electric Eagle Speedster I’d likely be
good, but I think most buyers would rather have something that would really
kick ass on the track and look pretty. Chrysler had one they were working on
that looked a lot like a Lotus, and that could work.

Interior

One of the areas I really think my Jag has it over the Tesla S is the
interior. (I’m not alone: The designer for the Jag did get the top award
this year.) But the best high-tech dash, in my opinion, would be the one on
the Nissan GT-R, but with a larger Tesla S screen. This wonder of electronic
gauges would really showcase what a tech-driven car should look like. They
should also consider transflective displays, so the sun doesn’t wash them
out. It’d be nice to see a heads-up display that worked on this car, but
since I have yet to find one I like, I’m not going to hold my breath. Seats
clearly need to hold you in place more like the F-Type Jag than the Tesla S.

Power and battery

The way I’m told the performance version of the Tesla S eats through rear
tires, I think this needs to be a four-wheel drive design. It’s great to
have a ton of power, but you have to get that power to the road somehow.
That means, like the Audi R8 and many other high-end performance cars
(including the GT-R), four-wheel drive.

The bigger issue is the battery – I think this is why you really can’t track
a Tesla today. You just can’t charge the car fast enough. While Tesla has a
swapping solution for the battery, installing one quickly at a track could
be problematic. The Tesla currently has ride-height adjustments – really
important for a performance car if you don’t want to drag the belly or take
out a front air dam – which could be used for this purpose. Imagine a car
that could drop down and release its battery. Someone could then pull it
out, roll another one under, and the car could drop back down to secure it.
You’d need a couple spare batteries, but you often need to have the
equivalent of a spare engine for gasoline cars at the track, and electric
motors tend to be far more reliable than gas ones.

It’s coming

Unless someone kills off electrics again before we get the electrical
ecosystem in place, I expect that by the end of 2015, we’ll have at least
one great electric sports car on the market. The smart money is still on
Tesla being first with it. Much like the F-Type, I think it needs to be
beautiful, powerful, and designed for the track, but I also think it needs
to go even farther to emphasize the electrical advantages and have a
creative way to deal with the battery-charge-time problem. They could even
use supercapacitors that could be flash charged during tire changes. We may
be only months from someone building a car that could give me my hot
convertible experience and still be green.
[© 2013 Designtechnica]




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